Meteor shower forecast

Lyrids Meteor Shower

This page is designed for practical meteor-shower planning: when to watch, where visibility is strongest, and which risks can reduce your return on travel. Use the peak and best-time guidance as your event baseline, then validate local cloud and moon conditions on the map and state pages before heading out. For most observers, darker locations and lower moon interference are the difference between a weak and strong shower experience.

Peak window: April 21-23

Best time: Late night through pre-dawn near the peak

Expected rate: Usually moderate, with occasional stronger bursts

Moon risk: Variable by year; bright moonlight can reduce visible counts

When to watch

Use the peak and local forecast together

Peak window: April 21-23

Best time: Late night through pre-dawn near the peak

Where it is strongest

Use dark sky + low moon conditions for best results

Visibility region: Northern Hemisphere favored, including much of the U.S. under dark skies

What can ruin visibility

Check this before you travel

Clouds, bright moonlight, haze, and city glow reduce visible meteor counts. Use the local map before departure.

How to watch

Simple field setup

  • Skip the telescope; meteors are best watched with wide-open sky.
  • Give your eyes 20 minutes to adapt.
  • Bring warm layers, a reclining chair, and a red light.
  • Face the darkest open part of the sky, not just the radiant.

Check meteor shower conditions

Final go/no-go step