Uluru/Ayer's Rock Solar Eclipse 2028 (Partial)
Uluru/Ayer's Rock sees a substantial partial eclipse around midday, but it is outside the city-center totality path.
Local Times
In UTC on 22 July 2028: first contact 01:52, maximum 03:23, eclipse ends 04:55.
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What This Means for Uluru/Ayer's Rock
The partial eclipse is significant but never total at the resort area. Keep certified filters on throughout and respect site rules, cultural restrictions, park access requirements, and designated viewing areas.
Weather and Site Choice
Central Australia may offer useful winter clarity, but remoteness makes flexibility harder. Use current forecasts and local advice before deciding whether to stay in place or travel toward the central path.
Cloud-history marker: Varies by source. Use this as background context only; final weather decisions should come from current satellite images, short-range forecasts, and local sky conditions.
Travel Planning
This is a logistics-first location. Confirm accommodation, park passes, road conditions, fuel, water, communications, and emergency plans before building any eclipse itinerary around the region.
For a smoother day, choose a viewing site before arrival, note the nearest toilets and shade, download offline maps, and set a backup meeting point. Carry water, warm layers, a small first-aid kit, and spare certified glasses for anyone in your group who misplaces theirs. Allow extra time for crowds, traffic, and changing weather, and avoid relying on one narrow road or car park.
Build the day around flexibility. Keep fuel, food, water, phone batteries, and printed directions sorted before eclipse morning, because mobile networks and local shops may be under pressure. Share your plan with the group, agree on when you will move if cloud develops, and leave enough margin to change sites calmly instead of racing the weather.
Think about comfort as much as the celestial timing. A good observing site has a broad view toward the Sun, room to sit away from traffic, shade before and after maximum, and a simple exit route. Avoid private land unless you have permission, and leave the site cleaner than you found it.
Safety
Use ISO 12312-2 certified viewing glasses during every partial phase. Cameras, binoculars, and telescopes need proper front-mounted solar filters whenever any part of the bright Sun is visible. Only observers inside totality may briefly view the fully covered Sun without filters, and only during totality itself.
Common Questions
What time is the solar eclipse in Uluru/Ayer's Rock?
In Uluru/Ayer's Rock on 22 July 2028 the partial eclipse begins at 11:22 a.m. ACST, reaches maximum at 12:53 p.m. ACST, and ends at 2:25 p.m. ACST. All times are local. In UTC that is 01:52, 03:23, and 04:55.
Will Uluru/Ayer's Rock see totality in 2028?
No. Uluru/Ayer's Rock is outside the path of totality, so the Sun is never fully covered. The eclipse is partial with a maximum magnitude of 0.823, and certified eye protection is required for the entire event.
Is Uluru/Ayer's Rock in the path of totality?
No. Uluru/Ayer's Rock sees a partial solar eclipse. Reaching totality means travelling into the central path that crosses inland New South Wales and the South Island of Aotearoa New Zealand.
Nearby City Guides
All City Guides
- Broome
- Alice Springs
- Bourke
- Dubbo
- Sydney
- Queenstown
- Dunedin
- Melbourne
- Brisbane
- Adelaide
- Perth
- Katoomba
- Orange
- Penrith
- Canberra
- Newcastle
- Uluru/Ayer's Rock
- Wollongong
- Wellington
- Christchurch
- Auckland
Sources
City-center timing and cloud-history notes are cross-checked against Timeanddate circumstances for Uluru/Ayer's Rock and the NASA GSFC path map.