San Juan, Texas Moon Phase Tonight
Tonight’s new moon over San Juan — moonrise, moonset, illumination, and how good the view will be.

Rendering: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio
- Phase
- New Moon
- Illumination
- 1%
- Moonrise
- 5:52 AM
- Moonset
- 7:24 PM
Skies are likely to spoil the view; check the forecast close to the night.
- 1% illuminated
- supermoon — larger, brighter disc
- overcast (83% cloud)
Why the moon phase changes
The Moon doesn’t make its own light — we see the half lit by the Sun. As it orbits Earth over about 29.5 days, the angle between the Sun, Earth and Moon changes, so the lit fraction we can see waxes from a thin new-moon sliver to a full disc and wanes back again. The phase shown above for San Juan is computed from the Moon’s position for the city’s exact coordinates.
Moonrise drifts roughly 50 minutes later each night, which is why the Moon keeps a different schedule than the Sun. Near full moon it rises around sunset and is up all night; near new moon it rises and sets with the Sun and is lost in the glare.
Frequently asked
- What is the moon phase in San Juan tonight?
- Tonight's moon phase for San Juan — its name and the percentage of the disc that's lit — is shown at the top of this page, updated from astronomical phase data. The Moon runs through its eight phases over a roughly 29.5-day cycle, from new moon (dark) through full moon (fully lit) and back.
- What time does the moon rise in San Juan tonight?
- Tonight's moonrise and moonset times for San Juan are listed above in local time, computed for the city's exact coordinates. Moonrise shifts roughly 50 minutes later each night, so the Moon climbs the sky on a different schedule than the Sun.
- Why does the moon look bigger near the horizon?
- That's the Moon illusion: the Moon's actual size in the sky barely changes, but the brain reads it as larger when it sits low behind foreground landmarks than when it's high overhead. It looks the same in a photo taken at both heights.
- What is a supermoon?
- A supermoon is a full (or new) moon that happens near perigee — the closest point of the Moon's slightly oval orbit, around 360,000 km or less. A perigee full moon looks a little larger and noticeably brighter than an average full moon.
- When is the next full moon visible from San Juan?
- The next full moon date is shown above, with a link to its dedicated page. A full moon rises around sunset and is visible all night, weather permitting; the moon-viewing score factors in tonight's local cloud cover.
More for San Juan
The next full moon is the Strawberry Moon on June 29, 2026. See the full 2026 full moon calendar, or tonight’s San Juan sunset & twilight times.
Moon phase nearby in Texas
- Alamo2 mi
- North Alamo2 mi
- Pharr3 mi
- Lopezville4 mi
- South Alamo4 mi
- Murillo5 mi