2025 CL3
2025 CL3
Current distance from Earth
94,324,202 km
245.4 lunar distances · 0.631 AU
Heliocentric orbit · live
Next close approach
2026-Sep-01
Passes 9.5 lunar distances from Earth — about 3,662,616 km, closing at 13.5 km/s.
Long-term impact monitoring
2025 CL3 is tracked on the long-term monitoring list — here’s what the numbers actually mean.
Torino scale
0 — No hazard
Cumulative impact chance
1 in 10,416
9.6e-3% across all dates
Palermo scale
-4.07
below background risk
Possible dates tracked
11
between 2064 and 2088
A Torino rating of 0 means no cause for concern, and a Palermo value of -4.07 — below zero — means the chance is lower than the background risk of a similar random impact over the same period. The headline figure is a cumulative probability spread across 11 possible dates between 2064 and 2088, so the chance on any one date is far smaller still. No impact is predicted, and objects are routinely removed from monitoring as their orbits are refined — both Apophis and 2024 YR4 were.
Orbit class
APO
around the Sun
Orbital period
1.20 yr
439 days
Diameter
30 m
roughly the height of the Statue of Liberty
Eccentricity
0.403
orbit shape
Inclination
4.8°
to the ecliptic
Discovered
—
Frequently asked questions
How close does 2025 CL3 come to Earth?
Its next notable close approach is on 2026-Sep-01, when it passes about 9.5 lunar distances from Earth — roughly 3,662,616 km. 2025 CL3 is currently about 245 lunar distances away — the live orbit and distance are shown above.
Is 2025 CL3 going to hit Earth?
No impact is predicted. 2025 CL3 is tracked on the long-term impact-monitoring list with a cumulative chance of roughly 1 in 10,416, spread across 11 possible dates between 2064 and 2088 — a very low probability. Its Torino rating is 0 (no hazard), and its Palermo value of -4.07 sits below the background level. Objects are removed from monitoring as their orbits are refined. The full impact-monitoring breakdown is shown above.
How big is 2025 CL3?
2025 CL3 is estimated at about 30 m across — roughly the height of the Statue of Liberty. Size estimates are derived from how bright the asteroid appears and refined by radar and thermal measurements when it passes close to Earth.
What kind of orbit does 2025 CL3 have?
2025 CL3 is APO object. It orbits the Sun once every 1.20 years, on an elliptical path that reaches beyond Earth’s orbit and swings back toward the Sun. The interactive orbit diagram above shows where it is right now.
Can I see 2025 CL3 through a telescope?
Most of the time 2025 CL3 is far too faint to see, but during a close approach it can brighten enough for amateur telescopes. Check the close-approach date above, then plan your night with our sky and space-weather tools.
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