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🌌 Aurora Forecast

Aurora Forecast

Will you see the northern lights tonight? Here's the live Kp index and G-scale, how far south the aurora is reaching, the best viewing window — and a check for your exact location.

Tonight's Aurora Forecast
Live from NOAA SWPC · syncing…
Kp INDEX
G0 · Quiet

Loading live geomagnetic conditions from NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center…

Now
Peak · 3-day
Visible from
Checking the 3-day outlook for the best aurora window…

How Far South Can You See It?

Drag the Kp level to see how the auroral oval expands toward the equator — and which places come into view. Latitudes are approximate and assume dark, clear skies.

N POLE · 70°
Kp 3 · ~66°
    EQUATOR ↓
    3Kp
    03579

    Reading Tonight's Aurora Forecast

    An aurora forecast answers one question: is the sky over your part of the world likely to light up tonight? The single most useful number is the Kp index — a 0-to-9 scale that summarises how disturbed Earth's magnetic field is right now. When a stream of charged particles from the Sun strikes the magnetosphere, it dumps energy into the upper atmosphere near the poles, and oxygen and nitrogen atoms glow green, red and violet. The stronger the disturbance, the higher the Kp, and the further that glowing ring — the auroral oval — slides away from the pole and toward where people actually live.

    The panel at the top of this page reads the live Kp index and NOAA's three-day outlook directly from the Space Weather Prediction Center (SWPC). Two numbers matter most: the Kp right now, and the forecast peak over the next three days. A peak of Kp 5 or more (a G1 storm or stronger) is the point at which the aurora becomes a realistic target for mid-latitude observers rather than just the far north.

    What Kp You Need for Your Latitude

    The aurora is not visible from everywhere at the same Kp. What counts is your geomagnetic latitude, which can differ from your map latitude by several degrees because Earth's magnetic pole is offset from the geographic pole. The United Kingdom and much of Canada, for instance, sit at a higher geomagnetic latitude than their geographic position suggests, which is why Scotland sees the aurora more often than its latitude alone would imply.

    As a practical rule of thumb:

    KpNOAA ScaleAurora May Be Visible From
    3Iceland, northern Scandinavia, northern Canada, Alaska
    4Southern Scandinavia, Scotland, southern Canada, northern-tier US states
    5G1 — MinorNorthern England, northern Germany, New York, Chicago, Seattle
    6G2 — ModerateCentral England, the Netherlands, Oregon, Michigan
    7G3 — StrongSouthern England, northern France, Illinois, Pennsylvania
    8G4 — SevereSouthern France, northern Spain, Texas, Florida
    9G5 — ExtremeSouthern Europe and the southern US; the tropics in historic events

    These are threshold latitudes — the southern edge of where the aurora may appear low on the poleward horizon. Directly beneath the oval the display is overhead and dramatic; at the threshold it is usually a coloured glow to the north (or south, below the equator). Use the interactive explorer above to see how each level shifts the boundary.

    The Best Conditions for Aurora Watching

    A strong forecast is necessary but not sufficient — the sky has to cooperate too. Four things make or break a sighting:

    The Moon is a secondary factor: a bright full Moon can dim a weak aurora, while a new or low Moon gives the darkest possible backdrop.

    When to Look — Timing the Aurora

    Geomagnetic activity is not constant through the night. It tends to intensify around local magnetic midnight, broadly the window from about 10pm to 2am, when your location rotates under the most active part of the oval. That is the time to be outside and dark-adapted. Substorms — sudden brightenings that send curtains rippling across the sky — can erupt within minutes and fade just as fast, so patience pays: a quiet sky at 11pm can explode into activity by midnight.

    Over longer timescales, the equinox months (around March and September) are statistically the most active for geomagnetic storms, and aurora frequency rises and falls with the roughly 11-year solar cycle. Near solar maximum, strong storms that reach mid-latitudes become far more common.

    How Accurate Is an Aurora Forecast?

    Forecast confidence depends entirely on the lead time:

    In short: use the three-day outlook to decide which nights to keep free, and the live Kp and Bz data — updated continuously — as the real go/no-go signal on the night.

    💡 Orbital Radar
    The Orbital Radar Space Weather panel tracks live Kp, solar wind and storm alerts in real time, and the Space Weather hub adds a 3-day forecast, CME watch and a 72-hour history. Open the panel on the live globe and watch conditions change as a storm develops.

    Photographing the Aurora

    A camera is far more sensitive to faint aurora than the human eye, and will often record colour and structure you can barely make out. Even a faint grey arc to the naked eye can photograph as vivid green. A few starting settings for any camera with manual control (including most phones in "night" or "pro" mode):

    Aurora Forecast FAQ

    Can I see the aurora tonight?
    It depends on tonight's Kp index and your latitude. The higher the Kp, the further from the poles the auroral oval reaches. At Kp 5 (a minor G1 storm) the aurora can become visible from northern England, northern Germany and the northern United States; each higher level pushes it further toward the equator. You also need darkness, clear skies and a clear view toward the pole. Use the live panel and the location check above for your best estimate.
    What Kp index do I need to see the northern lights?
    Roughly: Kp 3–4 for the far north (Iceland, northern Scandinavia, northern Canada, Alaska); Kp 5 for southern Scandinavia, Scotland and the northern US; Kp 6–7 for central and southern England, the Netherlands and the central US; and Kp 8–9 for southern Europe and the southern US. Your geomagnetic latitude — not just your map latitude — sets the exact threshold.
    Which direction should I look?
    In the northern hemisphere, look toward the northern horizon (toward the pole). During a strong storm the aurora can fill the sky overhead, but for most viewers it appears as a glow or curtains low to the north — so a dark, unobstructed northern horizon is ideal. In the southern hemisphere, look south.
    What time of night is best?
    Activity usually peaks around local magnetic midnight, broadly 10pm to 2am, though displays can happen any time it is dark and a storm is underway. The hours either side of midnight give the best odds. You need a dark sky, so head away from city lights with a new or low Moon on long autumn-to-spring nights.
    How accurate is the aurora forecast?
    Short-range is most reliable: solar wind measured at the DSCOVR and ACE spacecraft gives about 15–60 minutes of warning before conditions reach Earth. The 3-day Kp outlook is probabilistic — it flags whether storms are likely, not their exact timing or strength. Use the outlook for planning and the live data as the real signal on the night.
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