Skip to content

Astrian Light

Meteor Shower Calendar 2035

The 12 major annual meteor showers with lunar conditions for 2035. Ranked by observation score to help you plan the best nights of the year.

203420352035

Top 3 nights

Ranked by combined ZHR and lunar condition score.

1
QuadrantidsQUA
Jan 3–4ZHR 12034% moon
2
PerseidsPER
Aug 12–13ZHR 15061% moon
3
GeminidsGEM
Dec 13–14ZHR 15098% moon

ZHR (Zenith Hourly Rate): the maximum number of meteors a single observer would see per hour under perfect conditions, clear dark sky with the radiant directly overhead. Real counts are usually lower.

2035 Calendar

12 major annual peaks. Color shows lunar condition: green = new moon, blue = good, amber = fair, red = full moon.

Jan
QUA
Feb
Mar
Apr
LYR
May
ETA
Jun
Jul
SDACAP
Aug
PER
Sep
Oct
DRAORI
Nov
TAULEO
Dec
GEMURS
Excellent (new moon)
Good
Fair
Poor
Very poor (full moon)

Major showers (ZHR ≥ 100)

The three highest-rate showers of the year. Worth planning well in advance.

QUAGood

Quadrantids

Dec 28 – Jan 12 · Peak: Jan 3–4

2035 conditions

34%

Last Quarter

120

ZHR

41

km/s

The Quadrantids are one of the three strongest annual showers, but their peak lasts only a few hours — missing it by a day means a fraction of the rates. In 2026 a bright waning gibbous moon rises in the evening and interferes through the best pre-dawn window.

Photography tip

Shoot from 02:00–05:00 local when the radiant in Boötes is highest. Frame northeast and accept the moon glow in the background — bright Quadrantid fireballs (magnitude 1–2) will still stand out.

Parent: 2003 EH1 (asteroid)Radiant: Boötes 15h 18m
Plan the night

* Lunar conditions estimated for 2035 using synodic formula.

PERFair

Perseids

Jul 17 – Aug 24 · Peak: Aug 12–13

2035 conditions

61%

First Quarter

150

ZHR

59

km/s

The 2026 Perseid peak lands on a new moon — 0% illumination, moonset before 21:00. This happens once every 8–10 years on average. That same afternoon, a total solar eclipse crosses Spain. Two events from a single dark-sky setup, on a single night.

Photography tip

Full guide at the Perseids 2026 article. In short: 14–20mm wide open, ISO 3200–6400, 15–25 sec exposures, intervalometer running continuously from radiant rise (~21:00) through pre-dawn. Best window 01:00–05:00.

Parent: Comet 109P/Swift-TuttleRadiant: Perseus 3h 04m
Plan the night

* Lunar conditions estimated for 2035 using synodic formula.

GEMBelow avg

Geminids

Dec 4 – Dec 20 · Peak: Dec 13–14

2035 conditions

98%

Waxing Gibbous

150

ZHR

35

km/s

The Geminids rival the Perseids for the strongest annual shower. Uniquely, they originate from an asteroid (3200 Phaethon), not a comet. In 2026, a thin 12% crescent sets before 20:00 local, leaving the entire night dark. ZHR of 150 in ideal conditions; expect 80–120 from a Bortle 4 site.

Photography tip

Geminids are visible all night — the radiant (near Castor and Pollux) rises after sunset and is highest around midnight. Medium-slow speed (35 km/s) produces well-defined streaks. A Bortle 3–4 site can yield 80–100 meteors per hour of actual sky time.

Parent: Asteroid 3200 PhaethonRadiant: Gemini 7h 28m
Plan the night

* Lunar conditions estimated for 2035 using synodic formula.

Mid-tier showers (ZHR 20–99)

Active and worth photographing, especially in years with favorable lunar conditions.

ETAExcellent

Eta Aquariids

May 6–7

50

ZHR

66

km/s

1%

Moon

Lunar condition

New MoonIdeal dark sky

A waning crescent at 24% illumination rises late and leaves most of the night dark. Eta Aquariids are fast — 66 km/s — producing long glowing trains. Best viewed from the southern hemisphere, but from Spain they are observable in the hour before dawn.

Parent: Comet 1P/Halley

Plan night

* Conditions estimated for 2035.

SDAGood

Delta Aquariids

Jul 30–31

25

ZHR

41

km/s

22%

Moon

Lunar condition

Waning CrescentGood conditions

A broad, slow-building shower best seen from the southern hemisphere. In 2026 it peaks with a waning gibbous moon at 77% illumination, making faint meteors hard to catch. Bright ones above magnitude 2 remain visible despite the light.

Parent: Comet 96P/Machholz (likely)

Plan night

* Conditions estimated for 2035.

ORIBelow avg

Orionids

Oct 21–22

20

ZHR

66

km/s

78%

Moon

Lunar condition

Waning GibbousBright fireballs only

Fast Halley debris, same parent body as the Eta Aquariids. A half-full moon at 55% illumination masks the fainter half of the display. The brighter ones above magnitude 2 — some with persistent trains — remain capturable.

Parent: Comet 1P/Halley

Plan night

* Conditions estimated for 2035.

Minor showers (ZHR < 20)

Low rates but some produce slow, bright fireballs. Good for running an intervalometer all night.

ShowerPeakZHRkm/sMoonRating
LYRLyrids
Apr 22–231849100%Plan
CAPAlpha Capricornids
Jul 30–3152322%Plan
DRADraconids
Oct 8–9102039%Plan
TAUTaurids
Nov 10–1172775%Plan
LEOLeonids
Nov 17–18157195%Plan
URSUrsids
Dec 22–23103348%Plan

How lunar conditions affect meteor photography

Meteor photography is straightforward in one sense: you leave the shutter open and wait. The hard part is light pollution, and the worst source isn’t the city on the horizon. It’s the moon. A full moon washes out anything fainter than magnitude 2, cutting your visible count by half or more. A waning crescent at 10% illumination barely matters.

The ZHR (Zenithal Hourly Rate) figures assume a perfectly dark sky with the radiant at the zenith. Real conditions rarely match that. Under a suburban sky with a first-quarter moon, expect 15–30% of the listed ZHR. That’s still enough to catch fireballs, which is what makes for a good photograph.

The observation score combines ZHR and lunar rating to rank each shower. A high-ZHR shower under a bright moon can score lower than a modest shower under a new moon. Use it as a starting point, then check the sky planner for your specific location.

Newsletter

Planning tips for your next shoot.

Monthly golden hour highlights, upcoming celestial events worth photographing, and seasonal Milky Way windows. Free, no spam.

Cancel anytime. We don't share your address.

Support this project

Built independently, no external funding. If these tools help your photography, consider supporting the project.

Support on Ko-fi (opens in new tab)

Astrian Light is in development. If you notice something that doesn't work as expected, we'd appreciate hearing about it at hello@astrian.app.

Astrian is in development. If you notice something that doesn't work as expected, we'd appreciate hearing about it at hello@astrian.app.