December 2026 Moonrise, Moonset & Phases in Santiago de Cuba, Cuba

🌑 New Moon

121234567891011
11:38:35 CST
Sunday, June 14, 2026

Current Time (Local): 11:38:35

Moon Phase: Above horizon

Illumination: 52.8%

Moon Direction: 55.57° NE

Moon Altitude: 75.31°

Moon Distance: 351,128 km


Next Moonrise: Tomorrow, 06:41

Next Moonset: N/A


Next New Moon: 14 Jun 2026, 22:54

Next Full Moon: 29 Jun 2026, 19:56

Moonrise, Moonset and Moon Phase Calendar in Santiago de Cuba, December 2026

Scroll to the right to view more

Dec Moon Moonrise/Moonset Meridian Passing
Moonrise Moonset Moonrise Time Distance (km) Illumination
1
🌗 at 01:08
-
12:28
(274° W)
  06:12
( 75.4° )
372,655 45.2%
2
00:46
(89° E)
13:03
(268° W)
  06:57
( 69.0° )
377,933 34.8%
3
01:40
(96° E)
13:37
(261° W)
  07:41
( 62.7° )
382,916 25.4%
4
02:32
(102° ESE)
14:13
(255° WSW)
  08:24
( 56.9° )
387,448 17.1%
5
03:25
(108° ESE)
14:50
(250° WSW)
  09:09
( 51.8° )
391,443 10.3%
6
04:19
(113° ESE)
15:30
(246° WSW)
  09:56
( 47.5° )
394,858 5.2%
7
05:14
(116° ESE)
16:14
(242° WSW)
  10:45
( 44.3° )
397,663 1.8%
8
🌑 at 19:51
06:09
(119° ESE)
17:02
(241° WSW)
  11:36
( 42.3° )
399,823 0.3%
9
07:02
(120° ESE)
17:53
(240° WSW)
  12:27
( 41.7° )
401,284 0.5%
10
07:52
(119° ESE)
18:46
(242° WSW)
  13:18
( 42.5° )
401,973 2.6%
11
08:38
(117° ESE)
19:39
(244° WSW)
  14:08
( 44.7° )
401,800 6.3%
12
09:20
(114° ESE)
20:32
(248° WSW)
  14:55
( 47.9° )
400,672 11.6%
13
09:59
(110° ESE)
21:24
(253° WSW)
  15:40
( 52.1° )
398,506 18.3%
14
10:34
(105° ESE)
22:15
(258° WSW)
  16:23
( 57.1° )
395,253 26.2%
15
11:08
(99° E)
23:05
(264° W)
  17:04
( 62.7° )
390,921 35.1%
16
11:41
(93° E)
23:55
(270° W)
  17:46
( 68.6° )
385,602 44.8%
17
🌓 at 00:42
  -
12:14
(86° E)
18:28
( 74.8° )
379,495 54.9%
18  
00:48
(277° W)
12:49
(80° E)
19:14
( 81.0° )
372,916 65.2%
19  
01:43
(283° WNW)
13:28
(74° ENE)
20:03
( 86.8° )
366,304 75.1%
20  
02:43
(289° WNW)
14:13
(68° ENE)
20:58
( 88.1° )
360,193 84.2%
21  
03:48
(294° WNW)
15:05
(64° ENE)
21:59
( 84.3° )
355,161 91.7%
22  
04:56
(298° WNW)
16:05
(61° ENE)
23:05
( 82.4° )
351,746 97.0%
23
🌕 at 20:28
 
06:05
(299° WNW)
17:12
(61° ENE)
Does not pass meridian
( N/A )
N/A 99.7%
24  
07:11
(298° WNW)
18:23
(63° ENE)
00:13
( 82.8° )
350,345 99.3%
25  
08:10
(295° WNW)
19:33
(67° ENE)
01:19
( 85.5° )
351,124 95.9%
26  
09:01
(290° WNW)
20:39
(73° ENE)
02:20
( 90.0° )
353,972 89.8%
27  
09:46
(283° WNW)
21:41
(80° E)
03:15
( 84.2° )
358,534 81.6%
28  
10:26
(276° W)
22:39
(87° E)
04:06
( 77.7° )
364,295 72.0%
29  
11:02
(270° W)
23:34
(94° E)
04:53
( 71.0° )
370,686 61.6%
30
🌗 at 13:59
-
11:38
(263° W)
  05:38
( 64.5° )
377,175 51.0%
31
00:28
(100° E)
12:13
(257° WSW)
  06:23
( 58.5° )
383,321 40.7%
⏱️ Time.tz

00:00:00
Sunday, June 14, 2026

Moon Phases in Santiago de Cuba — FAQ

Answers refreshed daily based on tonight's actual moon phase in Santiago de Cuba.

What is the current moon phase in Santiago de Cuba?
The moon is currently in an intermediate phase, with unspecified of its visible disk illuminated as seen from Santiago de Cuba, Cuba. The phase changes continuously through the ~29.5-day synodic cycle, advancing roughly 12.2° each day.
What time does the moon rise tonight in Santiago de Cuba?
In Santiago de Cuba, moonrise tonight is at N/A local time, and moonset is at N/A. The exact times shift by ~50 minutes later each day.
Why does the moon look different each night?
What you see is the moon reflecting the sun's light from different angles as it orbits Earth. From New Moon (0%% illuminated) it grows through First Quarter (50%%) and Full Moon (100%%) to Last Quarter (50%%) and back. Cloud cover, the moon's distance (perigee/apogee), and atmospheric refraction all subtly change how it appears.
When is the next full moon visible from Santiago de Cuba?
The next full moon is on an upcoming date. Full moons rise around sunset and set around sunrise; if the weather cooperates, any open eastern horizon in Santiago de Cuba will give a clear view at moonrise.
When is the next new moon for Santiago de Cuba?
The next new moon is on an upcoming date. New moons are invisible because the moon is between Earth and the sun; this is also the best window for stargazing, as the sky stays dark all night.
Why does the moon sometimes look orange at the horizon?
When the moon (or sun) is near the horizon, its light passes through much more atmosphere than when overhead. Air molecules scatter the blue end of the spectrum away, leaving the warmer red/orange wavelengths to reach the eye. Dust and humidity intensify the effect.

Time now in these cities:

New York · London · Tokyo · Paris · Hong Kong · Singapore · Dubai · Los Angeles · Shanghai · Beijing · Sydney · Mumbai

Time now in countries:

🇺🇸 USA | 🇨🇳 China | 🇮🇳 India | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom | 🇩🇪 Germany | 🇯🇵 Japan | 🇫🇷 France | 🇨🇦 Canada | 🇦🇺 Australia | 🇧🇷 Brazil |

Time now in time zones:

UTC | GMT | CET | PST | MST | CST | EST | EET | IST | China (CST) | JST | AEST | SAST | MSK | NZST |

Free widgets for webmasters:

Free Analog Clock Widget | Free Digital Clock Widget | Free Text Clock Widget | Free Word Clock Widget