The next full moon is the Strawberry Moon on Mon, June 29 2026 at 23:58 UTC — 20 days away. There are 13 full moons in 2026. All times are UTC, computed with the Meeus astronomical algorithm.
| Full moon | Date | Time (UTC) |
|---|---|---|
| 🌕 Wolf Moon | Sat, January 3 | 10:04 UTC |
| 🌕 Snow Moon | Sun, February 1 | 22:10 UTC |
| 🌕 Worm Moon | Tue, March 3 | 11:39 UTC |
| 🌕 Pink Moon | Thu, April 2 | 02:13 UTC |
| 🌕 Flower Moon | Fri, May 1 | 17:24 UTC |
| 🌕 Blue Moon | Sun, May 31 | 08:46 UTC |
| 🌕 Strawberry Moon | Mon, June 29 | 23:58 UTC |
| 🌕 Buck Moon | Wed, July 29 | 14:37 UTC |
| 🌕 Sturgeon Moon | Fri, August 28 | 04:20 UTC |
| 🌕 Harvest Moon | Sat, September 26 | 16:50 UTC |
| 🌕 Hunter’s Moon | Mon, October 26 | 04:13 UTC |
| 🌕 Beaver Moon | Tue, November 24 | 14:55 UTC |
| 🌕 Cold Moon | Thu, December 24 | 01:29 UTC |
The new moon is the opposite of the full moon — the Moon sits between Earth and the Sun and its lit side faces away from us, so it is invisible. New moons in 2026: Jan 18, Feb 17, Mar 19, Apr 17, May 16, Jun 15, Jul 14, Aug 12, Sep 11, Oct 10, Nov 9, Dec 9.
Each month’s full moon has a traditional name from North American and European folklore — January’s Wolf Moon, June’s Strawberry Moon, October’s Hunter’s Moon, and so on.
A Blue Moon is the second full moon in a single calendar month — it happens because the 29.53-day lunar cycle is slightly shorter than most months. 2026 has 13 full moons, so there is a Blue Moon this year.
A Supermoon is a full moon that occurs when the Moon is near its closest point to Earth (perigee), making it look slightly larger and brighter. The full moon dates above are calculated to the minute in Universal Time (UTC) using the standard Meeus algorithm.