Where to watch the 2028 annular solar eclipse in Ibiza: the best viewpoints and the best towns and cities
Ibiza is a Spanish island that lies inside the path of annularity: the Moon will sit over the Sun and leave a visible ring of fire. This page combines tourist viewpoints, towns and cities, and official observation points with real-terrain visibility so you can choose where to watch it.
Top 6 viewpoints(of 7 observable with Pro Planner)
Tourist viewpoints in Ibiza ranked by eclipse visibility: real horizon, magnitude and duration.
Puig des Fornas
39.0519°, 1.5155° · 401 m
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Puig des Savinar
38.8741°, 1.2286° · 105 m
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
es Racó d'en Xic
38.9607°, 1.2198° · 2 m
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Finca Cosmi
39.0736°, 1.4220° · 221 m
- Magnitude
- 0.909
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Cantera antigua
38.9708°, 1.2615° · 5 m
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Calas Pou Ses Lleo
39.0372°, 1.6076° · 7 m
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Top 9 towns and cities(of 10 observable with Pro Planner)
Towns and cities in Ibiza ranked by eclipse visibility.
Sant Carles de Peralta
39.0345°, 1.5653° · 3,195 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Cap Martinet
38.9186°, 1.4603°
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Sant Joan de Labritja
39.0789°, 1.5140° · 4,838 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Sant Antoni de Portmany
38.9807°, 1.3036° · 21,852 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Cala de Portinatx
39.1082°, 1.5172° · 554 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Es Cubells
38.8811°, 1.2724° · 908 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.909
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Santa Eulària des Riu
38.9846°, 1.5341° · 31,314 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Sant Josep de sa Talaia
38.9224°, 1.2944° · 2,341 inhab.
- Magnitude
- 0.909
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
Cami Vell de Sant Mateu
39.0143°, 1.3738°
- Magnitude
- 0.908
- Obscuration
- 82.5%
More about Ibiza
About this list
Viewpoints are sourced from OpenStreetMap. Each locality visibility score is calculated for a single point inside it, which may not be the best observing spot in that locality. Use it as broad guidance, not as a precise recommendation.
The ranking combines precise astronomical ephemerides with a digital terrain model to estimate real visibility at each point. It does not account for buildings, trees or other nearby obstructions, nor for access, safety or expected crowding on eclipse day. Always follow local authority guidance, respect authorised access and plan ahead.
