🌙 Moon Phases Calendar

Daily moon phase, zodiac sign, and exact UTC times for every major lunar event — April 2026

Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
1
🌕
Full Moon
Libra
2
🌕
Full Moon
Libra
🌑 02:14 UTC
🌕 02:14 UTC
3
🌕
Full Moon
Libra
4
🌖
Waning Gibbous
Scorpio
5
🌖
Waning Gibbous
Scorpio
6
🌖
Waning Gibbous
Sagittarius
7
🌖
Waning Gibbous
Sagittarius
8
🌗
Last Quarter
Sagittarius
9
🌗
Last Quarter
Capricorn
10
🌗
Last Quarter
Capricorn
🌓 04:54 UTC
🌗 04:54 UTC
11
🌗
Last Quarter
Aquarius
12
🌘
Waning Crescent
Aquarius
13
🌘
Waning Crescent
Pisces
14
🌘
Waning Crescent
Pisces
15
🌘
Waning Crescent
Pisces
16
🌑
New Moon
Aries
17
🌑
New Moon
Aries
18
🌑
New Moon
Taurus
19
🌒
Waxing Crescent
Taurus
20
🌒
Waxing Crescent
Gemini
21
🌒
Waxing Crescent
Gemini
22
🌓
First Quarter
Cancer
23
🌓
First Quarter
Cancer
24
🌓
First Quarter
Leo
25
🌓
First Quarter
Leo
26
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
Virgo
27
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
Virgo
28
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
Libra
29
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
Libra
30
🌕
Full Moon
Libra
1 Wed
🌕
Full Moon
♎ Libra
2 Thu
🌕
Full Moon
♎ Libra 🌑 02:14 UTC 🌕 02:14 UTC
3 Fri
🌕
Full Moon
♎ Libra
4 Sat
🌖
Waning Gibbous
♏ Scorpio
5 Sun
🌖
Waning Gibbous
♏ Scorpio
6 Mon
🌖
Waning Gibbous
♐ Sagittarius
7 Tue
🌖
Waning Gibbous
♐ Sagittarius
8 Wed
🌗
Last Quarter
♐ Sagittarius
9 Thu
🌗
Last Quarter
♑ Capricorn
10 Fri
🌗
Last Quarter
♑ Capricorn 🌓 04:54 UTC 🌗 04:54 UTC
11 Sat
🌗
Last Quarter
♒ Aquarius
12 Sun
🌘
Waning Crescent
♒ Aquarius
13 Mon
🌘
Waning Crescent
♓ Pisces
14 Tue
🌘
Waning Crescent
♓ Pisces
15 Wed
🌘
Waning Crescent
♓ Pisces
16 Thu
🌑
New Moon
♈ Aries
17 Fri
🌑
New Moon
♈ Aries
18 Sat
🌑
New Moon
♉ Taurus
19 Sun
🌒
Waxing Crescent
♉ Taurus
20 Mon
🌒
Waxing Crescent
♊ Gemini
21 Tue
🌒
Waxing Crescent
♊ Gemini
22 Wed
🌓
First Quarter
♋ Cancer
23 Thu
🌓
First Quarter
♋ Cancer
24 Fri
🌓
First Quarter
♌ Leo
25 Sat
🌓
First Quarter
♌ Leo
26 Sun
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
♍ Virgo
27 Mon
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
♍ Virgo
28 Tue
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
♎ Libra
29 Wed
🌔
Waxing Gibbous
♎ Libra
30 Thu
🌕
Full Moon
♎ Libra
🌑 New Moon
🌒 Waxing Crescent
🌓 First Quarter
🌔 Waxing Gibbous
🌕 Full Moon
🌖 Waning Gibbous
🌗 Last Quarter
🌘 Waning Crescent

🌑 Major Lunar Events — April 2026

Event Date Time (UTC) Moon Sign
🌑 New Moon Thu, 02 Apr 2026 02:14 UTC ♎ Libra
🌕 Full Moon Thu, 02 Apr 2026 02:14 UTC ♎ Libra
🌓 First Quarter Fri, 10 Apr 2026 04:54 UTC ♑ Capricorn
🌗 Last Quarter Fri, 10 Apr 2026 04:54 UTC ♑ Capricorn

Nobody tracks the moon because they have to. There's no committee, no algorithm nudging you toward it, no productivity guru telling you it'll improve your morning routine. People track the moon because something about it feels useful — or at least feels true — in a way that's genuinely hard to articulate.

Eight Phases. One Weird, Gorgeous Month.

Here's a thing that surprises people when they actually learn how moon phases work: it's not about which slice is lit. It's about angles. The Moon doesn't produce light — it just bounces the Sun's. And depending on where the Moon sits in its orbit relative to Earth and the Sun, you get a different proportion of that reflected shine.

At 0° of separation — New Moon — they're basically aligned. Moon rises with the Sun, sets with it. Invisible. You could look directly where it should be and see nothing. At 180° (that's the Full Moon), they're on opposite sides of the sky, which is why a Full Moon rises exactly as the Sun is setting. Most people have noticed this without actually noticing it, if that makes sense.

The in-between phases: crescents describe less than half illuminated, gibbous phases describe more than half. First and Last Quarter are the exact 90° marks — what you might casually think of as "half moon," though astronomers twitch slightly at that term. Pedantry aside, there are four cardinal points and four transitional phases. Eight signposts around a monthly loop.

Waxing Means Building. Waning Means Releasing. That's the Short Version.

Agricultural traditions across basically every continent that had agriculture noticed this. Plant seeds in waxing light. Harvest — or cut timber, or wean animals — in the waning phase. The reasoning was partly intuitive and partly empirical; farmers weren't idiots, and if planting by the moon consistently produced better yields over generations, you wrote it down and kept doing it.

Now, whether the Moon's gravitational pull on moisture in soil actually affects germination rates is... contested. Genuinely contested, not pseudo-science hand-waving. Some studies find marginal effects. Others don't. Biodynamic farmers swear by it. Mainstream agronomists mostly roll their eyes. I find the honest answer is that nobody fully knows, and that should probably make everyone a little more humble on both sides of the argument.

For astrology specifically, the waxing half (New to Full) carries the symbolic charge of building, initiating, bringing things forward into the light. The waning half (Full back to New) carries completion, release, the letting-go that makes room for whatever comes next. Simple enough that it's almost too simple. And yet — it holds surprisingly well as a framework for organizing effort and attention.

The Moon Changes Signs Every Two-and-a-Half Days (Roughly)

This is where calendars like this one become genuinely useful rather than just aesthetically pleasing. The Moon transits the full zodiac in about 27.3 days — its sidereal return — spending roughly 2.5 days in each sign. The sign colors everything happening during that transit. Not just the phase, but the flavor of the phase.

Full Moon in Scorpio hits differently than Full Moon in Gemini. Scorpio Full Moons tend toward intensity, excavation, things coming to surface that were buried. Gemini Full Moons are more scattered — productive chaos, ideas flying everywhere, communication both accelerated and unreliable. Same phase. Completely different energetic texture. That's why tracking the sign matters, not just the phase name.

A few of the sign qualities that are actually useful to know:

Aries Moon — quick, impulsive, good starting energy but poor finishing energy. Taurus Moon — slow, sensory, the best possible moment for anything that requires patient embodiment. Cancer Moon — emotionally amplified; not a great moment for detached analysis, excellent for connection and care. Capricorn Moon — pragmatic, disciplined, disproportionately productive if you can use it. Pisces Moon — dreamy, porous, the kind of days where you lose three hours without noticing and that's either a crisis or a gift depending on what you were meant to be doing.

How These Times Are Actually Calculated

The exact UTC times you see here — New Moon at 03:47, Full Moon at 14:22, that sort of thing — come from a set of astronomical algorithms first published by Jean Meeus in his book Astronomical Algorithms. It's a thick, somewhat dense volume primarily used by planetarium software developers and people who build ephemerides. The calculations account for the Moon's elliptical orbit (it's not circular — the Moon's distance from Earth varies by almost 50,000 km over the course of a month), various gravitational perturbations from the Sun and other planets, and the Moon's wobble in latitude.

The result is accurate to within a few minutes of what you'd find published by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory or the U.S. Naval Observatory. Good enough for any astrological purpose, and for most astronomical ones too.

All times are UTC. To convert: find your offset (Central European is UTC+1 in winter, UTC+2 in summer; Eastern US is UTC-5 standard, UTC-4 daylight), add or subtract. A Full Moon at 21:30 UTC is 22:30 in London during standard time and 16:30 in New York. Simple arithmetic. Less simple in practice at 10pm when you're trying to figure out if the Moon has peaked yet.

The New Moon as a Reset Point

There's something about New Moon timing that even people who aren't particularly spiritual find resonant. The idea of a monthly reset — a moment when you're starting from zero, from dark, from invisible — is one of those concepts that plugs into something real in human psychology even without requiring belief in astrology.

Journaling at New Moons. Setting intentions. Starting projects. Not because the Moon makes things happen, necessarily, but because having a recurring external marker forces a rhythm into time that it otherwise lacks. The Gregorian calendar doesn't give us much for this — dates feel arbitrary, months feel imposed. The lunar calendar has a shape to it. It curves and swells and empties in a way that's at least honest about what time actually feels like.

For those already working with astrological charts: pair this calendar with your natal chart. Each New and Full Moon falls in a different house of your chart, and that's where the monthly energy concentrates. Full Moon in your 7th house means partnerships and contracts. New Moon in your 12th means something is seeding itself in your subconscious whether you invited it or not. That's the layer where this gets genuinely interesting.