Best things to see in the Southern Hemisphere sky, May 2026

Best things to see in the Southern Hemisphere sky, May 2026

Find out what's in the night sky tonight from your Southern Hemisphere location.

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If you're based in the Southern Hemisphere and want to know what you can see in the night sky tonight, this page is for you.

Our monthly-updated night-sky guide will show you what you can see in the Southern Hemisphere over the coming weeks.

We'll include monthly highlights, stars, constellations, planets and deep-sky objects.

May 2026 highlights

The Eta Aquariid meteor shower is associated with Halley’s Comet and is active 19 April–28 May, peaking around 6 May.

It has swift, yellow meteors and famously persistent trains (glowing paths left in their wake). From mid-latitude Southern Hemisphere locations, the radiant lies reasonably high in the northeast (around 40°) in the predawn sky.

Sadly, 2026’s peak sees a near full Moon to the northwest in the mornings, so seeing trains may be a challenge.

Dawn conjunction of Venus, Jupiter and the Pleiades by Jonathan Green, North Shore, Auckland, New Zealand. Equipment: Canon 60Da, 28-80mm Canon lens.
Dawn conjunction of Venus, Jupiter and the Pleiades by Jonathan Green, North Shore, Auckland, New Zealand. Equipment: Canon 60Da, 28-80mm Canon lens.

Planets

Venus and Jupiter are in the northwest early evening sky. As Venus gains altitude and Jupiter heads towards conjunction, they slowly draw closer, ending May 10° apart, setting one hour after twilight ends.

Neptune and Saturn rise around 03:00 mid-month. Mars follows, having climbed out of the Sun’s glare, rising around one hour before dawn.

Mercury is briefly visible embedded in the dawn glow in early May, as it heads towards its mid-month conjunction.

Stars and constellations

After the Sun, our nearest star is Alpha Centauri, whose two first-magnitude stars are binaries in an 80-year orbit.

Their separation swings from 11 AU out to 35 AU. With an orbit highly inclined to Earth, their angular distance changes dramatically.

They sit 9.5 arcseconds apart in 2026, closing to 1.7 arcseconds in 2038, before widening to 21.8 arcseconds in 2060.

It’s remarkable to observe such stellar motion over so few years, all visible through a backyard telescope!

Omega Centauri (NGC 5139), Fernando Oliveira de Menezes, Campos do Jordão- SP – Brazil, 6 May 2021. Equipment: ZWO ASI6200MC camera, Sky-Watcher Esprit 150ED apo refractor, iOptron CEM60 mount
Omega Centauri (NGC 5139), by Fernando Oliveira de Menezes, Campos do Jordão- SP – Brazil, 6 May 2021. Equipment: ZWO ASI6200MC camera, Sky-Watcher Esprit 150ED apo refractor, iOptron CEM60 mount

Deep-sky objects

The biggest, brightest globular cluster is passing nearly overhead in the evenings: NGC 5139 (RA 13h 26.8m, dec. –47° 28’), best known as Omega (ω) Centauri.

A fourth-magnitude globular 36 arcminutes across, its dense 10-arcminute core smoothly transitions to a rich halo.

Individual stars are around 11th magnitude, so it’s resolvable – including numerous easy doubles – in any scope. The cluster has a profusion of lacy star patterns, with some star-poor lanes. An awesome object! 

Look 12° west to the close double D Centauri (RA 12h 14.0m, dec. –45° 43’), with mag. +5.8 yellow primary and mag. +7.0 white companion, 2.8 arcseconds apart. Reasonable power (100x) is needed to split this impressive pair. 

Southern Hemisphere Star Charts

Access this month's and all previous star charts for the Southern Hemisphere by clicking on the links below.

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