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.
More guides

Mercury
Mercury spends most of its time immersed in the Sun’s glow, but April sees its best morning return for the year, sitting 10° above the eastern horizon at the start of dawn on 1 April, showing a phase like a three-day-old Moon.
As the month progresses, its sunlit portion grows, closing April shaped like a 10-day-old Moon.
Pre-dawn on 16 April, Mercury has an impressive naked-eye conjunction with Mars, Saturn and the thin crescent Moon, with all four fitting in a 7° circle.
Stars and constellations

The most southerly region of the Milky Way rides high in autumn, marked most famously by the Southern Cross (Crux).
Looming over it is the large constellation Centaurus, distinguished by the pointer stars Alpha (α) and Beta (β)Centauri, marking its two hooves.
When these constellations were created, Centaurus stood on the southern horizon for Mediterranean observers. Today, due to precession, the cross and its pointers no longer rise from these latitudes.
The planets
The early evening finds Venus low in the west, setting around the end of twilight.
Uranus passes it towards the end of April and is lost by month’s end. Jupiter still reigns the evening sky, transiting (due north) around sunset.
With its departure around 23:00 mid-month, the night is devoid of planets until a flurry of activity
in the predawn with the appearance of Mercury, then Mars, rising around the start of dawn.
Neptune and then Saturn join this morning gathering in mid-April.

Deep-sky objects
This month, we begin in the Sickle of the constellation Leo. Naked-eye (third-magnitude) Zeta (ζ) Leonis (RA 10h 16.7m, dec. +23° 25’) is the central star to an impressive binocular triple.
Flanking Zeta are two similar brightness (sixth-magnitude) yellow stars, 35 Leonis 0.1° to the northwest and 39 Leonis 0.3° to the southeast, the three forming a straight line.
Moving 10.5° west of Zeta, you’ll find the brilliant ninth-magnitude spiral galaxy NGC 2903 (RA 09h 32.1m, dec. +21° 30’).
Most striking is its bright, mottled oval core, extending 4 x 8 arcminutes, with a stellar nucleus. It’s surrounded by a halo that drops in brightness quickly on the shorter axis and extends much farther on the long axis, especially towards the northeast.
Southern Hemisphere Star Charts
Access this month's and all previous star charts for the Southern Hemisphere by clicking on the links below.
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart April 2026 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart March 2026 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart February 2026 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart January 2026 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart December 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart November 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart October 2025(PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart September 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart August 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart July 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart June 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart May 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart April 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart March 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart February 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart January 2025 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart December 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart November 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart October 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart September 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart August 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart July 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart June 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart May 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart April 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart March 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart February 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart January 2024 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart December 2023 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart November 2023 (PDF)
- Southern Hemisphere Star Chart October 2023 (PDF)


