The next solar eclipse is due to occur in the UK around the 2080s.
The next solar eclipse in the UK area is on March 20, 2015. It will be a total solar eclipse, lasting around 2.5 minutes. However, you will only be able to view the eclipse from Faroes.However, the next solar eclipse in the actual UK is on September 23, 2090. Also a total solar eclipse, you can view best from the south-west of Cornwall.
The solar eclipse lasted just a few minutes and people from all around the world went to Plymouth to watch it as it was a one in a life time experience. If you have any more questions about the solar eclipse just ask =)
The next eclipse in which the path of totality goes through the British Isles may not occur during your lifetime, even if you live longer significantly longer than the average life expectancy and are quite young when reading this. Also, while the eclipse should be visible everywhere in England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales, it will only be total in the extreme southern portion of Great Britain (and the very southern tip of Ireland... Cork is too far north, for example). Hastings, Brighton, Southampton, and Taunton are all a few miles inside the zone of totality; anyone more than a very short distance north of a line passing through those cities will see a partial eclipse instead.Oh, the date: September 23, 2090.
March the 20th 2015!
It will roughly be on the 21st of December.
The next solar eclipse visible in England will occur on August 12, 2026. This will be a partial solar eclipse, where a portion of the Sun will be obscured by the Moon. For a more significant solar eclipse, the next total solar eclipse visible in parts of the UK will take place on September 23, 2090.
august 1999
1999 in Cornwall
A partial eclipse will occur across the UK (greater than 80% everywhere) on 20 March 2015. The next total eclipse in the UK wont be until 2090 (23rd September).
in the UK our last lunar eclipse was only 2 days ago (15th June 2011)
The next solar eclipse visible in the UK will occur on October 25, 2022. It will be a partial eclipse, with the Moon covering around 29% of the Sun's disk as seen from the UK.