Here’s the latest on where to see the Lyrid meteor shower.
- Visibility: The Lyrids are best seen from the Northern Hemisphere, with higher radiant elevation in the pre-dawn hours around Lyra near Vega. Expect around 10–20 meteors per hour under dark skies, with potential outbursts on some years.[1][4]
- Peak window: In 2026, the peak is around the night of April 22 into the early hours of April 23, with moonlight not heavily interfering due to a dim crescent moon; this improves how many faint meteors you can catch.[4][1]
- Best viewing tips for Los Angeles (your location):
- Head to a dark site away from city lights, such as a clear hillside or parklands outside the urban core.
- Plan for after midnight local time, when the radiant in Lyra climbs higher in the sky, and the sky is darker.
- Allow your eyes 15–20 minutes to adapt to darkness; avoid bright screens to keep night vision.
- Bring a lawn chair, warm clothing, and a wide-view of the sky (no need to focus on a single star).
- Check local weather and moonrise times for the specific night you plan to observe; if the crescent Moon is low or set early, you’ll have darker skies and better counts.
Illustrative example: On peak nights, you might see a meteor roughly every 3–6 minutes under good conditions, with occasional brighter fireballs if debris hits a larger fragment.
Would you like a concise one-page viewing checklist tailored to a specific date you’re free to watch (e.g., April 22 or 23, 2026), or a short-weather-ready plan for your usual observing spot in Los Angeles? I can also point you to local astronomy clubs or star-gazing sites near your area.
Sources
The Lyrids are back in April 2026! Find the peak time, where the meteor shower is visible, and the best local hours to watch – plus a quick checklist to catch the most “shooting stars.”
starwalk.space22 April 2026: The Lyrid meteor shower reaches its peak. – In-The-Sky.org.
in-the-sky.orgThe Lyrid meteor shower is visible now and peaking soon, here's how to spot it
www.edexlive.comThe Lyrids are back! Here's where to look and how to spot these shooting stars.
www.space.comNEW YORK (AP) — This year’s Lyrid meteor shower is getting a boost thanks to a dim crescent moon. Skywatchers could see 10 to 20 shooting stars per hour soar across the spring sky, according to NASA, when the fiery display peaks Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. The show will be visible across the globe, but views will be best in the Northern Hemisphere. And there’s no risk of the crescent moon photobombing the Lyrid shower. It’ll set before…
ground.newsDiscover the Lyrid Meteor Shower 2026 peaking April 21-22 with 10-15 meteors per hour. Best viewing tips, moon phase, history and embedded videos for this ancient spring sky event.
www.crystalwind.caThe Lyrid meteor shower returns to the sky, on Tuesday night. Here's where and how to catch a glimpse of the cosmic show.
www.cnn.comThe best night to catch the "shooting stars" in action is on Tuesday - here's how to spot them.
news.stv.tvThe Lyrid meteor shower is expected to bring fiery streaks to the night sky. The shower peaks Tuesday night into Wednesday morning. Ten to twenty meteors are generally visible per hour. The show will be visible across the globe, but views will be best in the Northern Hemisphere. Meteor showers happen when Earth plows through debris trails left behind by space rocks. To see the Lyrids, go outside after midnight and look to the northeastern sky. Avoid looking at your phone to let your eyes get...
www.ajc.com