Three total lunar eclipses in a row

Gustav Nødland and Andy Ardener monitoring the eclipse images from our partners across the globe at timeanddate HQ.
©پԻ岹ٱ.dz
This will be the second total lunar eclipse this year. The first was on March 13–14 , and there is a third coming in March 2026 .
Do we ever get four total lunar eclipses in a row? Yes: this is called a tetrad—the next tetrad will occur in 2032–2033 .
In 2043–2044 there will be what we’re calling a “super tetrad:” four total lunar eclipses, plus four total or annular solar eclipses, all within a period of 18 months.
Find out more about tetrads