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Countdown
Thursday, October 22, 2026 · 134 days away
Countdown
Orionid Meteor Shower 2026 Peak
Reminders
Event overview
Peak of the Orionids — the second annual shower from Halley's Comet — with ZHR ~20 and fast meteors radiating from Orion before dawn.
Confirmation checklist
Source trail
Primary source
science.nasa.gov
Last reviewed
2026-04-30
Tracker status
scheduled
Date precision
Single-date event without a reliable public start time; date-first countdown only.
Schema posture
Event structured data is emitted because the record is single-date and scheduled or confirmed.
Primary citation
Freshness and review
Operational detail
Weak-date handling
The clock counts down to the peak of the Orionid meteor shower on the night of October 21 into October 22, 2026 — the autumn half of the annual showers caused by Halley's Comet, with a zenithal hourly rate of about 20 and a broad multi-night maximum.
The Orionids are debris shed by 1P/Halley on the outbound leg of its orbit (the Eta Aquariids being the inbound counterpart). Halley last passed perihelion in 1986 and returns in 2061, but the dust trail it has laid across millennia continues to feed both annual showers. Orionid meteors strike Earth's atmosphere at about 66 km/s — tied with the Eta Aquariids as the fastest of any annual shower — producing swift, often greenish trails.
The radiant sits just north of the constellation Orion, near the star Betelgeuse, which rises in the east around 22:00 local time at mid-northern latitudes. Unlike most showers, the Orionids have a relatively flat, broad peak — observed rates can be near maximum for three or four consecutive nights, which gives a longer observing window than narrow-peak showers like the Quadrantids.
The Orionids are also famous for occasional fireballs and for "trains" — glowing ionised channels that linger in the upper atmosphere for several seconds after the meteor itself has passed.
For 2026 the peak is the night of October 21 into October 22, with strong activity for two nights either side. The Moon is in waxing crescent phase and sets in the early evening, leaving the prime pre-dawn hours dark.
Best observing time is from about 23:00 local time onward, when Orion is high in the south-east. Lie back, give your eyes 20 minutes to adapt, and look toward the zenith rather than directly at the radiant. Expect 15–25 meteors per hour from a dark site, fewer from suburban skies.
NASA's Meteor Watch, the American Meteor Society, the IMO, EarthSky and Sky & Telescope publish predicted peak times and observer guides. The Virtual Telescope Project, Subaru's Hawaii feed and several US observatory feeds stream the peak overnight. No equipment is needed — naked-eye observation under a dark sky from about 23:00 local time onward is the standard approach.
The Orionids are paired with the Eta Aquariid meteor shower 2026, the spring Halley shower. Follow on the autumn calendar with the Leonid meteor shower 2026 and the Geminid meteor shower 2026. The Saturn opposition 2026 sits in the same observing window.
When do the Orionids peak in 2026? The night of October 21 into October 22, 2026, with a broad multi-night maximum. What is the Orionids' parent body? Halley's Comet (1P/Halley) — the same comet produces the May Eta Aquariids. How many meteors per hour will I see? About 20 from a dark site; 5–10 from suburban skies. Where should I look? Toward the zenith with the radiant near Orion rising in the east-south-east after 22:00 local time.
Date confidence
Orionid Meteor Shower 2026 Peak is tracked as a scheduled event. The date is suitable for countdown and calendar use, while final logistics should still be checked against the linked source.
Source
https://science.nasa.gov/solar-system/meteors-meteorites/orionids/Structured data posture
This page emits Event structured data because the tracked record has a single scheduled or confirmed date. The linked source remains the final reference for time, venue, and operational changes.
Countdown evidence
Retention class
Date-first scheduled countdown
Evidence score
5/10 record signals
City-page readiness
Held to date-first
Planning notes
Source reviewed Apr 30, 2026. The countdown record is intentionally labeled as scheduled or expected; use the source link and any range notes before treating the date as final.
Live values rendered at Jun 6, 5:46 AM UTC.
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