Shooting Guide · Golden Hour

What Time Is Golden Hour Today? How to Find It Accurately

Golden hour is not simply one hour before sunset. The window shifts daily, varies by latitude and season, and can be cut short by terrain before the official sunset time.

Goldcast by LightCast
Check tonight's golden hour for your location
Exact window · Cloud cover forecast · Sunset color quality score · Blue hour timing
Enter any location. Updated daily. Free.
Check tonight's golden hour →
Free · No account required · Any location worldwide
01 · What It Is

What Golden Hour Actually Is and When It Starts

Golden hour begins when the sun drops low enough that its light travels through a thick slice of atmosphere before reaching your lens — roughly when the sun is between 6° above and at the horizon. At that angle, shorter blue wavelengths scatter away, leaving warm reds, oranges, and ambers. The result is soft, directional light with minimal harsh shadows and a color temperature between 2,000K and 3,500K.

In practical terms: golden hour typically starts 45 to 60 minutes before sunset. But that range is wide because the exact start depends on your latitude, the season, and local terrain. A photographer in Miami has a shorter, more intense window than a photographer in Oslo shooting in June. Same phenomenon, completely different experience.

The most common mistake is arriving at sunset and wondering why the light already looks flat. The warmest, most directional light usually peaks 15 to 25 minutes before the sun actually reaches the horizon. By the time the sun sets, you are already into the transition toward blue hour. Arrive early — the light builds toward that peak, it does not start at it.

Phase
Sun angle
Light quality
Best for
Pre-golden hour
10–6° above horizon
Warm, still some contrast
Landscapes, wide establishing shots
Peak golden hour
6–2° above horizon
Warmest, softest, most directional
Portraits, backlit subjects, texture
Sunset
0° (at horizon)
Maximum color, fading fast
Sky compositions, silhouettes
Civil twilight
0–6° below horizon
Pink-purple transition
Long exposure, city lights emerging
Blue hour
6–12° below horizon
Deep blue, even, no shadows
Architecture, cityscapes, long exposure
02 · Duration

How Long Golden Hour Lasts by Latitude

The sun's angle of descent through the horizon determines how long it spends in the golden range. Near the equator, the sun sets almost vertically — it crosses the critical zone quickly and golden hour can be as brief as 15 to 20 minutes. At higher latitudes, the sun cuts across the horizon at a shallower angle, dragging the transition out. At 60°N in summer, what qualifies as golden hour can extend well past 90 minutes.

Season compounds this. In winter, even high-latitude locations get shorter golden hours because the sun's path is steeper relative to the horizon than in summer. The longest golden hours in the world happen at high latitudes in summer — Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska — where the sun barely dips before rising again.

Location (approx. latitude)
Summer golden hour
Winter golden hour
Miami, FL (25°N)
~25 min
~22 min
Los Angeles, CA (34°N)
~35 min
~28 min
Denver, CO (40°N)
~45 min
~33 min
New York, NY (41°N)
~47 min
~34 min
Seattle, WA (47°N)
~60 min
~38 min
London, UK (51°N)
~75 min
~42 min
Oslo, Norway (60°N)
~90+ min
~50 min
Want the exact window for your location today? Goldcast calculates it with cloud cover and color quality included.
Check tonight's golden hour →
03 · Terrain & Weather

How Terrain and Weather Change the Window

Official sunset time is calculated for a flat horizon at sea level. Your shooting location is almost certainly not that. Mountains, ridgelines, tall buildings, and dense tree lines can end golden hour 10 to 30 minutes before the official sunset time by blocking the sun before it reaches the mathematical horizon. This is one of the most common reasons photographers arrive "on time" and find the light is already gone.

Shooting in a valley with a western ridge? The sun disappears behind that ridge early. Shooting on an east-facing cliff? You lose the light faster than someone on an open plain at the same latitude. Scouting your location in daylight — or checking satellite imagery to understand the horizon line — is as important as knowing the sunset time.

Weather changes the character of the light, not just whether you can shoot. A completely clear sky at sunset often produces less color than a sky with mid-level cloud cover. Clouds catch, scatter, and amplify the warm light — a layer of altocumulus at sunset can turn a mediocre evening into a spectacular one. The most vivid sunsets typically follow a day with moisture and variable cloud, not a perfectly clear day.

The post-sunset window

Don't pack up at sunset. The 5 to 15 minutes after the sun drops below the horizon often produce the most saturated colors, as the sky transitions through pink and purple before blue hour. If clouds are present, this is when they catch fire. The light drops fast in this window — be ready before it starts.

04 · Light Quality

What Makes a Golden Hour Worth Shooting

Knowing the time is necessary but not sufficient. Two golden hours at the same location on consecutive evenings can look completely different. These are the variables that determine quality:

☁️
Cloud cover and type
Mid-level clouds (altocumulus, altostratus) catch and amplify warm light. High cirrus clouds diffuse it softly. Ground-level fog blocks it entirely. 30 to 60% cloud cover often produces better color than a clear sky.
💧
Atmospheric particles
Dust, smoke, and humidity scatter light and intensify warm tones. After a dry windy day, the atmosphere carries more particles — sunsets are often more vivid. Wildfire smoke can produce dramatic orange light or block it entirely, depending on density.
🌬️
Wind and clearing fronts
Post-frontal evenings — the evening after a cold front passes through — produce some of the cleanest, most dramatic golden hours. The air is scrubbed, the clouds are dynamic, and the contrast between the cleared sky and remaining cloud is high.
🌡️
Season and sun angle
In winter the sun sets at a steeper angle, producing a shorter but often more intense burst of color. Summer evenings have longer, more gradual transitions. Neither is objectively better — they produce different aesthetic results.
Goldcast forecasts all of this for your location.

Cloud cover · Atmospheric quality · Sunset color score · Exact golden hour window
Check any location, any date. Free, no account required.

Check tonight's golden hour →
05 · Blue Hour

Blue Hour: What Comes After and Why It Matters

Blue hour begins when the sun drops 6° below the horizon and the sky transitions from the warm post-sunset glow to a deep, even blue. Artificial lights — city lights, streetlamps, lit windows — balance against the ambient sky light during this window, which is why blue hour is the standard for architecture and cityscape photography. There are no shadows because there is no directional light source.

Blue hour lasts roughly 20 to 40 minutes depending on latitude, ending when the sky goes fully dark. Like golden hour, it is longer at higher latitudes. Unlike golden hour, the light level drops fast — exposures that worked at the start of blue hour may need 3 to 5 stops more by the end. If you are shooting on a tripod, this is a straightforward adjustment. Handheld, you will be pushing ISO hard by the midpoint.

Practically: if you are already out for golden hour, stay for blue hour. The setup is the same, the location is the same, and the results are completely different. The two windows together give you a 60 to 90 minute shooting session that covers warm, directional landscape light through to long-exposure architectural conditions — more range than almost any other time of day.

Goldcast shows the full timeline: golden hour, sunset, civil twilight, and blue hour for your location.
See tonight's full timeline →
06 · Common Questions

Common Questions about Golden Hour Timing

What time is golden hour today?
It depends on your location and the current date. As a starting point: golden hour begins roughly 45 to 60 minutes before sunset and ends at sunset. The exact time shifts daily. Goldcast gives you the precise window for any location today, including cloud cover and color quality forecast.
How long does golden hour last?
Typically 20 to 60 minutes, depending on your latitude and season. Near the equator it can be 15 to 20 minutes. At higher latitudes like the UK or the Pacific Northwest in summer, it stretches past an hour. The usable window of warmest light is usually the final 20 to 30 minutes before sunset.
Is golden hour the same as sunset?
No. Golden hour begins before sunset and ends when the sun reaches the horizon. Sunset is the end of golden hour, not the middle. The blue hour follows immediately after, when the sky turns deep blue and artificial lights balance with ambient light.
Does golden hour happen at sunrise too?
Yes. Morning golden hour begins at sunrise and lasts roughly 45 to 60 minutes after the sun clears the horizon. Morning light tends to have better atmospheric clarity than evening because particulate and haze haven't built up through the day. The colors are typically cooler and less saturated than evening golden hour, but the light quality is often sharper.
What makes a golden hour worth shooting?
Timing alone doesn't determine quality. Cloud cover, atmospheric particles, and humidity all determine whether golden hour produces vivid color or flat grey light. A clear sky often produces less color than 30 to 60% cloud cover, where clouds catch and scatter the warm light. Checking conditions for your specific location before you drive matters as much as knowing the time.
Goldcast by LightCast
The golden hour forecast built for photographers

Sunset time is just the start. Goldcast forecasts the full window — exact golden hour start, cloud cover at your location, atmospheric quality score, and blue hour timing — so you know whether tonight is worth the drive before you leave. Free, no account required.

Check tonight's golden hour → See all LightCast tools
Continue Reading
Find out if tonight is worth shooting.

Exact golden hour window · Cloud cover · Color quality · Blue hour timing
Any location. Updated daily. Free.

Check tonight's golden hour →
or
Find the Best Sunset Near Me →