How many hours of daylight in summer in the Northern Hemisphere

Regardless of where you live, you almost certainly enjoy the benefits of a greater length of daylight in the summer months. If you live in the Northern Hemisphere, summer runs from late June to late September; in the Southern Hemisphere, summer occupies the same period winter does north of the equator, late December through late March. This increase in summer sunlight results from a combination of increasingly earlier sunrises and ever-later sunsets.

Why does the planet experience more sunlight in the summer and correspondingly less in the winter? The answer combines basic geometry with basic astronomy, though not in the way you may think.

Astronomical Factors Determining Length of Daylight

Earth, on average, is about 93 million miles (150 million kilometers) from the sun. The shape of the orbit is not a circle but an ellipse, so the Earth comes as close to around 91 million miles to the sun in January and strays as far as about 95 million miles in July.

Clearly, however, it is not this variation that makes the summer months warmer and better-lit than the winter months. Instead, the seasons in their entirety result from the Earth being tilted by 23.5 degrees from a line perpendicular to its orbital path around the sun. This tilt always "points" in the same direction with respect to the sun, whereas the Earth completes a circuit around it over the course of a year. This means that, instead of every part of the planet getting 12 hours of sun and 12 hours of darkness every throughout the year, as would occur if the Earth's rotation were perpendicular to its orbital plane, every location (except for the equator itself) experiences more daylight than darkness in the summer. Furthermore, this imbalance becomes more pronounced with increasing distance from the equator (and hence proximity to the poles). In the Northern Hemisphere, June is the sunniest month overall, and December correspondingly the darkest.

You may have heard of the Arctic Circle, a line of latitude circling Earth 66.5 degrees north of the equator (or 23.5 degrees south of the North Pole) and the Antarctic Circle, the Arctic Circle's similarly located counterpart in the Southern Hemisphere. The significance of these imaginary boundaries is that regions closer to the poles than these experience around-the-clock sunlight for a month or more beginning with the onset of summer, called the summer solstice. This is because the tilted axis of Earth's rotation points directly toward the sun on this date, and small portions of the planet do not completely rotate out of the sun's rays until some time has passed. The number of summer solstice hours of daylight is at its peak on this day everywhere on Earth.

At the end of summer, on the autumnal (fall) equinox that takes place on September 21 or 22 in the Northern Hemisphere, the axis or rotation points neither toward nor away from the sun. This has the effect for one day of the Earth not being tilted on its axis at all, and everywhere on Earth receives 12 hours of sunlight and 12 hours of darkness. This also occurs on the vernal (spring) equinox six months later, when the amount of daily sunlight has been increasing from its annual minimum for three months rather than decreasing.

Geographical Examples

A number of websites, including a page operated by the U.S. Navy (see Resources), integrate these principles and allow you to quickly determine how much sunlight a given location receives on every day of the year. For example, if you enter Portland, Oregon, U.S.A., which has a latitude of just over 45 degrees and is hence just over halfway to the North Pole from the equator, you find that the city is lit for 15 hours and 41 minutes at the time of the summer solstice and for 8 hours and 42 minutes at the time of the winter solstice six months later, meaning that the timing of an Oregon sunset can vary by about three and a half hours. More northerly cities show the same pattern, but a greater amplitude between maximum and minimum amounts of sunlight across the seasons.

Average length of day in Canberra

How many hours of daylight in summer in the Northern Hemisphere

      sunshine duration       twilight phase

Sunrise and sunset in the most important cities of Australia

How many hours of daylight in summer in the Northern Hemisphere
The cities are ordered by their geographic position from east to west, so in an approximate direction of the sun's course. Since the orbit around the sun is elliptical, sunrise or sunset never happen on a whole longitude at the same time. All data given for December 3rd., localtime in Australia


Differences of the northern and southern hemisphere

The time course of sunrises and sunsets shows that the seasons here are reversed to those in the northern hemisphere. The longest days are in December and the shortest in June. The distance to the equator and especially the direction of the equator is crucial. Because the course of the sun "oscillates" between the tropics around the equator. Thus, the seasons in the southern hemisphere are exactly opposite to those in the northern hemisphere.
Australia is considered one of the southernmost regions of the earth, although the distance to the equator is not even that great. Australia lies between the 10th and 43rd southern latitude. Therefore, Australia is on average only slightly closer to the equator than the USA.

Sunset at Ayers Rock

The photo motif of the "Uluru", the red island mountain Ayers Rock at sunset is certainly world-famous. The impressive spectacle in the heart of Australia is caused by the dust particles in the air of the desert region, which influence the scattering of the light. Due to high temperatures and thus an increased amount of particles, Uluru appears deep red in the evening. Already before sunset it stands out in the evening sun as a red mountain; this is further enhanced by the already reddish colored sandstone.

Sunrise and sunset by month (Canberra)

Where does the sun rise in Australia?

The sun always rises in the east, everywhere and regardless of the country or continent. The easternmost city in Australia is Byron Bay in the state of New South Wales. There, the sun rises at 5:38 am and sets at 7:31 pm these days. The latest sunset is currently experienced in the west in the city of Carnarvon (Western Australia) at 19:03.

Duration of the sunset

The distance from the equator and the path of the sun determines not only the time of sunrise and sunset. The farther a country is from the equator, the more oblique the sun's path is to the horizon, causing sunset to last for a different duration. Canberra lies on the 35th degree of southern latitude and is therefore quite far away from the equator. While a sunset near the equator lasts only about 20 minutes, in Australia, this period averages 31 minutes. In June, it's about 29 minutes in Canberra, while in December it's 33 minutes.

International cities for comparison


How many hours of daylight does the Northern Hemisphere get?

All northern locations have more than 12 hours of daylight. All locations south experience less than 12 hours of daylight. Locations above the Arctic Circle (north of 66.5 degrees latitude; 90 degrees minus the tilt of Earth's axis) receive 24 hours of sunlight.

Which country has 24 hours daylight in summer?

Svalbard is the place in Norway where the midnight sun occurs for the longest period. Here, the sun doesn't set between 20 April and 22 August.

How many hours of daylight does the North Pole get in summer?

The North Pole stays in full sunlight all day long throughout the entire summer (unless there are clouds), and this is the reason that the Arctic is called the land of the "Midnight Sun"*.

What state has the longest daylight hours in summer?

According to the World Meteorological Organization, Yuma (Arizona) is the sunniest place on earth. It has a total of 11 hours of sunlight in winter and up to 13 in summer. This means Yuma experiences an average of 4,015 hours of sunshine per year. At first this sounds fantastic.