Sydney, Australia is perfectly placed for satellite spotting. The ISS, Tiangong, Hubble, and AST BlueBird satellites all pass overhead — OrbitalNodes.ai shows you exactly when and where to look, personalised to your exact location.
Evening twilight ~30 min after sunset, morning ~45 min before sunrise. Moderate — best viewing from western suburbs or Blue Mountains. Best months: April–September — longer nights, less humidity.
🛰 SEE SATELLITES OVER SYDNEY NOWThe ISS is visible from Sydney during twilight — roughly 30–60 minutes after sunset or before sunrise. Sydney's latitude of 33°S gives excellent ISS coverage with passes up to 85° elevation, nearly directly overhead, several times per week. At peak elevation the ISS takes about 6 minutes to cross the sky. Use OrbitalNodes for exact pass times and directions.
From Sydney you can see the ISS (magnitude −4, extremely bright), Tiangong (China's space station), Hubble Space Telescope, and the AST BlueBird satellites. Starlink trains from recent SpaceX launches are spectacular from Sydney's southern hemisphere vantage — the Vandenberg launch site in California sends Starlinks on trajectories that make them well-placed for Australian viewing.
Away from the CBD light dome — Centennial Park and Parramatta Park offer reasonable dark patches within the city. Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park to the north and the Royal National Park to the south give much darker skies within 45 minutes drive. The Blue Mountains (90 minutes west) are excellent for fainter satellites like BlueBirds and Hubble.
Yes — the ISS at magnitude −4 cuts through Sydney's light pollution easily. It's bright enough to see from Circular Quay or the CBD with no equipment. Tiangong is also city-visible. For BlueBirds (magnitude 3) you need to get away from direct street lighting — even a local park helps significantly.
Yes — 33°S is close to ideal. You get high-elevation ISS passes (up to 85°) which are both brighter and longer than low passes. You also have access to satellites in both high-inclination orbits (ISS, Hubble) and lower-inclination orbits that some northern cities miss. The Southern Cross and Milky Way core are also spectacular from dark Sydney suburbs.
April through September — the Australian autumn and winter months give longer nights and less humidity. Sydney summers (December–February) are warm but the longer twilight windows and humid haze can reduce visibility. Winter nights are clear and crisp with excellent transparency. The Blue Mountains in July or August offer some of the best satellite-spotting conditions in NSW.
Sydney is one of the best cities in the Southern Hemisphere for satellite spotting — and when EARENDIL-1 launches, its steerable mirror could illuminate Sydney during targeted passes. OrbitalSolar.ai has full pass predictions for Sydney →
From Sydney (33°S) you have access to a wide range of satellites — here's what's visible and what isn't: