Seasons

Earth experiences four seasons: spring, summer, fall, and winter. This happens because our planet is tipped on its axis and the two poles point to the same directions in space all year.

Different colored leaves. Photo by Chris Lawton (https://unsplash.com/photos/c0rIh0nFTFU)

Upcoming Equinox and Solstice Events at Griffith Observatory

Summer occurs on the hemisphere that is tipped toward the Sun. The Sun is high in the sky, and the days are longer. The hemisphere tilted away from the Sun experiences winter. The Sun is lower in the sky, and days are shorter. The seasons change on predictable schedules, which are listed below (times for Los Angeles).

2025

Spring equinox 2:01 a.m. PDT March 20
Summer solstice 7:42 p.m. PDT June 20
Autumn equinox 11:19 a.m. PDT September 22
Winter solstice 7:03 a.m. PST December 21

2026

Spring equinox  7:46 a.m.  PDT  March 20
Summer solstice 1:24 a.m. PDT  June 21
Autumn equinox  5:05 p.m.  PDT  September 22
Winter solstice  12:50 p.m.  PST  December 21

2027

Spring equinox  1:25 p.m.  PDT  March 20
Summer solstice 7:11 a.m. PDT  June 21
Autumn equinox  11:02 p.m. PDT  September 22
Winter solstice  6:42 p.m.  PST  December 21

2028

Spring equinox  7:17 p.m.  PDT  March 19
Summer solstice 1:02 p.m.  PDT  June 20
Autumn equinox  04:45 a.m. PDT  September 22
Winter solstice  12:19 a.m. PST  December 21

2029

Spring equinox  1:02 a.m. PDT  March 20
Summer solstice 6:48 p.m. PDT  June 20
Autumn equinox  10:38 a.m.  PDT  September 22
Winter solstice  6:14 a.m. PST  December 21

2030

Spring equinox  6:52 a.m. PDT  March 20
Summer solstice 12:31 a.m. PDT  June 21
Autumn equinox  4:27 p.m.  PDT  September 22
Winter solstice  12:09 p.m.  PST  December 21