Sunrise and Sunset in Los Angeles, United States
Today the sun rises in Los Angeles at and sets at , giving 14h 25m of daylight.
Times shown in America/Los_Angeles · PDT · UTC-07:00
Twilight phases
Mon, Jun 15, 2026Twilight is the period before sunrise and after sunset when the sky is lit by scattered sunlight. There are three phases, each defined by how far the sun is below the horizon.
- Sunrise
- Solar noon
- Sunset
Sun direction and altitude
The sun rises in the east and sets in the west — but the exact compass direction shifts with the seasons. At the solstices the difference can be 50° or more.
Sun path over the day
A polar view of the sun's path across the sky today as seen from Los Angeles. The outer ring is the horizon; the centre is directly overhead.
Los Angeles on the map · sun bearings today
Los Angeles, United States
- Sunrise05:42
- Sunset20:07
- Daylight14h 25m
- Sunrise bearing61°
- Sunset bearing299°
- Continent
- Americas
- Country
- United States
- City
- Los Angeles
- Population
- 3.8M
- Elevation
- 89 m
- Coordinates
- 34.05°, -118.24°
Longest and shortest day of 2026
The earth's tilt makes the day length swing through the year. In Los Angeles these are the extremes for 2026.
Time zone and daylight saving
Yearly extremes
Day length throughout 2026
The length of the day across the entire year in Los Angeles. Solstices are the peaks and troughs; equinoxes are the 12-hour crossings.
Los Angeles sunrise calendar — June 2026
A full month of sunrise, sunset, twilight, and solar-noon times for Los Angeles. Scroll horizontally on mobile to see all columns.
| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Daylight | Diff | Civil dawn | Civil dusk | Solar noon | Noon alt. | Rise dir. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1Mon | 14h 16m | — | 78.0° | 63° ENE | |||||
2Tue | 14h 17m | +1m | 78.2° | 62° ENE | |||||
3Wed | 14h 18m | +1m | 78.3° | 62° ENE | |||||
4Thu | 14h 19m | +1m | 78.4° | 62° ENE | |||||
5Fri | 14h 20m | +1m | 78.5° | 62° ENE | |||||
6Sat | 14h 20m | +1m | 78.6° | 62° ENE | |||||
7Sun | 14h 21m | +1m | 78.7° | 62° ENE | |||||
8Mon | 14h 22m | +1m | 78.8° | 62° ENE | |||||
9Tue | 14h 22m | +1m | 78.9° | 61° ENE | |||||
10Wed | 14h 23m | +1m | 79.0° | 61° ENE | |||||
11Thu | 14h 23m | 0m | 79.0° | 61° ENE | |||||
12Fri | 14h 24m | 0m | 79.1° | 61° ENE | |||||
13Sat | 14h 24m | 0m | 79.2° | 61° ENE | |||||
14Sun | 14h 24m | 0m | 79.2° | 61° ENE | |||||
15MonToday | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.3° | 61° ENE | |||||
16Tue | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.3° | 61° ENE | |||||
17Wed | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.3° | 61° ENE | |||||
18Thu | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
19Fri | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
20Sat | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
21Sun★ | 14h 26m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
22Mon | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
23Tue | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
24Wed | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.4° | 61° ENE | |||||
25Thu | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.3° | 61° ENE | |||||
26Fri | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.3° | 61° ENE | |||||
27Sat | 14h 25m | 0m | 79.3° | 61° ENE | |||||
28Sun | 14h 24m | 0m | 79.2° | 61° ENE | |||||
29Mon | 14h 24m | 0m | 79.2° | 61° ENE | |||||
30Tue | 14h 24m | 0m | 79.1° | 61° ENE |
Sunrise & sunset in other United States cities
Sunrise and sunset for other cities in United States.
Frequently Asked Questions
Today's day length in Los Angeles is 14h 25m, with 0 min longer than yesterday compared to yesterday.
The longest day of 2026 in Los Angeles is June 21, with 14h 26m of daylight.
The shortest day of 2026 in Los Angeles is December 21, with 9h 53m of daylight.
Today the sun rises 61° east of north in Los Angeles (approximately ENE) and sets at 299° (WNW).
Yes. Los Angeles uses America/Los_Angeles, with the next DST transition on November 1, 2026.
Civil twilight covers the sun between 0° and 6° below the horizon; nautical twilight is 6° to 12°; astronomical twilight is 12° to 18°. After astronomical twilight the sky is fully dark.
Earth's rotational axis is tilted about 23.5° relative to its orbit, so as the planet circles the sun each hemisphere faces toward the sun for part of the year and away for the other. That tilt is why days grow longer around each summer solstice and shorter around each winter solstice — the effect is strongest near the poles and vanishes at the equator.
Data source
Times computed with the NOAA / SunCalc solar-geometry model. Sea-level horizon is assumed; local terrain and buildings may shift actual times by several minutes.
Sunrise JSON API https://worldstats.org/api/sunrise/los-angeles-us
Updated: