When is the ISS visible from Myrtle Beach tonight?
Saturday morning at 12:10 AM — look NNW: it rises out of the NNW, climbs to 23° above the horizon, then vanishes into Earth’s shadow at 12:10 AM — mid-sky, not at the horizon, so don’t keep waiting when it blinks out.
ISS passes over Myrtle Beach, SC — next five days
| When | Appears | Path | Peak height | Gone by | Brightness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Saturday morning Sat, Jul 18 |
12:10 AM rises NNW |
NNW → NE → E | 23° | 12:10 AM vanishes into Earth’s shadow |
Moderate |
All times local (EDT). Peak height is degrees above the horizon — 90° is straight overhead; anything over 40° is an easy, high pass.
Times on this page are recomputed daily from the latest published orbital elements (current set is ~13 h old). With fresh elements, pass times are accurate to within a few seconds; they only drift by tens of seconds if the elements go several days stale.
Why it disappears mid-sky
The ISS has no lights of its own — what you see is reflected sunlight. You can only spot it while your sky is dark but the satellite, 250+ miles up, is still catching the sun. The moment its orbit carries it into Earth’s shadow, it fades out within seconds — often high overhead, nowhere near the horizon. Most trackers leave you staring at an empty sky; the tables here print that exact fade-out moment, computed from the same twilight math we use for rocket-launch visibility.
What you’re looking for: a very bright, steady, fast-moving point of light — brighter than any star, no blinking (that’s a plane), crossing the sky west-to-east in three to six minutes. No telescope needed; it’s one of the easiest things in the night sky to see from Myrtle Beach, even downtown.
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ISS over Myrtle Beach — FAQ
What time is the ISS visible from Myrtle Beach tonight?
The next visible pass over Myrtle Beach, SC is Saturday morning at 12:10 AM local time. Look NNW and watch it climb to 23° above the horizon; expect it to vanish into Earth's shadow at 12:10 AM, mid-sky. The full five-day table is on this page.
Why does the ISS suddenly disappear mid-sky?
The station has no lights of its own — you're seeing reflected sunlight. When its orbit carries it into Earth's shadow it fades out within seconds, often while still high overhead. The pass table on this page lists that exact fade-out moment for every pass over Myrtle Beach; most trackers don't.
How accurate are these ISS pass times?
They're recomputed every day from the latest published orbital elements. With fresh elements, pass times are accurate to within a few seconds; if the elements go several days stale they can drift by tens of seconds. Directions and peak heights barely change either way.