SkyAlmanac

ISS

ISS passes over Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France

Upcoming visible passes of the International Space Station over Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France. A pass is "visible" when the station is sunlit against a dark sky.

At 48.9° latitude, Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France lies under the ISS ground track — on the best passes the station crosses directly overhead.

Upcoming visible passes over Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France

Visible pass · 3:47 AM–3:57 AM · July 11, 2026
max elevation 25° · duration 240s · SW
Visible pass · 10:09 PM–10:19 PM · July 11, 2026
max elevation 64° · duration 645s · SSE
Visible pass · 11:45 PM–11:56 PM · July 11, 2026
max elevation 54° · duration 650s · N
Visible pass · 1:23 AM–1:33 AM · July 12, 2026
max elevation 66° · duration 475s · NNE
Visible pass · 2:59 AM–3:10 AM · July 12, 2026
max elevation 37° · duration 240s · SW
Visible pass · 10:58 PM–11:09 PM · July 12, 2026
max elevation 61° · duration 650s · N
Visible pass · 12:35 AM–12:46 AM · July 13, 2026
max elevation 57° · duration 520s · N
Visible pass · 2:12 AM–2:23 AM · July 13, 2026
max elevation 54° · duration 280s · SSW
Visible pass · 10:10 PM–10:21 PM · July 13, 2026
max elevation 74° · duration 650s · N
Visible pass · 11:48 PM–11:58 PM · July 13, 2026
max elevation 52° · duration 585s · N

Predictions cached 2026-07-10 21:05 UTC; refreshed automatically while you read.

Another city or date

Spotting the Space Station

The ISS looks like a bright, steady star gliding across the sky in a few minutes — no blinking lights. It is only visible when it is still catching sunlight while your sky is dark, so passes cluster in the couple of hours after dusk and before dawn.

Visibility comes in streaks: the orbit precesses, so a city gets a run of evening passes for a week or two, then a quiet spell, then a run of pre-dawn passes. If nothing is listed right now, check back within a few days.

Data: N2YO, Meeus astronomical algorithms. Updated 2026-07-10 21:05 UTC. How we calculate this

Frequently asked questions

How high in the sky does the ISS get over Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France?

Because Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France (latitude 48.9°) lies within the ISS orbit's ground track, the station can pass anywhere up to the zenith — the brightest passes go almost straight overhead.

How often can you see the ISS from Argenteuil, Île-de-France, France?

The station orbits every ~93 minutes, but you only see it when it is sunlit against a dark sky. Visible passes come in runs of several evenings or mornings every few weeks, with 1–3 sightings per night during a run.

What does the ISS look like?

A bright, steady, fast-moving star — often brighter than Venus — crossing the sky in 2–6 minutes. It does not blink; anything flashing is an aircraft.

Near Argenteuil