Johannesburg at 26.2°S and 1,753m above sea level is Africa's highest major city — sitting on the Highveld plateau where the atmosphere is 20% thinner than at sea level. This altitude advantage translates directly to satellite brightness: the ISS at magnitude −4 appears visibly cleaner and more vivid from Johannesburg than from coastal cities at similar latitudes. The ISS can reach 72° elevation from the Highveld plateau, and dry Highveld winter skies from May–August deliver some of Africa's most reliable satellite-watching conditions.
Evening twilight ~30 minutes after sunset. Best months: May–August — Johannesburg's legendary dry winter. Inland high altitude + zero cloud = exceptional. Avoid November–March summer rainy season when afternoon thunderstorms are daily.
🛰 SEE SATELLITES OVER JOHANNESBURG NOWThe ISS is visible from Johannesburg during twilight — roughly 25–30 minutes after sunset or before sunrise. At 26.2°S Johannesburg gets ISS passes reaching 72° elevation — and the city's 1,753m altitude means the station appears through roughly 20% less atmosphere than from a sea-level city at the same latitude. From the Northcliff ridge (the highest natural point in Johannesburg at 1,794m) you can watch the ISS rise over the northwestern horizon and arc nearly overhead against the backdrop of the dry Highveld sky. SAST (UTC+2) is maintained year-round without daylight saving.
Johannesburg can see the ISS (magnitude −4), Tiangong, Hubble Space Telescope, and AST BlueBirds. At 26.2°S Hubble reaches approximately 56° elevation — well visible from the Highveld plateau. The altitude advantage makes all satellites appear slightly brighter: at 1,753m there's 20% less atmospheric extinction, meaning a magnitude 3 satellite visible only from dark suburbs at sea level can sometimes be detected from Johannesburg's suburban parks. The Astronomical Society of Southern Africa (ASSA) has its Johannesburg Centre active in public outreach.
The Northcliff ridge in the northwest suburbs is Johannesburg's highest accessible urban viewpoint — its 1,794m elevation and open western/northern horizons make it ideal for satellite watching. Constitution Hill near the CBD has open grounds with 360° access. For dark skies, the Magaliesberg mountain range (~60km northwest, Bortle 3) is the closest quality dark-sky site and a popular destination for ASSA public nights. The Kalahari Game Reserve (~800km northwest, Bortle 1–2) represents South Africa's darkest accessible skies for serious astronomers willing to travel.
Yes — the ISS at magnitude −4 cuts through Johannesburg's light dome with ease. From the Nelson Mandela Square in Sandton or the Apartheid Museum grounds in Soweto the station is clearly visible. The altitude advantage slightly compensates for the city's light pollution — Johannesburg's limiting magnitude from suburban parks is marginally better than for a sea-level city of similar size. For BlueBirds (magnitude ~3) the open lawns of Emmarentia Dam or Delta Park provide adequate dark patches. The northern suburbs generally have lower light density than the CBD and Sandton corridor.
Exceptionally. The combination of 26.2°S latitude (strong ISS geometry at 72° max elevation) and 1,753m altitude (thinner atmosphere) makes Johannesburg one of Africa's best cities for satellite observing. The altitude advantage is real and measurable: satellites appear slightly brighter and star images sharper than at sea level. This explains why Johannesburg has historically hosted major astronomy facilities — ASSA was founded here in 1922 and the Union Observatory (now SAAO Johannesburg) operated on the Milner Park campus until the 1970s. Compare to Lagos (6.5°N) where ISS passes nearly overhead but sea-level humidity limits transparency, or Cape Town (33.9°S) where Mediterranean climate delivers clear nights but at sea level.
May through August — Johannesburg's legendary Highveld dry winter. The city averages fewer than 5 days of cloud per month in June and July, with clear blue skies day after day as the subtropical high-pressure belt anchors over southern Africa. The air is exceptionally dry — humidity regularly drops to 20–30% — and the combination of altitude and dry air gives sky transparency values comparable to professional observatory sites. November through March is the summer rainy season: afternoon thunderstorms develop almost daily over the Highveld from noon onwards, clearing overnight but often leaving residual cloud. September–October and April are transition months with variable conditions.
Johannesburg is in the coverage zone for EARENDIL-1, the first commercial space mirror from Reflect Orbital. When operational, the steerable mirror could illuminate Johannesburg during targeted passes. OrbitalSolar.ai has full pass predictions for Johannesburg →
From Johannesburg (26.2°S) you have access to a wide range of satellites: