Daytime moon: Why can we sometimes see the moon in broad daylight?

The daytime moon is visible almost every day of the month, except those closest to the full moon and the new moon. Here's why the moon and sun often share the daytime sky.

The nearly-full daytime moon hangs dimly in a blue sky near clouds
The daytime moon can be visible for most of the month. Why do the moon and sun share the daytime sky?
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The moon's presence in the night sky has transfixed people for millennia. But why is the moon sometimes visible during daylight?

We sometimes see the daytime moon for the same reason we see it at night — it is reflecting light from the sun — and its closeness to Earth makes it brighter than the daytime or nighttime sky. After the sun, the moon is by far the brightest celestial object we can see.

Martin McGuigan
Live Science Contributor

Martin McGuigan is an Irish writer based in Norwich, England. His work has appeared in The Mays XIX, Cabinet of the Heed and SHE magazine. His writing explores the bizarre questions of everyday life, the mysteries of human psychology, and environmental issues. He studied English literature at the University of Cambridge and creative writing at the University of East Anglia.