Once in a blue moon

What Is a Blue Moon?

The second full moon in a calendar month — and the reason "once in a blue moon" means almost never. What it really is, why the Moon isn't actually blue, and every blue moon through 2028.

Short answer
A blue moon is the second full moon in a single calendar month. It happens roughly every 2.5 years, because the 29.5-day lunar cycle occasionally lets two full moons fit in one month. The next blue moon is May 31, 2026. The Moon does not actually turn blue — the name is about rarity and an old calendar quirk, not colour.

Upcoming blue moons

DateTypeNote
May 31, 2026Monthly2nd full moon in May (1st was May 1)
Dec 31, 2028Monthly2nd full moon in December — a New Year's Eve blue moon
Aug 21, 2029Seasonal3rd of 4 full moons in one astronomical season
Sep 30, 2031Monthly2nd full moon in September

Monthly vs seasonal blue moon

There are two definitions. The monthly blue moon — the second full moon in a calendar month — is the one everyone uses today. The seasonal blue moon — the third full moon in an astronomical season that contains four instead of the usual three — is the older, original meaning from the Maine Farmers' Almanac. The monthly version became dominant after a 1946 Sky & Telescope article accidentally simplified the seasonal rule; the mistake stuck and is now the popular standard.

Why "blue"?

The colour is a red herring. The most accepted origin traces "blue" to the old English "belewe", meaning "to betray" — a "betrayer moon" was an extra full moon that disrupted the calendar of religious fasts like Lent. Over centuries "belewe moon" drifted into "blue moon". The Moon can rarely look genuinely blue when wildfire smoke or volcanic ash (famously after Krakatoa in 1883) fills the air with particles of just the right size to scatter red light — but that optical effect has nothing to do with the calendar blue moon.


Frequently asked questions

How often does a blue moon happen?
On average about every 2.5 to 3 years. That irregular, infrequent rhythm is exactly why "once in a blue moon" means "very rarely".
Can a blue moon be a supermoon or a blood moon too?
Yes — these are independent and can stack. A blue moon near perigee is a "super blue moon"; if it's also eclipsed, the press calls it a "super blue blood moon". Such triple alignments are decades apart.
Is a blue moon astronomically special to look at?
No — it looks exactly like any other full moon. A blue moon is a calendar coincidence, not a physical change in the Moon. It's culturally special, not visually.

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