When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission.The full moon pictured glowing in the night sky. | Credit: Photo by Dilara Irem Sancar/Anadolu via Getty ImagesTear your eyes away from fireworks this New Year’s Eve (Dec. 31) to witness a magnificent natural light show, complete with twinkling constellations and star clusters, the steady light of planets and the awe-inspiring sight of the waxing gibbous moon shining in the constellation Taurus.The moon will be visible halfway up the eastern horizon in the hours following sunset, with the delicate light of the Pleiades open star cluster vying for attention 5 degrees — roughly the width of your three middle fingers held at arm’s length — to the upper right of the 95%-lit lunar disk.AdvertisementAdvertisementLook directly below the moon to find the stars of the constellation Orion twinkling close to the eastern horizon. The brightest point of light to Orion’s left is no star at all, but rather the “king of the planets,” Jupiter. On the final night of 2025, Jupiter shines in the constellation Gemini, close to its two brightest stars — Castor and Pollux.Saturn’s steady light can also be seen shining halfway up the southern horizon around this time. A telescope with an aperture of around 6 inches will help reveal its famous rings as a thin line bisecting the planet’s cloud tops. The rings are currently oriented edge-on to Earth, but will gradually open up throughout 2026 to reveal their majestic, sweeping structure, including a 2,980-mile (4,800-kilometer) gap known as the Cassini Division.The night sky looking east after sunset on New Years Eve | Credit: Created by Anthony Wood in CanvaBy midnight, Saturn will have slipped below the horizon, while the moon and Jupiter will stand high overhead. Look roughly 40 degrees above the northern horizon — approximately the width of four clenched fists stacked on top of each other — to find the bright star Polaris, around which the entire sky appears to rotate. To its r …