
Here you'll find links to selected suppliers of solar viewers and filters that you can be confident are safe when used properly. These include companies and organizations with which members of the AAS Solar Eclipse Task Force have had good experience as well as other companies and organizations that have demonstrated to our satisfaction that the products they're selling meet the safety requirements of the ISO 12312-2 international standard. We have intentionally randomized the order of listings within each section so as not to give an unfair advantage to companies whose names put them near the top of alphabetized lists.
If you don't see a vendor listed on this page, it does not mean their products are unsafe — with so many sellers out there, it's impossible for us to vet them all.
Important: We do not recommend searching for eclipse glasses on Amazon, eBay, Temu, or any other online marketplace and buying from whichever vendor offers the lowest price. Before you buy a solar viewer or filter online, we recommend that you make sure that (1) the seller is identified on the site and (2) the seller is listed on this page.
For instructions on how to observe the Sun safely, see our main safety page and our pages on pinhole and optical projection and viewing through optics.
Eclipse Glasses & Handheld Solar Viewers | Solar Filters for Optics | Solar Filters for Smartphones | Solar Optical Projectors
Eclipse Glasses, Handheld Solar Viewers & Solar Filter Sheets/Rolls
The following companies manufacture or import eclipse glasses, clip-on solar viewers, handheld solar viewers, and/or sheets or rolls of solar-filter material for direct viewing of the Sun's bright face. Some offer custom printing.
North American & European Manufacturers
These companies manufacture their own solar-filter film and/or use one of the other companies' films to produce eclipse glasses and/or handheld solar viewers, except as noted below.
- Absolute Eclipse (Gravitis Enterprise Limited)*
- American Paper Optics / eclipseglasses.com / Eclipser
- Flip'n Shades (clip-ons for baseball caps)
- Halo Eclipse Spectacles**
- Celestech
- Celestial Optical (EclipseGuard glasses^ | SolarShield sheets)
- Grafix Plastics (sheets & rolls, wholesale only)
- DayStar Filters
- American PaperWear (Solar Rollens viewers)
- Seymour Solar (Hyperion sheets)
- Rainbow Symphony / Eclipse Shades
- Thousand Oaks Optical
*This company manufactures its glasses in Latvia.
**This U.S. company produces innovative 3-in-1 interchangeable blue-light-blockers + sunglasses + eclipse glasses that remain wearable post-eclipse. They feature detachable, safe solar filters responsibly sourced from China that comply with the transmittance requirements of the ISO 12312-2 standard.
^This U.S. company's eclipse glasses incorporate ISO-compliant filter material that is made in the U.S. but finished, cut, and mounted in frames by a Chinese manufacturing partner.
North American Telescope Companies
These well-known companies sell branded solar viewers made for them by one or more of the manufacturers listed above.
North American Importers from Germany
These well-known companies sell solar viewers or sheets of solar-filter material made for them by long-established manufacturers in Germany.
- Alpine Astronomical (from Baader Planetarium)
- Lunt Solar Systems (from TSE17, child-size glasses available too)
Chinese Manufacturers
- Hangzhou Retsing Eyewear Co., Ltd. (wholesale only)
- Jaxy Optical Instruments Co., Ltd. (wholesale only)
- Shenzhen Lionstar Technology Co., Ltd. (wholesale only)
- Shenzhen Shihui Tongda Technology Co., Ltd. (selling both wholesale and retail [direct to consumers] and shipping from North American warehouses)
Other Sources of Solar Viewers
What if you received eclipse glasses or a handheld solar viewer from a relative, friend, neighbor, or acquaintance? If that person is an amateur or professional astronomer — and astronomers have been handing out eclipse viewers like Halloween candy lately — they're almost certainly ISO-compliant, because astronomers get their solar filters from sources they know and trust (for example, the ones listed on this page). Ditto for professional astronomical organizations (including college and university physics and astronomy departments) and amateur-astronomy clubs.
If you bought or were given eclipse viewers at a science museum or planetarium, or at an astronomy trade show, again you're almost certainly in possession of ISO-compliant filters. As long as you can trace your filters to a manufacturer listed above, you have nothing to worry about. What you absolutely should not do is search for eclipse glasses on the internet and buy whatever pops up in the ads or search results. Buy from one of the sources listed on this page.
Solar Filters for Telescopes, Binoculars & Camera Lenses
Solar filters for optics are meant to go over the aperture, i.e., the front opening, and should be used only by experienced observers. We have intentionally randomized these listings so as not to give an unfair advantage to companies whose names put them near the top of alphabetized lists. Be sure to read our safety tips before using solar filters with optics!
- Alpine Astronomical (Filter Sheets / Mounted Filters)
- NiSi Lens Filters
- Astronomy Plus
- Astrozap
- All-Star Telescope
- Explore Scientific
- Seymour Solar
- Baader Planetarium
- Celestial Optical Sundara Lens Filters
- Astro-Physics, Inc.
- Astronomics
- High Point Scientific
- Thousand Oaks Optical
- Agena Astro
- Marumi Lens Filters / Argraph Division, Unique Photo
- Svbony Optics
- ICSTARS Astronomy
- Rainbow Symphony
- East Fox Studio
- Galileo Optics
- Woodland Hills Camera & Telescope
- Spectrum Telescope
- Kosmos Scientific
- Telescopes Canada
- Celestron
- DayStar Filters
- Datyson / Shengzhen Datyson Trading Company Ltd.
- Khan Scope
- Mile High Astronomy
- B&H Photo & Video
- Kendrick Astro Instruments
- APM Telescopes
- Ontario Telescopes & Accessories
Warning: Solar filters designed to thread into an eyepiece at the back end of the telescope — where you put your eye — are dangerous; sunlight concentrated by your optics could destroy it and injure your eye in a flash — literally. If you have such a filter, such as the example shown at right, discard it. We'll say it again: A solar filter must be attached to the front of your telescope, binoculars, or camera lens.
To find telescopes and binoculars specially made for observing the Sun, see the Special-Purpose Solar Binoculars & Telescopes section of our Telescopes & Binoculars page.
Solar Filters for Smartphones
The following products include safe solar filters and Velcro or other fasteners that enable you to temporarily secure a filter over the lens(es) of your smartphone camera.
- Solar Snap (Doug Duncan & American Paper Optics; made in the U.S.)
- This is the first such product to appear on the market. Using the accompanying Solar Snap app, which is available for free in versions for iPhones and Android phones, you can easily choose appropriate exposure settings to shoot photos of the uneclipsed or partially eclipsed Sun through the included solar filter. You can use the app to capture images of the totally eclipsed Sun, too, but you'll need to remove the filter during totality or your images will be blank.
- SafeShot (Grafix Arts / Grafix Plastics; made in the U.S.)
- Made of heavy-duty cardboard, this product has two solar filters: a dark visual filter that you can look through and a lighter filter for your smartphone's camera; this means you can take pictures and view the Sun at the same time. Instructions on the SafeShot website explain how to use your phone's native camera app or a third-party camera app to dial in the appropriate exposure settings. Thanks to the light photographic filter, you should be able to capture images of the inner corona during totality without having to detach your smartphone from the device.
- Smartphone Camera Filter (VisiSolar; made in China)
- This is like Solar Snap (see above) but without the app, i.e., just a solar filter that covers your smartphone's camera lenses. Of course, you can use the free Solar Snap app with it if you wish. You must remove the filter if you want to shoot any pictures during totality! The filter is only for use during the partial phases of the eclipse or when no eclipse is happening. Sources of a similar device: East Fox Studio, Tember Camera Solar Filter / Rezos LLC.
- Cell Phone Solar Viewer (Solares, LLC; made in China)
- Like SafeShot (see above) but made of lighter-weight cardboard, this product includes two solar filters so that you can shoot photos and view the Sun with your eyes at the same time. But in this case both filters are dark enough for visual use, so you'll have to disconnect your smartphone from the cardboard if you want to shoot images during totality. With all such products, advance experimentation on the uneclipsed Sun and the full Moon (which is about as bright as the totally eclipsed Sun) is the key to successful imaging, whether using the Solar Snap app (which will work with any of these products), your smartphone's native camera app, or a third-party camera app. Other sources of similar devices: Absolute Eclipse; Solar Eclipse International, Canada.
- Like SafeShot (see above) but made of lighter-weight cardboard, this product includes two solar filters so that you can shoot photos and view the Sun with your eyes at the same time. But in this case both filters are dark enough for visual use, so you'll have to disconnect your smartphone from the cardboard if you want to shoot images during totality. With all such products, advance experimentation on the uneclipsed Sun and the full Moon (which is about as bright as the totally eclipsed Sun) is the key to successful imaging, whether using the Solar Snap app (which will work with any of these products), your smartphone's native camera app, or a third-party camera app. Other sources of similar devices: Absolute Eclipse; Solar Eclipse International, Canada.
Solar Optical Projectors
The following devices are used for indirect solar observation. They use lenses and mirrors to project an image of the Sun onto a white surface. In other words, you don't look through them — you look at them. Be sure to read our safety tips before using a solar optical projector!
- Sunspotter (Starlab / Science First)
- Solarscope (Solarscope USA)
- Build-It-Yourself Safe Solar Viewer (T. R. Richardson, College of Charleston, SC)
And check out the Sun Funnel, an inexpensive do-it-yourself projection device that works with a small telescope to provide a safe solar viewing experience for groups. Download a free PDF with detailed instructions for making and using one.
