| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 July 2026, Wednesday | 4:52 AM | 7:24 PM | 14h 32m |
| 2 July 2026, Thursday | 4:52 AM | 7:24 PM | 14h 31m |
| 3 July 2026, Friday | 4:52 AM | 7:24 PM | 14h 31m |
| 4 July 2026, Saturday | 4:53 AM | 7:24 PM | 14h 30m |
| 5 July 2026, Sunday | 4:53 AM | 7:23 PM | 14h 29m |
| 6 July 2026, Monday | 4:54 AM | 7:23 PM | 14h 29m |
| 7 July 2026, Tuesday | 4:55 AM | 7:23 PM | 14h 28m |
| 8 July 2026, Wednesday | 4:55 AM | 7:23 PM | 14h 27m |
| 9 July 2026, Thursday | 4:56 AM | 7:22 PM | 14h 26m |
| 10 July 2026, Friday | 4:56 AM | 7:22 PM | 14h 25m |
| 11 July 2026, Saturday | 4:57 AM | 7:22 PM | 14h 24m |
| 12 July 2026, Sunday | 4:57 AM | 7:21 PM | 14h 23m |
| 13 July 2026, Monday | 4:58 AM | 7:21 PM | 14h 22m |
| 14 July 2026, Tuesday | 4:59 AM | 7:21 PM | 14h 21m |
| 15 July 2026, Wednesday | 4:59 AM | 7:20 PM | 14h 20m |
| 16 July 2026, Thursday | 5:00 AM | 7:20 PM | 14h 19m |
| 17 July 2026, Friday | 5:01 AM | 7:19 PM | 14h 18m |
| 18 July 2026, Saturday | 5:01 AM | 7:19 PM | 14h 17m |
| 19 July 2026, Sunday | 5:02 AM | 7:18 PM | 14h 16m |
| 20 July 2026, Monday | 5:03 AM | 7:18 PM | 14h 14m |
| 21 July 2026, Tuesday | 5:04 AM | 7:17 PM | 14h 13m |
| 22 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:04 AM | 7:16 PM | 14h 12m |
| 23 July 2026, Thursday | 5:05 AM | 7:16 PM | 14h 10m |
| 24 July 2026, Friday | 5:06 AM | 7:15 PM | 14h 09m |
| 25 July 2026, Saturday | 5:06 AM | 7:14 PM | 14h 07m |
| 26 July 2026, Sunday | 5:07 AM | 7:14 PM | 14h 06m |
| 27 July 2026, Monday | 5:08 AM | 7:13 PM | 14h 04m |
| 28 July 2026, Tuesday | 5:09 AM | 7:12 PM | 14h 03m |
| 29 July 2026, Wednesday | 5:09 AM | 7:11 PM | 14h 01m |
| 30 July 2026, Thursday | 5:10 AM | 7:10 PM | 14h 00m |
| 31 July 2026, Friday | 5:11 AM | 7:09 PM | 13h 58m |
Tehran sits at 1,200 m elevation on the southern slopes of the Alborz Mountains. The steep terrain difference between north and south Tehran, combined with mostly clear skies from May to October, provides excellent conditions for watching sunrise and sunset.
At 3,740 m elevation, this is the highest accessible viewpoint near Tehran. The telecabin runs from Velenjak (north Tehran) and the first cabin departs at 8:30 AM, so reaching Station 7 for sunrise requires hiking up the evening before or staying at the mountain shelter. Unobstructed eastern horizon over the Alborz range.
A recreational complex at the top of Chamran Expressway in north Tehran, around 1,800 m elevation. Free access to the surrounding trails at any hour. Faces east with a wide panorama over the city and the plains beyond.
A hillside park in the Niavaran neighborhood, built on natural rock formations at 1,650 m. Opens at 7 AM (earlier in summer). Terraced stone paths lead to elevated platforms with a clear eastern view. Entry is free, nearest metro is Tajrish (Line 1), then 10 minutes by taxi.
The open-air observation deck at 315 m height gives a full 360-degree view. Opens at 9 AM, so sunrise viewing is only possible with special event tickets or from the surrounding Milad Park area at ground level.
The large open square around the tower provides a low, flat horizon to the east. The tower museum opens at 9 AM, but the surrounding Azadi Square is accessible at all hours. Metro station Azadi (Line 4) is directly adjacent.
A 270 m long, three-level pedestrian bridge connecting Taleghani Park to Ab-o-Atash Park. The upper deck faces west with unobstructed views toward the Azadi Tower skyline. Open 24 hours, free access. Nearest metro station is Shahid Haghani (Line 3), about 600 m walk.
An artificial lake in District 22, western Tehran. The western shoreline promenade stretches about 2 km and faces directly into the sunset. Pedal boats available until dusk (around 50,000 IRR). Accessible via Iran Mall or the Chitgar metro station on Line 6.
The enclosed observation deck on the 12th floor offers floor-to-ceiling windows facing west. Standard ticket costs around 500,000 IRR. Last entry is one hour before closing at 9 PM, which works well for sunset most of the year.
From the east side of Azadi Square, the sun sets directly behind the iconic tower silhouette during the equinox weeks in March and September. A popular spot for photography, with the tower framed against the western sky.