| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 July 2026, Wednesday | 7:18 AM | 6:10 PM | 10h 52m |
| 2 July 2026, Thursday | 7:18 AM | 6:10 PM | 10h 52m |
| 3 July 2026, Friday | 7:18 AM | 6:11 PM | 10h 52m |
| 4 July 2026, Saturday | 7:18 AM | 6:11 PM | 10h 52m |
| 5 July 2026, Sunday | 7:18 AM | 6:11 PM | 10h 53m |
| 6 July 2026, Monday | 7:18 AM | 6:12 PM | 10h 53m |
| 7 July 2026, Tuesday | 7:18 AM | 6:12 PM | 10h 54m |
| 8 July 2026, Wednesday | 7:18 AM | 6:12 PM | 10h 54m |
| 9 July 2026, Thursday | 7:18 AM | 6:13 PM | 10h 54m |
| 10 July 2026, Friday | 7:18 AM | 6:13 PM | 10h 55m |
| 11 July 2026, Saturday | 7:18 AM | 6:14 PM | 10h 55m |
| 12 July 2026, Sunday | 7:18 AM | 6:14 PM | 10h 56m |
| 13 July 2026, Monday | 7:17 AM | 6:14 PM | 10h 56m |
| 14 July 2026, Tuesday | 7:17 AM | 6:15 PM | 10h 57m |
| 15 July 2026, Wednesday | 7:17 AM | 6:15 PM | 10h 58m |
| 16 July 2026, Thursday | 7:17 AM | 6:15 PM | 10h 58m |
| 17 July 2026, Friday | 7:17 AM | 6:16 PM | 10h 59m |
| 18 July 2026, Saturday | 7:16 AM | 6:16 PM | 10h 59m |
| 19 July 2026, Sunday | 7:16 AM | 6:17 PM | 11h 00m |
| 20 July 2026, Monday | 7:16 AM | 6:17 PM | 11h 01m |
| 21 July 2026, Tuesday | 7:16 AM | 6:17 PM | 11h 01m |
| 22 July 2026, Wednesday | 7:15 AM | 6:18 PM | 11h 02m |
| 23 July 2026, Thursday | 7:15 AM | 6:18 PM | 11h 03m |
| 24 July 2026, Friday | 7:15 AM | 6:19 PM | 11h 04m |
| 25 July 2026, Saturday | 7:14 AM | 6:19 PM | 11h 04m |
| 26 July 2026, Sunday | 7:14 AM | 6:19 PM | 11h 05m |
| 27 July 2026, Monday | 7:13 AM | 6:20 PM | 11h 06m |
| 28 July 2026, Tuesday | 7:13 AM | 6:20 PM | 11h 07m |
| 29 July 2026, Wednesday | 7:12 AM | 6:20 PM | 11h 07m |
| 30 July 2026, Thursday | 7:12 AM | 6:21 PM | 11h 08m |
| 31 July 2026, Friday | 7:12 AM | 6:21 PM | 11h 09m |
Lapaha is on the eastern shore of Tongatapu, Tonga's main island. The flat terrain leaves the horizon largely unobstructed; east-facing beaches are well positioned for Pacific Ocean sunrises, and the west coast sees the full sunset over open water.
The trilithon's lintel notch is traditionally said to mark solstice sunrise positions, making it one of the few archaeo-astronomical sunrise sites in Oceania. Located about 30 km east of Nukualofa via Taufa'ahau Road; free entry, small parking area on site.
This east-facing resort beach on the southeast coast sits at the base of a 60-step staircase cut into the cliff, about 22 km from Nukualofa near Fua'amotu Airport. The open Pacific horizon to the east is fully unobstructed; call the resort ahead to confirm day access for non-guests.
Regular boat transfers from Faua Wharf (approx. TOP 20 return, 10 minutes) reach the island's east-facing beach, which looks out over open harbor water and the reef beyond. Weekday boats depart at 11 a.m., so pre-dawn visits are not possible via the standard ferry.
A natural coral arch on the southeast coast, roughly 20 km from Nukualofa, with clifftop platforms that give westward views along the coastline. Access is free across open grassland; the cliffs are up to 30 m high with no safety railings.
The west-facing beach at Ha'atafu is Tongatapu's most consistently recommended sunset spot, about 16 km from Nukualofa. Local buses run to the village; street parking is available near the beach entrance and entry is free.
The island's west-facing shore looks back toward Nukualofa and the harbor. The last ferry typically returns around 4-5 p.m.; confirm the current schedule before planning a late-afternoon visit.
The promenade along Vuna Road runs the length of Nukualofa's northern harbor edge and faces northwest, with the offshore islands (Pangaimotu, Fafa, 'Atata) as silhouettes against the evening sky. Free access, street parking available along the entire length.