The Messier Catalog is a collection of 110 deep-sky objects—galaxies, nebulae, and star clusters—compiled in the 18th century by French astronomer Charles Messier to help observers distinguish permanent celestial objects from comets. Because Messier observed from Paris, most of his catalog highlights objects visible in the Northern Hemisphere. While a few famous Messier objects—like the Andromeda Galaxy (M31), Orion Nebula (M42), and the Pleiades (M45)—are visible to the naked eye under dark skies, most require binoculars or a telescope to truly appreciate.
Many amateur astronomers and astrophotographers treat the Messier Catalog as a lifelong challenge, aiming to observe or photograph every single object on the list. Are you going to do the same?
The chart below shows how Messier objects are distributed in declination across the year, and the interactive tool that follows helps you explore which ones are visible from your latitude and which are highest in your sky at midnight for each month.

Explore my Interactive Messier Sky Planner
Not everyone shares the same sky. Because Earth is curved, your latitude determines how high each Messier object climbs—and some may never rise at all from where you are. This interactive planner reveals which Messier objects are visible from your location and ranks them by how high they stand at midnight in each month.
Best Messier Objects at Midnight
Pick your latitude and month to see Messier objects that actually rise sometime between −6h and +6h around local midnight. Sorted by altitude at midnight, plus a compact night chart for the Top 12.
Night chart
(Top 12 by altitude at midnight) — X: hours from midnight · Y: altitude (°)Objects rising sometime tonight — sorted by altitude at midnight ()
| Object | Type | RA | Dec | Alt @ Midnight (°) | Max Alt (°) |
|---|
Finding Deep-Sky Objects with RA and DEC
Right Ascension (RA) and Declination (DEC) are the celestial equivalent of longitude and latitude on Earth, used to pinpoint the exact position of an object in the night sky. RA measures how far east an object is along the celestial equator, expressed in hours, minutes, and seconds (since the sky appears to rotate once every 24 hours), while DEC measures how far north or south an object lies, in degrees. If your telescope is mounted on an equatorial mount, you can use the RA and DEC setting circles—or your mount’s computerized GoTo system—to align and move directly to these coordinates. To make this work accurately, your mount must first be polar aligned, meaning its RA axis is aimed precisely at the celestial pole (near Polaris in the Northern Hemisphere). Once properly aligned, tracking in RA allows your telescope to follow the object smoothly as the Earth rotates.
Finally, you’ll find the full Messier catalog, covering objects from M1 to M110. Use the search function to quickly locate any target by its Messier or NGC number, constellation, or nickname. You can also filter by object type—such as galaxies, nebulae, or clusters—and view precise RA and DEC coordinates to help your telescope mount automatically slew to the chosen object.
| Messier | NGC/IC | Type | Mag. | Right Ascension | Declination | Const | Common Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M1 | 1952 | Supernova Remnant | 8.4 | 5h 34.5m | +22° 01′ | Tau | Crab Nebula |
| M2 | 7089 | Globular Cluster | 6.5 | 21h 33.5m | -00° 49′ | Aqr | |
| M3 | 5272 | Globular Cluster | 6.2 | 13h 42.2m | +28° 23′ | CVn | |
| M4 | 6121 | Globular Cluster | 5.6 | 16h 23.6m | -26° 32′ | Sco | |
| M5 | 5904 | Globular Cluster | 5.6 | 15h 18.6m | +02° 05′ | Ser | |
| M6 | 6405 | Star Cluster | 4.2 | 17h 40.1m | -32° 13′ | Sco | Butterfly Cluster |
| M7 | 6475 | Star Cluster | 3.3 | 17h 53.9m | -34° 49′ | Sco | Ptolemy’s Cluster |
| M8 | 6523 | Nebula | 6.0 | 18h 03.8m | -24° 23′ | Sgr | Lagoon Nebula |
| M9 | 6333 | Globular Cluster | 7.7 | 17h 19.2m | -18° 31′ | Oph | |
| M10 | 6254 | Globular Cluster | 6.6 | 16h 57.1m | -04° 06′ | Oph | |
| M11 | 6705 | Star Cluster | 6.3 | 18h 51.1m | -06° 16′ | Sct | Wild Duck Cluster |
| M12 | 6218 | Globular Cluster | 6.7 | 16h 47.2m | -01° 57′ | Oph | |
| M13 | 6205 | Globular Cluster | 5.8 | 16h 41.7m | +36° 28′ | Her | Great Hercules Globular |
| M14 | 6402 | Globular Cluster | 7.6 | 17h 37.6m | -03° 15′ | Oph | |
| M15 | 7078 | Globular Cluster | 6.2 | 21h 30m | +12° 10′ | Peg | Great Pegasus Globular |
| M16 | 6611 | Star Cluster | 6.4 | 18h 18.8m | -13° 47′ | Ser | Eagle Nebula |
| M17 | 6618 | Nebula | 7.0 | 18h 20.8m | -16° 11′ | Sgr | Omega Nebula |
| M18 | 6613 | Star Cluster | 7.5 | 18h 19.9m | -17° 08′ | Sgr | |
| M19 | 6273 | Globular Cluster | 6.8 | 17h 02.6m | -26° 16′ | Oph | |
| M20 | 6514 | Nebula | 9.0 | 18h 02.6m | -23° 02′ | Sgr | Trifid Nebula |
| M21 | 6531 | Star Cluster | 6.5 | 18h 04.6m | -22° 30′ | Sgr | |
| M22 | 6656 | Globular Cluster | 5.1 | 18h 36.4m | -23° 54′ | Sgr | Sagittarius Cluster |
| M23 | 6494 | Star Cluster | 6.9 | 17h 56.8m | -19° 01′ | Sgr | |
| M24 | – | Star Cluster | 4.6 | 18h 16.9m | -18° 30′ | Sgr | Sagittarius Star Cloud |
| M25 | IC4725 | Star Cluster | 6.5 | 18h 31.6m | -19° 15′ | Sgr | |
| M26 | 6694 | Star Cluster | 8.0 | 18h 45.2m | -09° 24′ | Sct | |
| M27 | 6853 | Planetary Nebula | 7.4 | 19h 59.6m | +22° 43′ | Vul | Dumbbell Nebula |
| M28 | 6626 | Globular Cluster | 6.8 | 18h 24.5m | -24° 52′ | Sgr | |
| M29 | 6913 | Star Cluster | 7.1 | 20h 23.9m | +38° 32′ | Cyg | |
| M30 | 7099 | Globular Cluster | 7.2 | 21h 40.4m | -23° 11′ | Cap | |
| M31 | 224 | Galaxy | 3.4 | 0h 41.8m | +41° 16′ | And | Andromeda Galaxy |
| M32 | 221 | Galaxy | 8.1 | 0h 42.8m | +40° 52′ | And | |
| M33 | 598 | Galaxy | 5.7 | 1h 33.9m | +30° 39′ | Tri | Triangulum Galaxy |
| M34 | 1039 | Star Cluster | 5.5 | 2h 42m | +42° 47′ | Per | |
| M35 | 2168 | Star Cluster | 5.3 | 6h 08.9m | +24° 20′ | Gem | |
| M36 | 1960 | Star Cluster | 6.3 | 5h 36.1m | +34° 08′ | Aur | |
| M37 | 2099 | Star Cluster | 6.2 | 5h 52.4m | +32° 33′ | Aur | |
| M38 | 1912 | Star Cluster | 7.4 | 5h 28.7m | +35° 50′ | Aur | |
| M39 | 7092 | Star Cluster | 4.6 | 21h 32.2m | +48° 26′ | Cyg | |
| M40 | Win4 | Star Cluster | 8.4 | 12h 22.4m | +58° 05′ | UMa | Winnecke 4 |
| M41 | 2287 | Star Cluster | 4.6 | 6h 47m | -20° 44′ | CMa | |
| M42 | 1976 | Nebula | 4.0 | 5h 35.4m | -05° 27′ | Ori | Great Nebula in Orion |
| M43 | 1982 | Nebula | 9.0 | 5h 35.6m | -05° 16′ | Ori | De Mairan’s Nebula |
| M44 | 2632 | Star Cluster | 3.7 | 8h 40.1m | +19° 59′ | Cnc | Beehive Cluster |
| M45 | – | Star Cluster | 1.6 | 3h 47m | +24° 07′ | Tau | Pleiades |
| M46 | 2437 | Star Cluster | 6.0 | 7h 41.8m | -14° 49′ | Pup | |
| M47 | 2422 | Star Cluster | 5.2 | 7h 36.6m | -14° 30′ | Pup | |
| M48 | 2548 | Star Cluster | 5.5 | 8h 13.8m | -05° 48′ | Hya | |
| M49 | 4472 | Galaxy | 8.4 | 12h 29.8m | +08° 00′ | Vir | |
| M50 | 2323 | Star Cluster | 6.3 | 7h 03.2m | -08° 20′ | Mon | |
| M51 | 5194 | Galaxy | 8.4 | 13h 30m | +47° 11′ | CVn | Whirlpool Galaxy |
| M52 | 7654 | Star Cluster | 7.3 | 23h 24.2m | +61° 35′ | Cas | |
| M53 | 5024 | Globular Cluster | 7.6 | 13h 12.9m | +18° 10′ | Com | |
| M54 | 6715 | Globular Cluster | 7.6 | 18h 55.1m | -30° 29′ | Sgr | |
| M55 | 6809 | Globular Cluster | 6.3 | 19h 40m | -30° 58′ | Sgr | |
| M56 | 6779 | Globular Cluster | 8.3 | 19h 16.6m | +30° 11′ | Lyr | |
| M57 | 6720 | Planetary Nebula | 8.8 | 18h 53.6m | +33° 02′ | Lyr | Ring Nebula |
| M58 | 4579 | Galaxy | 9.7 | 12h 37.7m | +11° 49′ | Vir | |
| M59 | 4621 | Galaxy | 9.6 | 12h 42m | +11° 39′ | Vir | |
| M60 | 4649 | Galaxy | 8.8 | 12h 43.7m | +11° 33′ | Vir | |
| M61 | 4303 | Galaxy | 9.7 | 12h 21.9m | +04° 28′ | Vir | |
| M62 | 6266 | Globular Cluster | 6.5 | 17h 01.2m | -30° 07′ | Oph | |
| M63 | 5055 | Galaxy | 8.6 | 13h 15.8m | +42° 02′ | CVn | Sunflower Galaxy |
| M64 | 4826 | Galaxy | 8.5 | 12h 56.7m | +21° 41′ | Com | Black Eye Galaxy |
| M65 | 3623 | Galaxy | 9.3 | 11h 18.9m | +13° 05′ | Leo | |
| M66 | 3627 | Galaxy | 8.9 | 11h 20.2m | +12° 59′ | Leo | |
| M67 | 2682 | Star Cluster | 6.1 | 8h 50.4m | +11° 49′ | Cnc | |
| M68 | 4590 | Globular Cluster | 7.8 | 12h 39.5m | -26° 45′ | Hya | |
| M69 | 6637 | Globular Cluster | 7.6 | 18h 31.4m | -32° 21′ | Sgr | |
| M70 | 6681 | Globular Cluster | 7.9 | 18h 43.2m | -32° 18′ | Sgr | |
| M71 | 6838 | Globular Cluster | 8.2 | 19h 53.8m | +18° 47′ | Sge | |
| M72 | 6981 | Globular Cluster | 9.3 | 20h 53.5m | -12° 32′ | Aqr | |
| M73 | 6994 | Star Cluster | 9.0 | 20h 59m | -12° 38′ | Aqr | |
| M74 | 628 | Galaxy | 9.4 | 1h 36.7m | +15° 47′ | Psc | |
| M75 | 6864 | Globular Cluster | 8.5 | 20h 06.1m | -21° 55′ | Sgr | |
| M76 | 650 | Planetary Nebula | 10.1 | 1h 42.4m | +51° 34′ | Per | Little Dumbbell Nebula |
| M77 | 1068 | Galaxy | 8.9 | 2h 42.7m | +00° 02′ | Cet | |
| M78 | 2068 | Nebula | 8.3 | 5h 46.7m | +00° 03′ | Ori | |
| M79 | 1904 | Globular Cluster | 7.7 | 5h 24.5m | -24° 33′ | Lep | |
| M80 | 6093 | Globular Cluster | 7.3 | 16h 17m | -22° 59′ | Sco | |
| M81 | 3031 | Galaxy | 6.9 | 9h 55.6m | +69° 04′ | UMa | Bode’s Galaxy |
| M82 | 3034 | Galaxy | 8.4 | 9h 55.8m | +69° 41′ | UMa | Cigar Galaxy |
| M83 | 5236 | Galaxy | 7.6 | 13h 37m | -29° 52′ | Hya | Southern Pinwheel |
| M84 | 4374 | Galaxy | 9.1 | 12h 25.1m | +12° 53′ | Vir | |
| M85 | 4382 | Galaxy | 9.1 | 12h 25.5m | +18° 12′ | Com | |
| M86 | 4406 | Galaxy | 8.9 | 12h 26.2m | +12° 57′ | Vir | |
| M87 | 4486 | Galaxy | 8.6 | 12h 30.8m | +12° 24′ | Vir | |
| M88 | 4501 | Galaxy | 9.6 | 12h 32.1m | +14° 26′ | Com | |
| M89 | 4552 | Galaxy | 9.8 | 12h 35.7m | +12° 33′ | Vir | |
| M90 | 4569 | Galaxy | 9.5 | 12h 36.8m | +13° 10′ | Vir | |
| M91 | 4548 | Galaxy | 10.2 | 12h 35.5m | +14° 30′ | Com | |
| M92 | 6341 | Globular Cluster | 6.4 | 17h 17.1m | +43° 08′ | Her | |
| M93 | 2447 | Star Cluster | 6.0 | 7h 44.6m | -23° 52′ | Pup | |
| M94 | 4736 | Galaxy | 8.2 | 12h 50.9m | +41° 08′ | CVn | |
| M95 | 3351 | Galaxy | 9.7 | 10h 44m | +11° 42′ | Leo | |
| M96 | 3368 | Galaxy | 9.2 | 10h 46.8m | +11° 49′ | Leo | |
| M97 | 3587 | Planetary Nebula | 9.9 | 11h 14.8m | +55° 01′ | UMa | Owl Nebula |
| M98 | 4192 | Galaxy | 10.1 | 12h 13.9m | +14° 55′ | Com | |
| M99 | 4254 | Galaxy | 9.9 | 12h 18.9m | +14° 26′ | Com | |
| M100 | 4321 | Galaxy | 9.3 | 12h 23m | +15° 50′ | Com | |
| M101 | 5457 | Galaxy | 7.9 | 14h 03.2m | +54° 21′ | UMa | Pinwheel Galaxy |
| M102 | 5866 | Galaxy | 9.9 | 15h 06.5m | +55° 46′ | Dra | |
| M103 | 581 | Star Cluster | 7.4 | 1h 33.2m | +60° 42′ | Cas | |
| M104 | 4594 | Galaxy | 8.0 | 12h 40m | -11° 37′ | Vir | Sombrero Galaxy |
| M105 | 3379 | Galaxy | 9.3 | 10h 47.8m | +12° 35′ | Leo | |
| M106 | 4258 | Galaxy | 8.4 | 12h 18.9m | +47° 19′ | CVn | |
| M107 | 6171 | Globular Cluster | 7.9 | 16h 32.5m | -13° 03′ | Oph | |
| M108 | 3556 | Galaxy | 10.0 | 11h 11.5m | +55° 40′ | UMa | |
| M109 | 3992 | Galaxy | 9.8 | 11h 57.6m | +53° 23′ | UMa |