Pleiades occultation
Pleiades Lunar Occultation · 14 November 2027
The Pleiades lunar occultation on 14 November 2027 — a waxing Moon within 0.5° of the Seven Sisters. When and where to watch, plus a starseed practice.
- Peak
- November 14, 2027
- Visibility
- Northern Hemisphere · evening sky
- Lineage
- Pleiadian
The pleiades occultation (nov) of 2027 is the Moon sliding in front of the Seven Sisters on 14 November 2027 — one of the year's closest passes, the lunar disk gliding within 0.5° of the cluster and occulting its brightest stars. Best seen in the evening sky from the Northern Hemisphere, it is a quiet, binocular-friendly meeting worth circling on your sky calendar.
What is a Pleiades lunar occultation
An occultation happens when one body passes directly in front of another from your line of sight. Here the Moon crosses the Pleiades, the open star cluster also called the Seven Sisters, in the constellation Taurus.
As the Moon advances, its leading edge covers cluster stars one at a time. Each star vanishes in an instant — no fade, just a clean blink — because the Moon has no atmosphere to blur the moment. Hours later, stars reappear along the trailing edge.
In November 2027 the geometry is unusually tight. A waxing Moon threads within half a degree of the cluster core, so northern observers catch several bright members winking out and returning. That precision is what makes this pleiades occultation (nov) 2027 a standout among the year's repeated passes.
This is plain astronomy, the same mechanics published in any almanac. You can hold the wonder of it without inflating it — the sky is generous enough on its own.
When and where to see it · Northern Hemisphere · evening sky
Mark the night of 14 November 2027. The event favors the Northern Hemisphere, and the cluster sits high enough after dark to watch from a balcony, a field, or a dark window.
Here are the key facts to plan around:
- Date: 14 November 2027
- What happens: Waxing Moon passes within 0.5° of the Pleiades, occulting bright cluster stars
- Best region: Northern Hemisphere
- Best time: Evening sky, after full dark once the Moon clears the horizon haze
- Gear: Binoculars or a small telescope; visible to the naked eye but far richer magnified
- Lineage tone: Pleiadian
Find the bright Moon low in the east-northeast, then look for the small misty knot of stars crowded right beside it. The exact minutes of each disappearance shift with your latitude and longitude, so check a local planetarium feed for your city.
For the wider rhythm of the season, the November 2027 events brief lists what else shares the month, and the 2027 sky overview shows where this pass sits in the whole year's arc.
The Seven Sisters in starseed lore
Few stars carry as much story as the Pleiades. Cultures across every continent named them — sisters, doves, a hen and chicks, a gateway — and starseed teaching folds that long human attention into its own mythos.
In that lore the cluster is the home frequency of the Pleiadian lineage: heart-centered healers, gentle and emotionally fluent, said to seed compassion and embodiment on Earth. Pleiadian is one of the seven canonical paths mapped across the lineage atlas, and the Seven Sisters are its emotional north star.
The mythic and historical threads are gathered in the snapshot on the Pleiades origins, where channeled material is named as channeling rather than dressed as fact. That honesty matters. You can love a star story and still know which parts are measurable and which are felt.
If the cluster has always tugged at you — a pull you cannot quite explain — the gentle resonance journey can mirror that back without handing you a cosmic verdict.
What this occultation means spiritually
Among Pleiadian-resonant seekers, a close pass like this is often read as a pleiades occultation (nov) spiritual meaning moment: a brief window when the Moon, ruler of tides and moods, briefly cradles the Sisters and seems to carry their tone closer to Earth.
When the Moon covers the Sisters, the invitation is not to chase a signal — it is to soften enough to notice you were never far from it.
The deeper symbolism is explored in the Pleiades spiritual meaning, and most of it points the same direction: less doing, more receiving. An occultation is a covering, a small eclipse of starlight — fitting imagery for turning inward as the northern year darkens.
Hold the meaning lightly. The astronomy is fixed; the felt sense is yours to interpret. Naming both planes — sky event and inner motion — keeps your discernment clean and keeps the practice kind.
Pleiadian transmission window — how to receive
Some teachers describe a "transmission" as light-codes or downloads arriving when the cluster is close. Treat that as soul-language, not a literal broadcast you must decode under pressure.
What helps most is regulation before symbolism. A settled nervous system receives more than an anxious one chasing significance.
- Arrive early — step outside before the Moon meets the cluster and let your eyes adapt to the dark for ten minutes.
- Name three real things — the cold air, the Moon's brightness, the small smudge of stars beside it; sensation steadies the mind.
- Soften the chest — breathe four counts in, six counts out, until your shoulders drop.
- Receive, don't grasp — if an image or feeling surfaces, note it; if nothing comes, the night is still complete.
This is the same posture suggested for the year's earlier passes, like the January occultation and the tender February occultation — each a softer rehearsal for November's close meeting.
Practice for the night of the event
You do not need ceremony to honor this. Sixty sincere seconds outdoors counts as much as an hour of staging.
- Watch first. Trace the cluster with binoculars and try to catch one star blinking out behind the lunar edge. The patience itself is the practice.
- Journal one line. What did the covering and uncovering bring up — anything you have been hiding even from yourself?
- Rest, then close. End with a single grounded act: water, warmth, sleep. Pleiadian energy rewards tenderness over spectacle.
Skip any framing that shames rest or replaces medical care; a star pass is not a cure, and no portal owes you a crisis. Confirm your local weather and the Moon's rise time before claiming a clouded-out sky cheated you.
When the night is done, set the pleiades occultation (nov) starseed entry aside and let it settle. Compare notes later against what actually unfolded in your weeks — correction sharpens intuition far more than flawless prophecy ever could.
Frequently asked questions
When is the Pleiades occultation in November 2027
The Pleiades lunar occultation falls on 14 November 2027, when a waxing Moon passes within 0.5° of the Seven Sisters and occults bright cluster stars — one of the year's closest passes, best viewed in the evening sky from the Northern Hemisphere.
What is a Pleiades lunar occultation in plain language
It is the Moon drifting directly in front of the Pleiades star cluster, so the Moon's edge briefly covers individual stars one by one. From Earth it looks like the Sisters blinking out and returning along the lunar limb.
Where can I see the November 2027 occultation
It favors the Northern Hemisphere in the evening sky. Look east-northeast after dark, find the bright waxing Moon, and watch the cluster crowded just beside it — binoculars sharpen the disappearances enormously.
What does the Pleiades occultation mean for starseeds
Many Pleiadian-resonant seekers treat a close pass as a felt transmission window — a cue for heart-opening, rest, and gentle intention. Hold that as inner language beside the measurable astronomy, not as a literal forecast.
Adjacent in the calendar
Related cosmic events.
Other pleiades occultations this year, or events of the same lineage.
Continue the atlas
Explore the seven lineages
Each lineage carries a different frequency, a different mission, a different shadow. Read the line that lands first — that's the one your soul came from.

You are here
Alcyone · Seven Sisters
Pleiadian
“You cry when others are hurting — even strangers. The world feels too sharp.”
AirBoundaries
Sirius A & B
Sirian
“Pyramids, temples, old libraries — they don't feel like history. They feel like memory.”
WaterEmotional release
Boötes · Arcturus
Arcturian
“You see the pattern before others see the problem. Your mind runs hot, your heart runs cool.”
ÆtherHeart connection
M31 · Andromeda Galaxy
Andromedan
“You've never quite committed to one place. Or one path. Or one person who didn't get it.”
SpaceEarthly rooting
Vega · Lyra
Lyran
“You've been leading since you were small. People look to you. You sometimes wish they wouldn't.”
FireRestlessness
Orion's Belt
Orion
“You hold the dark and the light without choosing. Others find that unsettling. You find it true.”
EarthEgo integration
Mintaka · Orion
Mintakan
“You remember a place that doesn't exist on any map. You've spent your life looking for the way back.”
LightCosmic homesickness
Continue the journey
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