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International Space Station: Best Photos Taken Above Earth in 2025

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  • 2025 marked 25 years of nonstop human presence on the International Space Station.
  • Photos shared by NASA show what life looked like 250 miles above Earth this year.
  • Astronauts photographed the northern lights, hurricanes, lightning, rivers, and city streets.

In the 25 years since the first permanent crew docked at the International Space Station, fewer than 300 people have experienced what life is like there, 250 miles above Earth.

The rest of us can only imagine it.

So, for NASA astronauts like Don Pettit, taking photographs of our planet while aboard the ISS is a way to share the experience with people on the ground.

“It’s a labor of love,” Pettit said of his photography in an interview from space in December 2024. “That’s what astronauts spend a lot of their off-duty time doing: doing imagery, collecting the photographs that go with the memories to tell the story of what it’s like up here.”

In 2025, NASA shared thousands of photographs of Earth taken by its astronauts from the International Space Station.

The powerful images captured weather events from above, including deadly hurricanes and lightning strikes. Others showed the pinks and greens of the northern lights and what sunrises look like from space.

While there are challenges in taking photos from the ISS — the multiple layers of windows, for example, cause reflections that need to be overcome — there are benefits as well.

Large camera setups, like Pettit’s 800-millimeter telephoto lens and solar filter, would be cumbersome in a place with gravity.

“There are things we can do up here that would make many photographers envious when they’re mounting their heavy gear on stout tripods,” Pettit said.

Take a look at some of the most awe-inspiring images of Earth taken by astronauts aboard the International Space Station in 2025.

This year, 25 astronauts lived at the ISS to conduct research and complete maintenance. They also took thousands of photos.


Astronaut Anne McClain on the International Space Station in May 2025.



Astronaut Anne McClain during a space walk to upgrade the ISS’s power generation system and adjust an antenna for communications in May 2025.

NASA

From 250 miles above Earth, they witnessed jaw-dropping sights, such as the northern lights stretching across the horizon.




Clouds cover the Gulf of Alaska beneath the aurora borealis in March 2025.

NASA

Astronaut Don Pettit captured the Milky Way behind Earth’s atmospheric glow.




Pettit, who returned to Earth in April, used a camera with long-duration settings to take this image of the Milky Way from the ISS on January 29, 2025, according to NASA.

NASA/Don Pettit

“Photographs help complete the story of what it means for human beings to expand into space and expand into this frontier,” Pettit said.




The Milky Way was photographed in August 2025.

NASA/JAXA

This long-exposure photo by astronaut Nichole Ayers shows mesmerizing, illuminated arcs of star trails.




The photo was taken over 31 minutes in July 2025.

NASA/Nichole Ayers

Using a handheld camera, Ayers also captured neon northern lights above the Indian Ocean.




The photo was taken as the ISS soared 269 miles above Australia and Antarctica in June 2025, NASA reported.

NASA/Nichole Ayers

Her image of lightning above Milan looks like something out of a movie.




Lightning above Milan as seen from the ISS in July 2025.

NASA/Nichole Ayers

“I’m still amazed by every sunrise and every sunset that I get to see,” Ayers told Denver7. “I try to take as many pictures as I can so that we can share it with you all.”




New Year’s Day dawning on Cuba in January 2025.

NASA

Their views are incomprehensible to us on Earth. Here, they saw an orbital sunset — the last rays of the sun as the ISS slipped into Earth’s shadow.




The ISS’ Harmony module and robotic arm were photographed in front of an orbital sunset while above the southern Indian Ocean in August 2025.

NASA

Some of the views are far more recognizable, such as the (upside-down) boot of Italy next to the island of Sicily.




The boot of Italy and Sicily as seen from the ISS in September 2025.

NASA

Another unmistakable sight: Dubai’s manmade islands in the Persian Gulf.




Dubai’s manmade islands were visible from the International Space Station in June 2025.

NASA

The sands of the Sahara Desert in Libya were seen behind an extending robotic arm in August.




The ISS’ Harmony module, with its robotic arm and hand, is seen above the Saharan Desert in August 2025.

NASA

Another photo looks down on Mount Damavand. At more than 18,000 feet, it’s the highest peak in Iran and the highest volcano in Asia.




Mount Damavand, a dormant stratovolcano in Iran, was photographed from the ISS in May 2025.

NASA

Also visible from space is the Manicouagan crater, caused by a 3-mile-wide asteroid that crashed into what is now Quebec 214 million years ago.




The ISS flew over the Manicouagan crater in Quebec, Canada, in January 2025.

NASA

The lights of the Nile River, leading to Cairo, were captured as the ISS orbited 259 miles above Earth in July.




The Nile River was photographed from the International Space Station at 1:32 a.m. local time.

NASA

The river was also visible by day, as the ISS soared above the Mediterranean Sea.




The ISS above the Red Sea (right) and the Nile River (left) in September 2025.

NASA

An image shows the British Isles, upside down and brightly lit, with the northern coast of France in the background.




The bright lights of London are visible from the International Space Station in September 2025.

NASA

Astronauts also captured multiple scenes across the US, from Phoenix…




Phoenix from the International Space Station in May 2025.

NASA

… and the San Francisco Bay Area …




The photograph taken by Ayers shows San Francisco, Oakland, and San Jose in August 2025.

NASA/Nichole Ayers

… to the fields of Kansas.




Fields in Great Bend, Kansas, were seen from the International Space Station in August 2025.

NASA

The Florida peninsula was captured in the early hours of a March morning …




The Florida peninsula and the eastern coast of the US from the ISS in March 2025.

NASA

… and during the day. Here, the tip of Florida is visible between Cuba and the Bahamas.




Florida (center), Cuba (left), and the Bahamas (right) seen from the ISS in May 2025.

NASA

Astronauts were witnesses to disasters that wreaked havoc on American communities, such as the Los Angeles wildfires in January.




Astronaut Don Pettit took images of smoke from the Los Angeles fires on January 10, 2025.

NASA/Don Pettit

Impending disasters were also visible from space, such as Typhoon Halong, which inflicted devastation on Western Alaska in October.




The swirling clouds of Typhoon Halong, seen as a Category 4 storm south of Japan.

NASA

They saw Hurricane Melissa, one of the most powerful Atlantic hurricanes on record, before it battered the Caribbean.




This image of Hurricane Melissa’s eye was captured as the ISS orbited south of Jamaica in October 2025.

NASA

Cyclone Alfred lurked near the coast of Queensland, Australia, several days before it crossed the mainland.




Cyclone Alfred, which drenched Brisbane, was photographed from the ISS on March 3, 2025.

NASA

Pettit said witnessing life-changing events with such a wide field of view “really changes the perspective of what you see.”




Resembling a chiaroscuro painting, clouds were illuminated by lightning during a storm off the coast of North Carolina in May 2025.

NASA

The incredible photos add to the more than 7 million images that astronauts have sent back from the ISS since the first crew docked in 2000.




A Southeast Asian sunrise seen from the International Space Station in March 2025.

NASA

Source: Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth

The photos are valuable for monitoring changes on Earth and for aiding in disaster response.




Sunshine bounces off the Atlantic Ocean in March 2025.

NASA

In November, NASA celebrated 25 years of “continuous human presence” aboard the ISS. Operations are scheduled to end around 2030.




The main solar arrays of the ISS looked violet as it orbited above New Zealand in September 2025.

NASA

For now, astronauts’ front-row seat to Earth gives us a new perspective on life on our planet.




A waxing gibbous moon was photographed over the Atlantic Ocean in October 2025.

NASA

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