The social platform the astronomy community deserves
Share your observations. Post your astrophotography. Find star parties near you. Connect with people who understand why you drive two hours for dark skies.
Fragmented communities
Astronomers are scattered across Reddit, Facebook groups, Discord servers, and forums that haven't been redesigned since 2005.
Photos without context
Instagram compresses your images. It doesn't know what telescope you used, where you were, or which nebula you captured. Your work deserves better.
Beginners feel lost
Expert-focused platforms intimidate newcomers. Someone who just saw Saturn's rings for the first time has no place to celebrate that moment.
What StarDrift changes
One platform for every kind of astronomer, from first telescope to deep-sky veteran.
More than just photos
Log what you observed, when, where, and with what gear. Share naked-eye sightings, sketches, and astrophotos in the same feed. Every post is a record of the sky.
Find your people, find dark skies
Discover astronomy events near you. Coordinate meteor shower watches, eclipse viewing meetups, and club gatherings. Built in, not bolted on.
Welcome whether you own a Dobsonian or a pair of binoculars
StarDrift is designed for beginners and experts alike. Celebrate your first Jupiter sighting alongside images of the Horsehead Nebula. No gatekeeping.
Your images, uncompressed
Upload high-resolution astrophotography with full metadata. Gear profiles, acquisition details, processing notes. The way it should be.
Astronomy is better when it's shared
StarDrift is being built for the millions of people who look up at the night sky and feel something. A home for that feeling, and for the community that shares it.