2/5 rating based on 46 reviews. Read all reviews for Moonrise for iPhone.
Moonrise is free iOS app published by AVIA AB
Ipod Siruis
Works great. Loads extremely fast and presents info well. Tow minor recommendations would be to add a "today" button to jump back to today went scrolling through dates. Also would be nice if the main screen list the location selected so you didn't have to jump back and forth from the map screen. Overall, I'm extremely happy and recommend it.
bwreviews
Maybe the app need location serviced to work? Did not display times for rise and set, only phase for a date. Could not pin location on world map. See MoonPhase instead.
Twiztedkini
Great concept .... If it actually worked & provided the times for moonrises.... ??
Rarr2019
Thought it was awesome till I realized the full moon calendar was wrong by two days
Repoezessed
Anyone that says it works great is lying and is probably friends with the developer. The pin me function doesn't even work, at all.
Fallconsmate
Knowing the lunar phases is good. Having a lunar tracker that is 2-3 days OFF the actual lunar phase is NOT good. Recalculate. Seriously.
Tom's nickname
I really like this app and I'm sure anybody that wants to know when the sun rises and sets will like it also. There is however a problem in that daylight saving time is not accounted for and the times are an hour off. I'm sure that it will be fixed as soon as this review is read.
Bob Bala
Too bad Moonrise can't derive the correct time zone; I'm in NY (and its map's pin is correctly on my block) but it says I'm at UTC -4 (incl. Daylight Savings Time), but it should be UTC -5. Compared to the other calculations it must do, this one seems trivial, yet it creates a gross error making it unusable. The ads work great, though, so I gave it two stars. Oh, I followed the link to support and it brought me to a page (with no contact info) that included the following: The calculations for events are accurate to a few minutes of the US Naval Observatory sun and moon calendars, and it doesn't rely on large astronomical data updates, nor on-line sites. In fact, it never accesses the Internet! So that may explain it. Nice that it doesn't need Internet access, but nicer would be if it were accurate.
Woodfur
It's great having an app that tells me when the next full moon will be and is also two days off! (See what I did there? I was being sarcastic? No?)