Komarov is a lunar impact crater that lies across the southeastern edge of Mare Moscoviense, on the northern hemisphere of the far side of the Moon.
The northern rim of Komarov bulges outwards into the mare, giving the crater a pear shape.
The regions around the northeastern and southern rims are rugged and uneven, and the crater floor in between has been resurfaced by lava flows that have completely submerged the western third of the interior.
This surface is marked by a pattern of multiple rilles that run primarily in a north–south direction, but are cracked like a drying mud bed.
The northwestern rim has an outer rampart where it slopes down to the plain of the neighboring mare.