Aurora borealis over Iceland
Planning

Aurora Season:
When to Actually Book

Most people book in December. The data says March is better. Here is the science, the destinations, and the practical guide.
8 min read Travel Guide By Arcticlyn

December is the most popular month to book an aurora trip. It has the longest nights, the most marketing around it, and an obvious appeal as a holiday destination. It is also, statistically, not the best month to see the northern lights. The highest aurora activity occurs around the equinoxes — a pattern driven by physics, documented over 50 years of geomagnetic data, and directly relevant to every trip you plan to Iceland, Norway, Finland, or Canada.

Why equinoxes produce
more aurora activity

In 1973, physicists C.T. Russell and R.L. McPherron published research explaining why geomagnetic activity peaks around the spring and autumn equinoxes. The mechanism — now called the Russell-McPherron effect — involves the orientation of the sun's magnetic field (carried by solar wind) relative to Earth's own magnetic field.

At equinoxes, Earth's axial tilt causes the Bz component of the interplanetary magnetic field to align most favorably with Earth's magnetosphere. When Bz points southward, it connects with Earth's northward-pointing field at the poles, opening a pathway for solar wind particles to flow in. The equinoxes are when this alignment is geometrically most favorable — twice per year, consistently, regardless of where we are in the solar cycle.

The result, visible in 50+ years of geomagnetic data: September–October and February–March produce statistically higher Kp index readings than any other time of year. December, despite its long nights, sits in the quieter mid-cycle period between the two peaks.

"The equinox effect is not a myth. It is documented in every geomagnetic dataset since the 1970s."

— Based on Russell & McPherron, 1973
Practical implication: Long nights help — but they don't cause aurora. A clear night in late September or early March with good geomagnetic conditions will outperform a cloudy December night, however dark.

2025–2026 is an
exceptional window

Aurora activity is ultimately driven by the sun. Every 11 years, solar activity moves through a cycle from minimum to maximum — and the current cycle, Solar Cycle 25, has significantly exceeded predictions. NOAA's Space Weather Prediction Center forecast a peak sunspot number of 105–125. The actual count exceeded 200 — nearly double.

Solar Cycle 25 reached its peak in October 2024 and continues to produce elevated activity into 2026. The practical consequence: aurora displays are more frequent, reach lower latitudes than usual, and are visually more intense than during a typical solar maximum. Kp 5+ storms (G1 class, visible in Iceland and northern Norway) have occurred significantly more often than in the previous cycle.

Trips planned for the aurora season of 2025–2026 are happening during one of the most active solar periods in more than a decade. This window will not repeat for another 11 years.

Solar Cycle 25 in Numbers
200+
peak sunspot count (forecast: 105–125)
Oct '24
solar maximum reached
11 yrs
until next comparable cycle peak
G1–G5
storm classes recorded in 2024–2025

Best months by
destination

Aurora probability, sky clarity, and travel costs vary significantly between destinations. Here is what the data shows for the four main aurora zones.

Iceland
Reykjavík · Akureyri · 64°N
Best monthsSep · Oct · Mar
Aurora seasonSep – Apr
Cloud cover riskHigh — chase rural areas
Dark hours in Dec~19 hrs
Hotels (mid-range)~€130–€200/night
Budget tipJan is cheapest; Sep best value overall
Norway
Tromsø · Lofoten · 69°N
Best monthsFeb · Mar · Oct
Aurora seasonSep – Mar
Clear skies (Tromsø)~35–40% of nights
Polar night (Tromsø)Nov 27 – Jan 15
Hotels peak season~€230–€500+/night
Aurora toursfrom ~€120/person
Finland
Rovaniemi · Saariselkä · 66–69°N
Best monthsMar (clearest skies)
Aurora seasonSep – Apr
Clear skies (Lapland)~45–55% of nights
Dark hours in Dec~21 hrs (Saariselkä)
Standard hotels~€130–€200/night
Glass igloosfrom ~€800/night (2-night min.)
Canada
Yellowknife · Yukon · 62–63°N
Best monthsFeb · Mar
Aurora seasonAug – Apr
Clear skiesClearest of all major destinations
Aurora nights/year~240 (highest globally)
Hotels~CAD $150–$300/night
Best odds per night50–60% clear-sky (peak season)

The variable most
travellers ignore

Aurora activity and dark skies are necessary conditions for viewing the northern lights. They are not sufficient. The single biggest obstacle to actually seeing an aurora is clouds — and all major aurora destinations in Northern Europe have significant cloud cover, especially in coastal areas.

According to the Finnish Meteorological Institute, Finnish Lapland has approximately 45–55% clear-sky nights during the aurora season — meaningfully better than coastal Tromsø, which sits at roughly 35–40%. Iceland's coastal exposure creates similar challenges. Yellowknife in Canada benefits from a continental climate that produces consistently clearer skies than all major Scandinavian destinations — one of its key advantages as an aurora destination.

Within any destination, February and March tend to produce clearer skies than December and January. This is another reason the equinox window outperforms the popular midwinter bookings in terms of actual viewing success — not just geomagnetic activity, but sky clarity too.

"The aurora appears above the clouds. The question is always: will you be able to see it?"

— Arcticlyn Forecast Team
Clear-Sky Probability · Aurora Season
35–40%
Tromsø, Norway (coastal) · Source: Finnish Met. Institute
45–55%
Finnish Lapland · Source: Finnish Met. Institute
50–60%
Yellowknife, Canada (peak season, 3–5 nights booked)
Variable
Iceland — highly dependent on location and season

Month by month:
aurora probability

This calendar combines geomagnetic activity patterns, hours of darkness, and cloud cover averages across the main aurora destinations. It reflects overall viewing probability, not just auroral activity.

Jan
ok
Feb
good
Mar
peak
Apr
ok
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
ok
Sep
peak
Oct
good
Nov
ok
Dec
ok
Peak — equinox windows, highest probability
Good — solid activity, good dark hours
OK — possible, conditions variable
Not season (midnight sun)

May through July: The aurora is still occurring — it never stops — but it is invisible to ground observers because there is not enough darkness. Above 60°N latitude, astronomical twilight persists through the night during summer months. Aurora season effectively ends in late April and resumes in mid-August.

How to maximise
your odds

Book 3–5 consecutive nights. In the best aurora destinations during peak season, clear-sky nights occur roughly 30–60% of the time. A single night is a lottery. Three to five nights raises the statistical likelihood of at least one successful viewing to a practical near-certainty during active periods.

Time your trip around the new moon. The lunar cycle produces approximately 10 nights of ideal darkness per month — the days around new moon, when the moon rises and sets with the sun. A full moon doesn't prevent aurora viewing for strong displays (Kp 5+), but it obscures fainter activity. For the best all-round odds, plan your trip to coincide with the new moon phase within your target month.

Be ready to move. Iceland's compact size and Norway's network of roads allow significant repositioning within a day. Local aurora tour operators track weather radar and will drive guests to wherever the cloud ceiling breaks. Booking a tour, not just a hotel, significantly improves results in high cloud-cover destinations.

On flights and pricing. December and January are peak pricing months across all aurora destinations — maximum demand, limited supply, premium rates. September offers a different trade-off: lower flight and hotel prices combined with the autumn equinox activity window. It is the highest-value month for aurora travel on a budget.

February and March sit between the two extremes — equinox-level aurora activity, clearer skies than midwinter, and moderately lower prices than the December–January peak. For travellers without budget constraints, March is the strongest single month. For travellers optimising for value, late September to mid-October is the alternative.

Glass igloos in Finland — the heated glass-roof cabins that allow you to watch the aurora from bed — start at approximately €800 per night at premium resorts (typically with a 2-night minimum) and require advance booking several months ahead. Standard hotel accommodation in Finnish Lapland runs approximately €130–€200 per night during aurora season. In Iceland, mid-range hotels in Reykjavík average €130–€200 per night; in Tromsø, expect €230–€500+ during peak aurora months (December being the most expensive).

The practical verdict

Best odds
March
Equinox peak activity. Clearest skies of winter. Moderate temperatures. Best month across all four major destinations.
Best value
September
Autumn equinox peak. Lowest flight prices of the aurora season. Still achieves astronomical darkness above 60°N by mid-month.
Most immersive
Nov – Jan
Polar night. 18–22 hours of darkness. Peak hotel prices, cloudier conditions — but the landscape and atmosphere are incomparable.

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