Month-by-month viewing quality
| Month | Viewing | Why |
|---|---|---|
| January | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
| February | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
| March | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
| April | Marginal | Short nights at the season edge |
| May | No — midnight sun | Midnight sun — no real darkness |
| June | No — midnight sun | Midnight sun — no real darkness |
| July | No — midnight sun | Midnight sun — no real darkness |
| August | Marginal | Short nights at the season edge |
| September | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
| October | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
| November | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
| December | Peak | Long dark nights + peak activity |
Why these months?
Two things decide your odds in Narvik: darkness and activity. You need real darkness — so the bright midnight-sun months are out no matter how strong the aurora is. On top of that, geomagnetic storms run statistically stronger around the spring and autumn equinoxes (the Russell–McPherron effect), which is why October and November and February and March tend to edge out the dead of winter. Narvik's season runs late september to early april.
Narvik sits at the head of a deep fjord ringed by mountains, with a cable car that lifts you above town lights for a panoramic dark-sky view.
Where to stand in Narvik
The Narvikfjellet cable car viewpoint, or drive east toward the Swedish border where skies clear fastest.
Tours & stays to book
Northern lights tours from Narvik
Viator · guided tours · from $79
Aurora chases & photo tours in Narvik
GetYourGuide · guided tours · from $79
Cabins, lodges & glass igloos near Narvik
Booking.com · lodging