Tuesday, February 17

How to save money on your Northern Lights holiday


The Northern Lights can best be seen from countries such as Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden.
The Northern Lights can best be seen from countries such as Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden. · Anna Mardo via Getty Images

2026 is proving to be another great year to see the Northern Lights, but travelling to see them dance across the night sky can prove costly.

While the Aurora Borealis was recently spotted as far south as Cornwall in the UK, the best places to see the Northern Lights are in Nordic countries such as Iceland, Finland, Norway and Sweden, which are also known for having some of the world’s highest costs of living and prices to match.

However, with some smart planning, a mobile phone and a bit of bargain hunting, you can check seeing the Northern Lights off your bucket list without completely breaking the bank.

A good place to start saving money on your Northern Lights trip is by booking packages or looking for bundle deals on travel, accommodation and excursions.

TUI, for example, offers two free excursions with some of their winter packages to Iceland, including a Northern Lights hunt and a Golden Circle tour. Meanwhile, online travel agent Expedia enables you to save while building your own package to a variety of Northern Light destinations including Finnish Lapland, with a wide range of flights, hotels and excursions to suit all plans and budgets.

While staying in hostels, budget hotels and Airbnb are obvious ways of keeping your accommodation costs down, take into account other ways of saving like going half board. Home Hotels, a Strawberry Hotels brand with locations across the Nordics, for example, can help you save money on your day-to-day budget as fika – the Swedish equivalent of afternoon tea – and dinner are included, alongside breakfast.

The Northern Lights as seen from the Lyngen Alps near Tromso, Norway.
The Northern Lights as seen from the Lyngen Alps near Tromsø, Norway. · Natalie Marchant

Another smart saving is to make the accommodation part of the adventure itself. A night in a glass-roofed cabin in the Lyngen Alps near Tromsø, in northern Norway, for example, will set you back over £300 per adult, but that includes all road and ferry travel, accommodation, activities (snowshoeing or snowmobiling) and food for a full 24 hours, and is a proper bucket list experience.

Alternatively, combine travel and accommodation. Travel blogger Beatrice Searle, of Wild Bee Outdoors, saved hundreds of pounds and a night’s accommodation costs on a trip to Finnish Lapland by flying to Helsinki, not Rovaniemi, and taking the overnight train north instead – much to the delight of her adventurous family.

Smartphones are a traveller’s best friend for everything from checking in – indeed, Ryanair is now insistent on having a digital version of your boarding pass – to reserving your hotel and booking excursions. However, they can also help you save money too.





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