Northern Lights in TromsøVisible Tonight?
Real-time aurora forecast updated every 15 minutes
The sky never gets fully dark in Tromsø at this time of year; aurora season runs September through early April.
Verify with the live sky camera →Aurora season in Tromsø runs September through early April; check back then.
Tonight, Hour by Hour
The four things that must line up over Tromsø, and how each hour of the night looks.
Kp 0.0 now, Kp 2 needed here
100% cloud cover around 2 PM
No true darkness at this time of year
Some local light glow; moon 2% lit
All times shown in Tromsø local time (GMT+2), not your device time.
Seeing the aurora in Tromsø
Tromsø sits at 69 degrees north, directly under the auroral oval, which is why it is Europe's aurora capital. Activity is almost never the problem here; even quiet nights produce overhead displays. What decides a Tromsø night is cloud, and locals chase clear gaps toward the fjords or inland toward Skibotn.
Our verdict is not a Kp number. The Kp index is a global, three-hour average, and treating it as a promise is the single biggest reason people drive out and see nothing. Instead we check four things for Tromsø specifically: whether forecast activity reaches the level this latitude needs, whether the sky will be clear, whether it will actually be dark, and how much moonlight and local light pollution will wash out. Only when all four line up do we say yes.
Why Tromsø is one of the best places on Earth for aurora
Tromsø sits at 69 degrees north, directly under the auroral oval: the ring around the pole where the lights live even on quiet nights. That changes the game completely compared to mid-latitude places. You do not need a geomagnetic storm here: on an ordinary Kp 1 night the aurora usually appears somewhere overhead, and a Kp 3 night can fill the whole sky.
The practical consequence is that in Tromsø the forecast question is almost never whether there is activity, but whether the sky is clear and dark. That is why the verdict above puts so much weight on cloud cover and twilight: they are the two things that actually decide your night here.
Aurora season: polar night and the equinox effect
The season runs from early September to mid April. From late November to mid January Tromsø is in polar night: the sun never rises, viewing can start as early as 3 pm, and a single day offers up to 18 potential aurora hours. September and March add the equinox boost, when displays are statistically strongest, along with milder weather and open hiking trails.
From roughly mid May to late July the opposite applies: the midnight sun keeps the sky bright around the clock and no aurora can be seen at any activity level. If you are reading this page in summer, that is why the verdict above talks about the season instead of showing an hourly forecast.
City, fjords, or chase tour
The aurora is regularly visible from Tromsø itself: locals watch from Telegrafbukta beach, the harbor, and the Fjellheisen viewpoint above town. City glow eats faint displays though, so the reliable move is 20 to 40 minutes out. The Kvaløya side toward Grøtfjord gives dark fjord horizons, while Skibotn inland is statistically the driest sky in the region, which is exactly why the university runs its all-sky research camera there.
On cloudy nights, mobility wins. Coastal weather is patchy and fast moving: it can be soaked at the coast and clear an hour inland. That is the whole case for chase tours, and equally for a rental car plus this forecast: you follow the hole in the clouds instead of hoping one opens above you.