gray wooden shed overlooking snow-capped mountain
a group of people riding horses across a snow covered field
sailing boat on ocean with snow-capped mountain at distance
green mountain under cloudy sky
a group of people riding motorcycles through a cave
Photo by Vince Gx on Unsplash

Holiday in Svalbard

Island in Norway — tips, highlights & best time to visit 🇳🇴

Country

Norway

Type

Island

Best time to travel

March to May for northern lights + snowmobiling + return of the sun. June to August for midnight sun and boat tours. Winter (Nov-Feb) for polar night and northern lights.

Budget/day

220-450 €

Getting there from Germany

Flight via Oslo (OSL) to Longyearbyen (LYR, approx. 6-8 h with layover). SAS and Norwegian fly daily from Oslo (3 h direct flight). No visa required.

About Svalbard

Svalbard is the northernmost permanently inhabited place on Earth — an Arctic archipelago halfway between the Norwegian mainland and the North Pole, where polar bears outnumber the human population, the midnight sun does not set for four months, and in winter the polar night bathes the landscape in a blue-black twilight interspersed with northern lights. Svalbard belongs to Norway and is located at 78° North — further north than most of Alaska and Siberia. Longyearbyen, the main settlement with around 2,400 inhabitants, is the northernmost city in the world with normal infrastructure: restaurants, hotels, a university center (UNIS), a hospital, and even a cultural center with a cinema. The colorful wooden houses on stilts (due to the permafrost ground) against the backdrop of snow-capped mountains and glaciers create a surreal cityscape. In Longyearbyen, it is forbidden to die — the permafrost preserves corpses and pathogens, which is why seriously ill individuals are taken to the mainland. The polar bears are Svalbard's most famous residents: around 3,000 animals live on the archipelago, more than the human population. Outside the settlements, carrying a firearm or being accompanied by an armed guide is mandatory. Boat excursions to the glacier fronts and along the coast offer the best chances to observe polar bears in the wild. The Svalbard Global Seed Vault is embedded in a mountainside near Longyearbyen: over 1.1 million seed samples from around the world are stored here at -18 °C as a backup for global food security. The facility is not open to the public, but the distinctive portal on the mountainside is a popular photo motif. In summer (April to August), the sun does not set: the midnight sun bathes the glacial landscape in a golden twilight, ideal for kayaking between icebergs, glacier hikes, and zodiac trips along the coast. In winter (November to February), polar night prevails, but the northern lights dance spectacularly over the snow-covered mountains, and dog sledding and snowmobiling tours take you through the blue-black Arctic.

Nature
100
Adventure
95
Safety
93
Winter
80
Beach
75

Top 6 highlights in Svalbard

The places you absolutely must not miss.

1

Polar Bear Watching

Around 3,000 polar bears on the archipelago: boat excursions to glacier fronts and coasts offer the best sightings, armed guide required.

2

Midnight Sun & Northern Lights

4 months of twilight in summer, 4 months of polar night in winter: northern lights over snow-covered mountains and glaciers, unique in the world.

3

Longyearbyen (Northernmost City)

2,400 inhabitants at 78° North: colorful wooden houses on stilts, restaurants, university campus, and the rule that no one is allowed to die here.

4

Glaciers & Fjords by Zodiac

Zodiac trips to calving glacier fronts: turquoise ice, walruses on ice floes, and the silence of the Arctic up close.

5

Svalbard Global Seed Vault

Global seed vault in the mountainside: over 1.1 million samples as a backup for global food security, iconic portal artwork.

6

Dog Sledding Tours

With huskies through the Arctic wilderness: in winter through polar night and northern lights glow, in spring over glittering snow landscapes.

Hotels in Svalbard

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Reise-SIM für Svalbard

Günstig surfen im Urlaub mit travSIM

Pauschalreisen & Rundreisen

Berge & Meer – 170 Tage Cookie

Best time to travel for Svalbard

Recommended travel time

March to May for northern lights + snowmobiling + return of the sun. June to August for midnight sun and boat tours. Winter (Nov-Feb) for polar night and northern lights.

Summer

-2 to 10 °C, midnight sun April-August, cool but bright, snow only partially melts

Winter

-15 to -5 °C, polar night November-February, extreme cold possible down to -30 °C, northern lights

How much does a holiday in Svalbard cost?

Average costs per person per day

🎒

Budget

120-200 €

Hostel, Street food, Public transport

🏨

Mid-range

220-450 €

Hotel, Restaurant, Excursions

🌟

Luxury

500-1500 €

Boutique hotel, Fine dining

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5 travel tips for Svalbard

Insider knowledge that makes your holiday better.

Firearm or guide — outside Longyearbyen, an armed guide or a firearm against polar bears is mandatory. All tours are guided.

No Schengen, but no visa — Svalbard is visa-free for all nationalities (Svalbard Treaty of 1920). Norwegian kroner is the currency.

Dress in layers — Arctic temperatures require thermal underwear, fleece, and a windproof outer layer. Many tour providers rent equipment.

Book tours early — Svalbard has limited capacities. Reserve glacier hikes, dog sledding, and boat tours weeks in advance.

Observe alcohol limits — Svalbard has duty-free alcohol, but strict purchase limits (Svalbardbutikken). Bring boarding pass as proof of arrival.

Food & drink in Svalbard

These specialties you must try!

Reindeer Steak — tender, lean reindeer meat from Svalbard reindeer: served as steak, stew, or smoked, the quintessential Arctic dish.
Whale Steak — minke whale meat, legally caught in Norway: dark red, tender, and surprisingly mild, often served as carpaccio or medium rare.
Arctic Char — cold-water fish from the waters around Svalbard: smoked or fried, finer and milder than salmon.
Stockfish (Torrfisk) — cod dried in the Arctic air: a Norwegian tradition since the Vikings, modernly interpreted in Longyearbyen.
Cloudberry Jam — golden Arctic berries (cloudberries), ripe for only a few weeks: served as a dessert topping on waffles or ice cream, an Arctic luxury.
Suitable for:ArcticPolar BearsNorthern LightsMidnight SunGlaciersPolar NightAdventure

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