
Multiple exposure of midnight sun passing due north on a summer night 175 miles north of Arctic Circle. | Location: Toolik Lake, Alaska, USA.
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This weekend, the sun will reach its highest point in the Northern Hemisphere sky, with sunrise being celebrated at Stonehenge, but in the Arctic, it will not set. The June solstice occurs on Sunday, June 21, 2026, at 08:24 UTC, marking the astronomical start of summer in the Northern Hemisphere. For most people, that means the longest day of the year. But north of the Arctic Circle, it brings something even stranger and more spectacular — a midnight sun.
A midnight sun is exactly what it sounds like. It’s the sight of the sun still above the horizon at local midnight, bathing landscapes in a soft, golden light when darkness should have fallen. Instead of rising in the east and setting in the west, the sun appears to skim around the horizon in a shallow circle, dipping low but never disappearing.
“At the Arctic Circle on the summer solstice is where you have this moment of the midnight sun, where the sun doesn’t actually ever set,” said Solan Jensen, a ranger and guide for Quark Expeditions’ Arctic cruises, in an interview. “Then you have this vast amount of the planet above the Arctic Circle — Svalbard included — and because you’re so much farther north, even before the solstice and well into the late summer, you have this experience of the sun never setting.”
North of the Arctic Circle, the midnight sun shines from summer solstice.
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Why Does The Midnight Sun Happen?
The sun, of course, is doing nothing out of the ordinary. It’s an optical illusion caused by Earth’s tilt. Earth rotates at an angle of about 23.4 degrees as it orbits the sun. Around the June solstice, the Northern Hemisphere is tilted as far toward the sun as it gets all year. That gives the north its longest days, while the Southern Hemisphere (which is titled away from the sun) experiences its shortest days.
The farther north you go, the more extreme the effect becomes. At the Arctic Circle, the sun can stay above the horizon for a full 24 hours around the solstice. Go farther north — to northern Norway, Svalbard, northern Greenland, northern Canada or Alaska — and the midnight sun can last for days, weeks or even months.
Think of Earth as a tilted spinning top circling a lamp. Near the top of the tilted globe, the Arctic remains angled toward the light through the entire daily spin. The result is a sun that circles the sky rather than setting below it.
“We’re so oriented towards a routine that allows for night and rest,” said Jensen. “There’s this really interesting synergy that happens when you’re going on an adventure to a far-out landscape featuring wildlife, glaciers, mountains and undeveloped land — and there’s no night.”
Trips to the Arctic around the solstice come with 24-hour wildlife viewing opportunities. “The sun is at its highest of the year, and the wildlife is also taking advantage,” said Jensen. “Everything is on the move — feeding, procreating, nesting — and wild flowers are bursting out of the tundra for a few weeks.”
The midnight sun is visible on, and above the Arctic Circle, 66 degrees north the equator.
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Where To SeeThe Midnight Sun
The classic place to see the midnight sun is anywhere north of the Arctic Circle, which is about 66.5 degrees north. Good options include Tromsø and the Lofoten Islands in Norway, Abisko and Kiruna in Sweden, Finnish Lapland, Svalbard, Iceland’s far north, Greenland, northern Canada and Utqiaġvik in Alaska.
Strictly speaking, Iceland’s capital, Reykjavík, lies just south of the Arctic Circle, so it does not experience true 24-hour midnight sun. However, it still has extremely long twilight-filled nights around the solstice, with the sky never becoming fully dark.
The experience is not just about astronomy. In Arctic communities, the midnight sun changes the rhythm of life. Hiking, kayaking, wildlife watching and photography can all happen late into the night.
“I struggle with words to describe this, but there's this surrealness to it that happens just behind my conscious life,” said Jensen. “I know it's midnight, I know my body is ready to sleep, but I'm up, and I'm having this experience of broad daylight — there's uncanniness, there’s eerieness, and there's an element of awe.” He added that it’s not uncommon to have people up all night long on deck during an Arctic cruise.
Forbes5,000-Year-Old Stonehenge Prototype Revealed Days Before The SolsticeBy Jamie CarterWhat Happens After Solstice?
The solstice is the peak of the midnight sun phenomenon, not the end. After this weekend, the sun will begin its slow retreat southward in the sky, and daylight in the Northern Hemisphere will gradually shorten. In the Arctic, the midnight sun will continue for a while longer, depending on latitude, before sunsets eventually return.
“Fatigue is a very real risk when you’re operating in a place where there’s 24-hour daylight and the midnight sun is there — but there’s also an energy that comes with it,” said Jensen. “If the midnight sun is something you want to experience at its peak, that solstice period in the high latitudes is really intense.”
Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.

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