Northern Lights on Camera: Where to Watch the Aurora Live
Can't travel to see the aurora borealis? These live webcams in Alaska, Iceland, and Scandinavia stream the northern lights in real time.
The northern lights are one of nature’s most breathtaking displays, but seeing them in person requires dark skies, clear weather, and being at the right latitude. Live webcams solve all three problems — just check the stream after dark.
Best Northern Lights Cameras
Alaska
Alaska is one of the best places on Earth to see the aurora, and several of our cameras have captured stunning displays:
- Aurora Forecast Northern Hemisphere — NOAA’s real-time aurora prediction overlay
- Fairbanks area cameras — Fairbanks sits directly under the aurora oval
- Chena Hot Springs — one of Alaska’s top aurora viewing spots
Peak season: September through March, with the strongest displays around the equinoxes (September and March).
How to Use Aurora Cameras
- Check the forecast first — the aurora forecast cam shows the current KP index and aurora oval
- Watch after 10 PM local time — aurora is most active between 10 PM and 2 AM
- Look for clear skies — check the regular highway cameras near aurora locations to see if skies are clear
- Be patient — aurora comes in bursts; a quiet sky can explode with color in minutes
Understanding Aurora Forecasts
The KP index measures geomagnetic activity on a 0-9 scale:
- KP 0-2: Quiet — aurora visible only at very high latitudes
- KP 3-4: Moderate — visible in Alaska, northern Canada, Scandinavia
- KP 5-6: Active — visible as far south as the northern US states
- KP 7-9: Storm — rare events visible at mid-latitudes, spectacular displays
Best Viewing Conditions
- Dark skies — no moon, no city lights (new moon phases are ideal)
- Clear weather — clouds block the view completely
- High latitude — Fairbanks (64°N) is ideal
- Equinox periods — September and March produce the strongest shows
- Solar maximum years — we’re currently near solar maximum (2024-2026), meaning more frequent and intense displays
Aurora Photography Through Webcams
Some of our cameras have captured incredible aurora photos. The trick is that webcam sensors can pick up colors that aren’t always visible to the naked eye, making even moderate aurora displays look impressive on camera.
Multi-Day Aurora Trips — Using Cams to Plan
If you’re planning an actual trip to see the aurora:
- Check Fairbanks cameras for weather before booking flights
- Monitor the aurora forecast for KP predictions 3 days out
- Use highway cameras to find clear sky pockets if Fairbanks is cloudy
- Watch Chena Hot Springs cameras for local conditions at one of the top viewing lodges
Beyond the Northern Lights
The same cameras that capture aurora also show incredible Alaska scenery year-round:
- Midnight sun (June) — 24-hour daylight in Fairbanks
- Alpenglow (winter) — pink and purple mountain light during the short days
- First snow (September–October) — termination dust on the peaks
- Ice fog (deep winter) — Fairbanks temperatures below -30°F create surreal fog
Browse all our Alaska cameras and bookmark your favorites for northern lights season.