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The 6 Best Luxury Hotels to See the Northern Lights this Winter

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Sure, you could rent a camper van and drive it to a northern latitude to see the northern lights, but isn’t it better to be awed in comfort and warmth? At these luxury winter lodges, you can take in the aurora borealis from an outdoor hot tub, a lakeside bonfire or your own private cozy bedroom.

Sheldon Chalet

Sheldon Chalet, Alaska

At the newest entrant into the Last Frontier’s luxury lodgings scene, you can see the light show from your bedroom window. That’s just one of the over-the-top niceties of Sheldon Chalet, a private alpine villa with five bedrooms spread over 2,000 square feet within five private acres in Danali National Park. Despite being in the middle of nowhere, it has running water, electricity, generous heat and world-class food.

Fairmont Hotels

The Fairmont Jasper Park Lodge, Canada

This resort is within Jasper National Park in Alberta, a dark sky preserve (and home to the Jasper Park Dark Sky Festival). But that’s doesn’t mean it’s always dark. The resort is located so for north that guests often get to witness one of nature’s ultimate shows. (And elsewhere in Alberta, researchers recently discovered a new aurora.) In case the sky doesn’t light up, experts from the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada lead virtual tours of the constellations several nights a week in a heated planetarium that’s debuting this winter.

Arturo Polo Ena

Ultima Thule, Alaska

This lodge in the Wrangell/St. Elias mountain ranges is 100 miles from pavement. Everything arrives by plane. That makes it all the more impressive that the five timer cabins have access to a deep Japanese-style hot soaking tub under the night sky. The northern lights are visible most nights during the spring skiing season and much of the fall (August–September).

Hotel Husafell

Hotel Husafell, Iceland

Leave the tourist hordes to the Golden Circle. This hidden gem in the west is the place to see the real Iceland—one with far less of a human foot print on nature. Away from the light pollution, it’s in the heart of Iceland’s aurora zone (the Northern Lights Institute is nearby). During the winter there’s an average of three sightings a week, and the hotel offers free automated northern lights wake-up calls.

Kakslauttanen

Kakslauttanen Arctic Resort, Finland

Staying in a glass igloo at this Arctic resort doesn’t actually mean sleeping outside, for obvious reasons (though there are also snow igloos for people who like to feel the cold). Heated, spacious and set up with basic bathrooms, the glass igloos are a perfectly comfortable base for heading out on reindeer safaris by day and watching the northern lights—while in bed—by night.

Within the Wild Lodges

Winterlake Lodge, Alaska

During winter, this family-run lodge is best known as a stop along the Itidarod, but it’s also a prime spot for viewing the aurora borealis. From January to April, guests join the owners for a bonfire on the frozen lake and a fabulous natural show.

 

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