REVIEW · TROMSO
Tromsø: Sommarøy Islands Midnight Sun Tour
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Jeshua As · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Midnight Sun arrives fast from Tromsø. This 4-hour tour focuses your time on the Midnight Sun and the island village feel of Sommarøy, with scenic stops along the route through places like Ersfjord and Kaldfjord. I love the way the light stays soft and bright late into the evening, and I also like that you’re not just riding—you’re traveling with a guide who brings Arctic life experience. One consideration: like a lot of Norway, the convenience (pickup/drop-off plus guiding) can feel a bit expensive.
I’ve also learned to expect that weather doesn’t have the final word. Even when conditions seem gray at first, the trip’s fjord crossings can turn into proper sunshine moments, and that midnight beach time can come with small comforts like warm tea and cookies.
To keep the experience smooth, plan for pickup timing. The tour asks you to be ready about 30 minutes before the scheduled pick-up, and to keep your phone available so you can reach the guide when they arrive.
In This Review
- Key things I’d lock in before you go
- Tromsø to Sommarøy: what this 4-hour loop really gives you
- Ersfjord and Kaldfjord: reading the fjords in eternal daylight
- Sommarøy at late hours: white sand, turquoise water, and village life
- Midnight Sun reality check: how to enjoy it without overthinking
- Guide experience that actually helps: languages and Arctic-life know-how
- Price and value: is it worth it for a 4-hour night?
- Who this tour fits (and who might want a different plan)
- Should you book the Tromsø: Sommarøy Islands Midnight Sun Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Tromsø: Sommarøy Islands Midnight Sun Tour?
- Do I get hotel pickup and drop-off?
- What languages are available for the live guide?
- Do I need to pay right away?
- What is the cancellation policy?
- What should I do before the guide arrives?
- Where does the tour take place?
Key things I’d lock in before you go

- 4 hours, hotel pickup included: Efficient timing means you get the Midnight Sun without giving up your whole day.
- Ersfjord and Kaldfjord route stops: You see the fjord rhythm up close while the daylight hangs on.
- Sommarøy beaches at night: White sand and turquoise water look extra unreal under endless evening light.
- Arctic-life guidance (multilingual): Your guide can answer questions in Spanish, Finnish, or English.
- Midnight snacks on the beach: Warm tea and cookies are part of the late-hour atmosphere.
- Reserve and pay later: You can hold your spot while keeping flexibility.
Tromsø to Sommarøy: what this 4-hour loop really gives you

This tour is built for people who want a real Midnight Sun moment without treating the evening like a full-day commitment. You start in Tromsø with hotel pickup, then travel toward the islands of Sommarøy and the Barents Sea, where summer daylight refuses to follow normal rules.
What makes the timing work is that you’re not just waiting around for the sun to behave. You get moving scenery while the sky stays bright, and you’ll reach the Sommarøy area with enough time to enjoy the look and feel of the place late in the evening. For me, that’s the smartest way to do Midnight Sun: you’re not stuck with only one dramatic viewpoint—you experience it as a process.
The tone is also practical and human. The tour includes a live guide with experience in Arctic life, and the group travels as a unit with a planned ride and planned stops. That matters if you’re short on time in Tromsø or you’d rather not figure out transport on your own at night.
If you’re sensitive to weather, you’ll also appreciate how the experience can play out. One account described rain turning into sunshine after crossing the fjords to the other side. Even if the sky starts uncertain, the trip format keeps you in motion toward better conditions.
Other Sommarøy tours we've reviewed
Ersfjord and Kaldfjord: reading the fjords in eternal daylight

Along the way, the tour makes time for stops at Ersfjord and Kaldfjord. These names matter because they signal what you’re actually seeing: fjords that feel like corridors carved into the coast, with water, slopes, and settlements arranged in layers.
In normal seasons, you might treat a fjord drive like scenery between places. Here, in Midnight Sun season, it becomes something closer to a living light show. Because the sun stays visible so late, the fjord surfaces don’t go from bright to dark. Instead, they shift gradually—so you can notice changes in reflections and contrast as you move.
Here’s the practical benefit for you: you’ll likely get better photos by simply moving with the group, rather than trying to pick a single best spot on your own. The guide can also help you time your looks, so you’re not just staring at bright water—you’re learning how to interpret it. And if the weather flips, you’re positioned to adapt rather than feeling stuck.
Sommarøy at late hours: white sand, turquoise water, and village life

Sommarøy is the main event. This is where the Midnight Sun feeling turns surreal in a way that’s hard to replicate anywhere else. You’re not watching a sun set in the normal sense—you’re watching daylight hang around as if the rules have been edited.
The experience centers on the contrast between soft beach detail and endless sky light. Expect white sandy beaches and turquoise waters that can look almost unreal under that glowing late-day illumination. Even at what feels like midnight, the atmosphere stays bright enough to keep exploring.
Another reason Sommarøy works so well is the village scale. Instead of a big tourist hub vibe, you get the quieter rhythm of a coastal community—enough charm to feel like you’re arriving somewhere real, not just passing through a scenic stop.
And yes, the late hour matters. One account described tea and cookies served at midnight on the beach. That kind of small comfort turns a photo-op into an actual moment you remember. You’re standing there while the light keeps going, and you’re not doing it cold, hungry, and hurried.
Midnight Sun reality check: how to enjoy it without overthinking

The Midnight Sun in Sommarøy isn’t just the sun staying up. It’s the way everything looks while time feels slightly wrong. That can be thrilling, but it can also make people chase one perfect photo too aggressively.
What I recommend: treat the experience like a slow walk with checkpoints. Start with broad scenes—sky and water—then shift to details like shoreline color, village edges, and reflections. Because the light doesn’t fully drop, you can return to the same general spot and still get a different look as the sky changes.
Also, don’t assume you’ll always get clear skies. The tour description and accounts point to weather shifts being part of the story. If you see clouds rolling in, take it as a cue to watch how the light softens rather than abandoning the moment. The fjord-crossing route structure helps here, too.
Finally, think about timing sensibly. The tour is only about 4 hours, so you’ll want to focus on the parts that fit your goal:
- If you want the Midnight Sun effect, prioritize beach time and sky watching at Sommarøy.
- If you want fjord scenery, pay attention during the Ersfjord and Kaldfjord stops.
- If you want comfort and calm, plan on using those late snacks (like warm tea and cookies) as a reset.
Guide experience that actually helps: languages and Arctic-life know-how
A big part of why this tour feels like more than a bus ride is the guiding. The tour includes a live guide with experience in Arctic life, and you can choose among Spanish, Finnish, and English.
That language support is more than a convenience. When you understand what you’re seeing—what to look for in the fjords, why the Arctic environment behaves the way it does—you get more out of the same view. You’re not just taking in scenery; you’re building a mental map of how the region works.
You might also appreciate the human side of guiding. One story highlighted that the guide actively made sure everyone had a successful night trip—stopping along the way and keeping the group on track. If you’re the type who gets distracted or worried about timing, that kind of attention helps a lot.
And in terms of the tour’s organization, the provider is listed as Jeshua As, so you’ll want to look for your exact guide details at booking time and on your confirmation.
Other midnight sun tours in Tromso
Price and value: is it worth it for a 4-hour night?

There’s no getting around it: this tour can feel a bit expensive. One review summarized it plainly—great experience, but Norway pricing is Norway pricing.
Here’s how I’d think about value instead of just sticker shock. You’re paying for:
- Hotel pickup and drop-off, which saves you the stress of finding transport late.
- A live multilingual guide with Arctic life experience.
- A tight 4-hour itinerary that gets you into the Sommarøy Midnight Sun zone while still keeping your evening manageable.
- The guided, planned viewing time that helps you catch the right feeling, not just the right location.
If you were doing this on your own, you’d likely spend time solving logistics, figuring out timing, and hunting down photo angles while also worrying about getting back. For many people visiting Tromsø, the convenience factor is worth paying for—especially when daylight lasts so long that it’s easy to lose track of time.
So the question isn’t only whether it costs more than you want. It’s whether you’d rather pay to reduce friction and get the best shot at the Midnight Sun mood in a short window.
Who this tour fits (and who might want a different plan)

This tour is a good match if you:
- Want Midnight Sun with minimal planning.
- Prefer guided stops at places like Ersfjord and Kaldfjord instead of navigating alone.
- Like the idea of reaching Sommarøy at late hours to enjoy beach time rather than only seeing the coast in daylight.
- Need language support in Spanish, Finnish, or English.
It may be less ideal if you:
- Are planning a super tight schedule and need more time than 4 hours offers.
- Want to spend every second in the same exact spot—because this is a guided ride with multiple stops.
- Don’t like paying for hotel pickup and drop-off. If you’re comfortable with independent transport, you could theoretically design your own approach.
But for most people, the structure is the point. It keeps the experience focused: Tromsø → fjords → Sommarøy beach atmosphere → back, with the Midnight Sun effect as the theme.
Should you book the Tromsø: Sommarøy Islands Midnight Sun Tour?
If your goal is a genuine Midnight Sun evening with less hassle, I’d book it. The best parts line up cleanly: Sommarøy beach time, the fjord route through Ersfjord and Kaldfjord, and a guide who knows how to explain the Arctic life side of what you’re seeing. Add the comfort touches like warm tea and cookies at midnight, and you get something more memorable than just a scenic drive.
I’d particularly recommend booking if you value convenience and clarity—hotel pickup, multilingual guidance, and a set 4-hour plan. And if you’re worried about weather, don’t let a gray forecast scare you too much. The trip is designed to keep moving, and better conditions can appear after fjord crossings.
FAQ

How long is the Tromsø: Sommarøy Islands Midnight Sun Tour?
The duration is listed as 4 hours, with starting times depending on availability.
Do I get hotel pickup and drop-off?
Yes. Hotel pickup and drop-off are included.
What languages are available for the live guide?
The tour offers live guiding in Spanish, Finnish, and English.
Do I need to pay right away?
No. You can reserve now and pay later, keeping your plans flexible.
What is the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is available up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.
What should I do before the guide arrives?
You should be ready about 30 minutes before the pick-up time, and keep your phone available so you can call the guide when they arrive.
Where does the tour take place?
It runs in northern Norway, moving from Tromsø toward Sommarøy in the Barents Sea area.































