In the Icy Far North, Svalbard's Tourism Scene Is on the Rise

In the Icy Far North, Svalbard's Tourism Scene Is on the Rise

Author
  • Maya Toebat
Photographer
  • Zeger Dox

Last chance tourism, scorching summers, and social media are spurring interest in an archipelago where polar bears roam and glaciers are in retreat

Published: 06-03-2026

It feels strange to see the colorful houses of Longyearbyen emerge after five days and nights at sea. It's not the return to land that feels most unfamiliar, but what surrounds us as we make our way into the harbor: cruise ships, their crisp-shirted passengers sipping coffee on balconies. With stiff legs and salty hair, our crew watches the hotel and cruise guests from our sailboat with a quiet detachment—we've crossed the Norwegian Sea on a daring adventure of our own dreams and making, they came in paid comfort. Yet the distinction fades more quickly than we like to admit as we discover that we've also crossed the perpetual yet barely existing divide between tourists and travelers.

Longyearbyen is the largest settlement on Spitsbergen, the main island of the Svalbard archipelago. Located nearly 650 miles north of mainland Norway, the island is rugged and mostly inaccessible. In winter, residents travel by snowmobile; in summer, by boat. A firearm is always necessary—this is polar bear country.

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Perhaps that is why it feels so strange; the Arctic town is no longer a remote outpost. About 70,000 tourists pass through each year, far outnumbering the town’s 3,000 residents. Better flights and easier access have transformed this once-isolated town into one of the Arctic’s most reachable and affordable destinations. The town is small but surprisingly well-equipped for the visitors who now define its economy: coffee shops, restaurants, and gear rental outfits line the main road, a single street that cuts between colorful wooden buildings and the bare mountains beyond.

Trends like coolcations, swapping scorching summers for northern cold, and last-chance tourism, the urge to see threatened places before they vanish, have intensified interest in Svalbard. Retreating sea ice has opened new routes and extended cruise seasons, while social media has spread its allure. Svalbard, once an abstract name of a remote place that drew mostly scientists and explorers now appears in brochures and Instagram feeds.

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At the Edge of the Map

Sammy Van Cleemput and Robin Caris are two Belgians who built their lives around wind and water. They often invite others to join in their voyages, myself included. We had just spent a week sailing around the North Cape in Norway on their 40-foot sailboat, Mencia, and I was up for more. Svalbard had come onto our radar during a night spent poring over an encyclopedia, one of those names that conjures polar expeditions and blank white spaces on the map. We asked ourselves how far north we could realistically sail, and the answer kept pointing to the same cluster of islands at the top of the world.

On 2 July 2025, we set sail from Tromsø, heading for Svalbard. Our crew had grown to four to include the photographer Zeger Dox. Spending a month on a small boat with near-strangers feels thrilling, but a shared rhythm quickly emerges. Our days and nights fall into a cycle: take watch, sleep, cook pasta, brush teeth, read, sleep again. All in the space of deck and a cramped cabin. It feels like summer camp; a temporary escape from the world, under the unsetting polar sun.

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The Norwegian Sea, notorious for its unpredictability, treated us with unusual calm. The wind was almost still, too little to sail. We used the motor more than once, hoping the fuel would last. Only near the end of the crossing did the wind carry us forward again, almost to Port Longyear. We arrived by more audacious and less comfortable means than most visitors. Crossing the Norwegian Sea by sailboat, on the strength of the wind, was a purer way, we told ourselves. But we had to admit that underneath, the drive and desire to journey to the edge of the map was similar.

Fully aware of the fact that we were also tourists, we left the harbor and headed further north. Gliding through misty waves, we glimpsed the first glaciers on the island's west coast along Isfjorden and dropped anchor in St. Johnsfjord, a remote inlet northwest of Longyearbyen. The next morning, we went ashore to the glacier Osbornebreen, its icy tongue spilling down from the mountains into the fjord basin. Paradoxically, we felt vulnerable standing before it, even though humans have proved we have the power to make glaciers retreat.

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Power, Policy, & Control

Svalbard developed as a coal mining region in the early 20th century with Norwegian, Russian, and other settlements established under shifting sovereignty, until the Svalbard Treaty of 1920 confirmed Norway's sovereignty over the land while allowing continued multinational activity. For decades, the archipelago's identity was industrial rather than touristic. Ten years ago, that changed. As the major Norwegian mines wound down, Norway shifted its focus to tourism, research, and education—and Svalbard's identity shifted with it.

“Ships have visited since the 19th century, but land tourism only took off in 1991,” says Ronny Brunvoll, CEO of Visit Svalbard. “Since then, Norway has actively developed tourism as an economic sector. In 2015, we launched a master plan to grow tourism by 2025, with the aim of attracting visitors year-round. It worked: the numbers doubled.”

Just before the pandemic, visitor growth was on the verge of tipping into mass tourism. Since January 2025, stricter rules have been introduced in response: cruise ships in national parks are limited to 200 passengers, landings are restricted to 43 designated sites, and enforced distances from wildlife are coupled with limits on drones, snowmobiles, and icebreakers. Officially, the measures are ecological. The 2024 White Paper (a policy document from the Norwegian government) notes that “the rise in tourism, especially expedition cruises, challenges environmental objectives and legislation.”

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Yet locals describe a political dimension. “With the Norwegian mines now closed in Svalbard, tourism is Norway’s way of maintaining a presence," says Grete Hovelsrud, a Norwegian climate researcher." In 2025, we marked 100 years since the Svalbard Act—the 1920 treaty granting Norway sovereignty over the archipelago—and you can feel the government wants a foothold.”

It seems tourism, once encouraged to keep the archipelago lively, has become a tool for control. Fewer visitors and designated landing sites make monitoring easier, but the limits can have unintended consequences. "Ships divert to northern areas where restrictions don’t apply, breaking the sea ice that is essential for ocean ecosystems," says Hilde Falun Strøm, a guide who lives in Longyearbyen. "Efforts to limit tourism can, paradoxically, increase pressure on vulnerable areas.”

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Wake-up call

On paper, the rules are strict, but in practice, there is considerable freedom. On our small sailboat, we were required to submit a rough itinerary to the governor but could largely move as we wished. That freedom took us places the cruise ships cannot go—into narrow fjords with no landing infrastructure, to glacier fronts with no other boats in sight, ashore at spots where the only footprints in the mud were our own. This liberty felt like a privilege, yet sits in a gray area.

Small-scale travel is often seen as an alternative to mass tourism. “Yet, there is no such thing as ‘sustainable tourism,’” says Birgitte Vegsund of Basecamp Explorer Svalbard, a tourism and expedition company. “Still, you can maximize its impact by allowing visitors to experience what is happening here. Our guests spend a week with the same guide, which encourages spontaneous storytelling and knowledge-sharing. Witnessing glacier retreat firsthand helps them understand what’s at stake.”

Alexia Spencer, of the travel company Spitsbergen Reisen, says that in small groups, close to nature, people engage more quickly. "On cruises with thousands of passengers, that’s harder. Experiencing this desolate landscape, almost alone, is unique. The awareness that this place might not exist in the future changes people. They feel vulnerable, yet also empowered. People often think one person cannot make a difference. Here, you see with your own eyes that you are one among billions, and that your actions have an impact on something much larger.”

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Explore more scenes from the high Arctic with this dreamy photo essay.