Northern winter destinations gets bombarded by selfie-taking tourists
Heavy snowfall, polar night and freezing cold. The trend for tourists taking selfies with astonishing Arctic backgrounds is filling up planes and hotels in the northern regions of Norway, Sweden and Finland.
Tromsø had a 126% increase in passengers on international flights in January compared with the same month in 2023, according to statistics from Avinor, the state-owned company operating airports.
Commenting on the numbers, Avinor’s Gaute Skallerud Riise points to the snow and cold. “We particularly see an increased interest in certain parts of the winter product that Norway can offer,” he says.
Tromsø receives flights directly from 20 European cities this winter. “The world wants to Northern Norway,” Avinor said in a press release.
Tourists can now fly directly to Tromsø from continental European cities like Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin, Milano, Gdansk, Copenhagen and others. Tromsø Airport recently opened an expanded terminal with more gates for international flights.
“Until December we had triple the amount of bookings for this year’s winter season”, Trond Arne Kongsli, CEO of the tour guiding company Best Arctic, recently told the Barents Observer. “We have never seen this before. It’s amazing,” he said with a big smile.
A similar trend is seen in Norrbotten, Sweden’s northernmost region. Winter tourism increased by 9% in 2023. That is more than the southern regions of the country, Affärer i Norr reports.
In Rovaniemi, the Nordic capital of winter tourism, counted a record-breaking with more than a million overnight stays last year. The Finnish town on the Arctic Circle has for decades marketed itself as the home of Santa Claus.
Although not all figures are counted yet, the tourist organization Visit Rovaniemi believes the winter season 2023/24 will see a 30% increase compared to the previous year.
Several new flights from Europe give increase in the number of seats by 40-50,000 travelers, the organization says. There are now 24 direct international flights to Rovaniemi, of which 12 are new this winter.
While a boost in tourism is good for hotels and jobs, debates are now heating up in both Rovaniemi and Tromsø about the burdens tens of thousands of tourists bring to the environment.
“The city is for its residents, so it would be justified to consider a tourist tax or a voluntary payment, chair of the Rovaniemi City Council, Susanna Junttila,” said to broadcaster YLE.
Tromsø Mayor Gunnar Wilhelmsen says to NRK that without a dedicated tourist tax, the municipality has to take money from its ordinary budget and give less to other urgent needs.
A photo of a tourist pooping on a bus stop has made headlines in Tromsø media, highlighting the need for more public toilets at popular tourist stops.
Related stories from around the North:
Canada: Kwanlin Dün First Nation buys tourism business near Whitehorse for $3.5M, CBC News
Iceland: Iceland moving ahead on better ways to manage tourism & safeguard protected areas, Eye on the Arctic
Norway: Stricter rules apply to tourists heading to Svalbard, The Independent Barents Observer
Sweden: Reindeer herding affected by increased tourism in Swedish mountains, Radio Sweden