37-45F summer temperatures in Svalbard offered a stark escape from Europe’s late-June heat wave, which pushed parts of the continent above 104F and disrupted travel and daily life.
Longyearbyen, about 800 miles from the North Pole, is easier to reach than many travelers expect: SAS and Norwegian fly from Oslo in roughly 3 hours, though visitors need passports because Svalbard sits outside Schengen.
2,100 residents live in the former mining settlement, where tourism, research and education now anchor a working Arctic community rather than a purpose-built resort.
Hurtigruten Svalbard excursions highlighted that mix of access and remoteness, from Mine No. 3 and midnight-sun kayaking to a hybrid-electric catamaran trip toward Nordenskiöldbreen glacier.
3-4 nights is the recommended minimum for first-time visitors, underscoring how “coolcation” demand is widening toward far-north destinations as European summers grow hotter.