REVIEW · KITTILA
Levi: Northern Lights Tour with Guaranteed Sightings
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Arctic GM Experiences OY · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Guaranteed aurora tours are rare. This one has a plan. I like the guaranteed refund setup if the tour can’t start due to weather, and I like the small group size that keeps the night focused on finding clear sky. One thing to consider: you’re signing up for a long, cold pursuit (often 6–10 hours), and you’ll need to be comfortable stepping out and waiting.
This Northern Lights hunt runs with pickup from your Levi accommodation, then an active chase guided by certified first-aid staff who also shoot Aurora photos. In the past, guides like Lachin and Mario have used a calm, persistent approach—driving, pausing, checking conditions, and staying out until you’ve had your best chance.
In This Review
- The Plan Behind a Northern Lights Tour From Levi
- Your Heated 2025 4×4 Van at Arctic Temperatures
- How the Aurora Hunt Actually Plays Out
- Multiple Locations, Including Sweden or Norway-Route Hunting
- Why the Photo Help Matters (And What You Actually Get)
- The Northern Lights Guarantee: What It Means in Real Life
- Timing, Pickup, and How Long You Should Plan For
- Price and Value: Is $211 Worth It?
- What to Pack (and What Not to Bring) for Your Aurora Night
- Who This Northern Lights Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book This Guaranteed Sightings Aurora Hunt?
- FAQ
- Is the Northern Lights viewing guaranteed?
- How long will the tour last once we start searching?
- How many people are in each group?
- What vehicle do we ride in?
- Are professional photos included?
- Will we drive far from Levi, or cross borders?
- What should I bring for the night?
- Do you provide warm clothing, drinks, and snacks?
- When should I show up for pickup?
- What is not allowed during the tour?
The Plan Behind a Northern Lights Tour From Levi

The real difference here is that you’re not stuck with a short, scripted program. The hunt is designed to last until the Aurora appears, and that matters because Lapland’s sky can flip from cloud to clear fast. I also like that the tour treats the Aurora like a forecasting-and-search problem, not just a hope-and-hope-again situation.
You’ll start with pickup in Levi and ride in a heated 2025 Ford Tourneo 4×4. Once you’re out of town and set up at a dark-sky spot, the guide’s job is simple: keep checking the sky, reposition when needed, and give you time for both seeing and photographing.
Your Heated 2025 4×4 Van at Arctic Temperatures

Cold isn’t a side issue. It’s the whole game. The tour uses brand-new 2025 luxury 4×4 vans built for severe winter driving, and you’ll also get thermal overalls plus hot drinks and light snacks for steady warming.
In practical terms, this setup gives you more control over your night:
- You can step out to watch and shoot without feeling like you’re marinating in the cold.
- When the lights fade, you’re not stuck freezing in the open. You get breaks that help you last the whole hunt.
The temperature note is serious: the vans are described as safe and comfortable even down to –40°C. That’s not “dress warmly” advice. That’s “plan to stay out, but do it with real gear and real heating.”
How the Aurora Hunt Actually Plays Out

Your evening follows a rhythm: drive to the next potential viewing area, stop in a darker/clearer patch, then wait long enough to see if the sky cooperates. Because visibility depends on clouds and sky conditions, the guide’s decision-making is everything.
What you should expect during the hunt:
- The guide will move when the sky isn’t cooperating.
- You may stop at multiple locations in the region to improve your odds.
- On some nights, the chase can extend beyond Finland’s borders in order to beat cloud cover.
This longer approach is the heart of the promise. Many shorter tours try for a couple of hours and then turn back. Here, the hunt typically runs 6–10 hours, and the guide keeps the search going until it happens.
Multiple Locations, Including Sweden or Norway-Route Hunting

Levi is great for getting set up in the Aurora zone, but it’s also common to hit cloud cover. That’s why the tour emphasizes unlimited mileage & time. It’s not a marketing line—it’s how the night stays flexible when conditions change.
In the field, you’ll often see guides work like this:
- Start closer, then expand if clouds are blocking the view.
- Try a second and third stop rather than giving up too early.
- Continue moving until the sky clears enough for a real show.
You’ll also hear guide names come up often—people mention Lachin, Mario, Rui, Giuseppe, and others by name—because the guides are the ones doing the searching, not a generic plan. In many cases, that search includes routes toward Sweden or even the Norwegian border when it improves the odds.
Why the Photo Help Matters (And What You Actually Get)

This tour isn’t only about “seeing the lights.” You’re getting professional photo results too. Your guide is not just a driver; they’re also a professional Aurora photographer, and DSLR images are included.
That changes your experience in three ways:
- You don’t have to figure out your own camera settings while you’re standing in the dark.
- You’ll get photos even if the Aurora is faint at first or you’re still learning what to look for.
- The guide can time the camera and adjust technique when the lights surge—when Aurora activity ramps up, timing matters.
You can also expect the guide to explain how the Aurora shows up to the human eye versus a camera. This is a small lesson, but it helps you understand why a photo might look different from what you felt in real life.
The Northern Lights Guarantee: What It Means in Real Life

Let’s translate the “guaranteed sightings” promise into something you can rely on. The tour says Northern Lights viewing is guaranteed in the sense that you’ll receive a full refund if weather prevents the tour from starting.
That’s important clarity. There’s a difference between:
- A tour that can’t depart because conditions are too unfavorable, where the refund applies.
- A tour that departs but the Aurora is weak—because no one can control the sky.
The program also emphasizes a high track record (a 99% success rate is stated) and uses a real-time system to reduce guessing. Their 24/7 Aurora Command Center monitors clouds, weather models, and solar wind, then coordinates drives across a network of guides in multiple locations. The point is to keep you out of the common trap: “We’ll try for a bit, then hope.”
Timing, Pickup, and How Long You Should Plan For

The tour is listed at 8 hours, and the Aurora hunt inside that window is typically 6–10 hours depending on conditions. So yes, plan a real night out. If you treat it like a quick side trip, the long hunt can feel heavy.
Pickup in Levi is included. You’ll be asked to arrive at the lobby about 10 minutes before your scheduled time, and the guide waits up to 15 minutes after pickup time before leaving. In practice, your pickup time can sometimes shift earlier than you expected, so it’s smart to check any updates you receive before heading out.
Once the night is underway, you’ll have warm drinks and light snacks during stops. That small routine helps you keep energy for long periods of waiting, and it makes the cold breaks feel more like a pause than a punishment.
Price and Value: Is $211 Worth It?
At $211 per person, this isn’t the cheapest Northern Lights option. But the value is less about the base price and more about what you’re buying with it: a serious logistics budget and a higher “search intensity.”
Here’s what you’re paying for that affects your odds:
- Small group size (max 8) so the guide can manage the group and photography attention.
- A heated luxury 4×4 van designed for extreme cold driving.
- Unlimited mileage & time, which lets the guide actually go find clearer sky.
- DSLR photo results included, with a guide who does Aurora photography.
- A refund promise if weather prevents the tour from starting.
If you care most about maximizing your chance of seeing the lights and getting photos without dealing with camera chaos yourself, the price starts to make sense. If your expectations are flexible and you’re comfortable with a shorter, lower-cost hunt, you might choose differently. But if you’re the type who doesn’t want to gamble with a “3-hour maybe,” this tour matches that mindset.
What to Pack (and What Not to Bring) for Your Aurora Night

The tour provides thermal overalls, but you still need to dress like the Arctic is real—because it is.
Bring:
- Passport or ID card
- Warm clothing
- Warm shoes
Not allowed:
- Pets
- Luggage or large bags
- Mobility scooters
- Smoking in the vehicle
- Alcohol and drugs
- Littering
- Baby carriages
- Fireworks
Also, think about layers you can move in. You’ll be stepping out for viewing and photographing, then warming up in the van. The best clothing strategy is the one that keeps you comfortable enough to stay outside longer.
Who This Northern Lights Tour Is Best For

I think this is a strong fit if you:
- Want a better chance through longer hunting rather than a quick check.
- Care about professional photos and would rather not learn camera settings in freezing darkness.
- Prefer a small group experience where you’re not lost in the shuffle.
It’s also a good match for first-timers, because the guide’s photography angle usually turns Aurora watching into something you understand, not just something you witness.
If you’re traveling with someone who can’t handle long outdoor waits, or if you hate the idea of being flexible and moving around all night, then you might feel drained by the chase style.
Should You Book This Guaranteed Sightings Aurora Hunt?
If seeing the Northern Lights is your top priority in Lapland, this is the kind of tour that aims to meet that goal with a practical strategy: move when needed, keep hunting longer, and deliver photos with real photography support.
I’d book it if you want:
- Guaranteed refund if the tour can’t start due to weather
- A small group night with a persistent hunt
- Heated 4×4 transport and included thermal gear
- DSLR photos handled for you by the guide
I’d think twice if you’re looking for a short, easy, low-effort evening and you’re not willing to stay out late or accept that conditions drive the schedule.
FAQ
Is the Northern Lights viewing guaranteed?
The tour states that Northern Lights viewing is guaranteed with a full refund if weather prevents the tour from starting. The company also monitors conditions closely during the hunt.
How long will the tour last once we start searching?
The tour is listed as 8 hours, and the Aurora hunt is typically 6–10 hours depending on conditions.
How many people are in each group?
The small group is limited to a maximum of 8 participants.
What vehicle do we ride in?
You travel in a brand-new 2025 Ford Tourneo luxury 4×4 van designed for safe comfort in very cold Arctic conditions.
Are professional photos included?
Yes. The guide is also a professional Aurora photographer, and DSLR photos are included.
Will we drive far from Levi, or cross borders?
The tour includes unlimited mileage and time, and it may cross borders if needed to reach clearer skies.
What should I bring for the night?
Bring a passport or ID card, warm clothing, and warm shoes.
Do you provide warm clothing, drinks, and snacks?
Yes. Thermal overalls are provided, and you’ll have hot drinks and light snacks during the night.
When should I show up for pickup?
Be in the lobby about 10 minutes before the scheduled pickup time. The guide waits up to 15 minutes after the scheduled pickup time before departing.
What is not allowed during the tour?
Pets are not allowed. You also can’t bring luggage or large bags, mobility scooters, alcohol or drugs, and smoking is not allowed in the vehicle.




