NordicMarketing Blog - News and trends in tourism marketing and from Northern Europe

Why Arctic summer outdoor travel is becoming a stronger sell for European tour operators

Written by Anja | May 26, 2026 9:06:47 AM

Lapland is no longer only a winter destination

More travelers are looking north for summer 

For a long time, Lapland has mainly been sold through winter images: snow-covered forests, husky safaris and Northern Lights dancing above frozen lakes. But across Europe, travel preferences are changing. More travelers are looking for cooler summer destinations, meaningful outdoor experiences and places where nature still feels genuinely present. And that shift is creating new opportunities for Nordic tourism.

In Finnish Lapland, summer and autumn offer something many travelers increasingly crave: space to breathe. Days spent hiking through national parks, evenings by the lake sauna, bike trails across the fells, fresh air instead of heatwaves, and landscapes that feel peaceful rather than overcrowded.

For tour operators in the DACH region and Benelux, this development opens interesting new opportunities. 

 

© Kota Collective Visit Ylläs

Nature, activity and calmness in one product

Finnish Lapland answers several current travel trends at once. Travelers are becoming more intentional about how and where they travel. Many are actively searching for:

  • active holidays without mass tourism
  • meaningful outdoor experiences
  • destinations with clean nature and fresh air
  • smaller groups and more personal experiences
  • cooler climates during summer
  • products connected to sustainability and wellbeing

This is exactly where Arctic summer products are becoming increasingly relevant. Finnish Lapland offers a combination that is still relatively rare in Europe: accessible outdoor adventures paired with comfort, strong infrastructure and a sense of calm that many destinations struggle to preserve.

Unlike winter-only products, summer and autumn itineraries often allow for more flexibility. They work well for roundtrips, active travelers, repeat Nordic guests and people looking for something beyond the classic Lapland winter package.

In Fell Lapland, hiking trails begin directly outside the villages, national parks stretch across vast landscapes, and activities such as biking, canoeing, sauna experiences and wildlife encounters can easily be combined into flexible itineraries.

© Visit Levi

More than a shoulder season

For many tour operators, Lapland has traditionally been a winter product. But summer and autumn are becoming increasingly relevant, especially for repeat Nordic travelers and clients looking for something less classic.

The snowless season also creates more flexibility for itinerary planning. Products can often be combined more easily with:

  • roundtrips through the Nordics
  • active and soft adventure programs
  • wellness and gastronomy
  • FIT and small-group travel
  • shoulder season offers

From late August onwards, another element slowly returns to the sky: the Northern Lights. Combined with autumn colors, hiking conditions and quieter travel periods, this creates strong storytelling potential for tour operators targeting nature-focused travelers.

© Visit Levi

Why this matters for the European market

Particularly in the DACH and Benelux markets, interest in outdoor travel and Nordic destinations has grown steadily in recent years. Many travelers today are no longer only searching for “sightseeing.” They want experiences that feel more personal, natural and emotionally memorable.

Arctic summer products fit well into this development because they combine activity with atmosphere. And unlike highly saturated destinations, Finnish Lapland still offers a feeling many travelers increasingly struggle to find elsewhere in Europe: space.

 

Header: © Christer Adahl Visit Ylläs