Aurora hunts can be a gamble. This one turns the odds in your favor with a private SuperJeep chase outside Reykjavik. You’ll get driven straight into the countryside and taken to likely viewing spots based on live weather and the aurora forecast, with extra effort aimed at photos of you under the sky.
I especially like two things: first, the tour is exclusive to your group (up to 6 people), so you’re not stuck waiting on a bigger bus crew. Second, you’re promised another try if the lights do not show that night, which matters in Iceland when the weather is the boss. One drawback to consider is the obvious one: the experience is dependent on sky conditions, and the operator can cancel if conditions are bad enough.
In This Review
- Key reasons this hunt works
- SuperJeep Pickup at 8 or 9 pm: Making the Night Start Right
- Leaving Reykjavik Fast: Why the Countryside Location Matters
- How the Route Is Chosen: Weather and Aurora Forecast Lead the Way
- The Private SuperJeep Setup: Comfort, Control, and Group Size
- The Photo Plan: Getting Aurora Shots Without Extra Hassle
- What You Might See: Colors, Movement, and Expectations
- The Real Itinerary: What Happens From Pickup to Return
- Price and Value: Paying for a Private Vehicle, Not a Ticket
- Weather Reality Check: When the Tour Goes On, Pauses, or Changes
- Best Fit: Who Will Love This Hunt (and Who Might Not)
- The Guide Factor: When the Hunt Becomes Memorable
- Should You Book This Private Northern Lights SuperJeep Hunt?
- FAQ
- What time does hotel pickup usually happen?
- How long is the tour?
- Is this tour private?
- What is the maximum group size?
- What’s included in the price?
- Are food and drinks included?
- What happens if we do not see the northern lights?
- Can the tour be cancelled due to weather?
- How do I confirm if the tour is on the day of?
- FAQ
- Question goes here
- Question goes here
Key reasons this hunt works
- Private SuperJeep for up to 6: you pay per vehicle, not per head, so small groups get real value.
- Live routing based on forecast and weather: your drive direction and stops change with the night.
- Free photos included: they’ll work to get shots of you with the aurora background.
- Another full try if needed: if you don’t see the northern lights, you can rebook free of charge.
- Hotel pickup and drop-off in Reykjavik: you avoid complicated self-drive late-night logistics.
SuperJeep Pickup at 8 or 9 pm: Making the Night Start Right
Timing is everything for the northern lights, and this tour builds that into your evening. You’ll be picked up at your hotel in Reykjavik around 8pm or 9pm depending on the season, then you head out of town immediately rather than wasting precious dark hours.
What I like about this is the practical flow. You’re not trying to coordinate with strangers, and you’re not guessing where to go first. Instead, you hand the first step to your driver/guide, who uses the night’s conditions to decide where to aim for the best chances.
You’ll typically be back in Reykjavik around 12am or 1am. That keeps the trip contained enough that you don’t feel like you’ve lost your whole evening, but it’s still long enough for a real aurora window.
You can also read our reviews of more guided tours in Reykjavik
Leaving Reykjavik Fast: Why the Countryside Location Matters
Reykjavik is bright. Even when you drive out, the city glow can hang on, and that’s the last thing you want when you’re chasing faint aurora activity. This hunt gets you out early and into darker areas right away, which is a big deal for visibility.
The key detail is that the direction and next stop aren’t fixed. The tour adapts to what the sky is doing. So instead of following a rigid script, you move based on conditions that night, which is usually what wins or loses an aurora hunt.
Also, you’re not just being dropped somewhere and told good luck. You’re taken to viewing locations where you’re most likely to see the lights. That’s exactly what you want in Iceland: someone making decisions in real time while you’re focused on the sky.
How the Route Is Chosen: Weather and Aurora Forecast Lead the Way

This experience is built around one reality: you cannot control Icelandic weather, and you definitely can’t force the aurora to appear on schedule. So the smarter approach is flexibility.
Your driver/guide chooses the route and stops based on the weather and the aurora forecast, and all efforts are made to get you into the best position for viewing. Translation: if clouds roll in, you don’t sit and hope. You move.
There’s another nice benefit here: because the plan stays flexible, you’re not stuck repeating the same viewing spot for hours. The route can shift as the night evolves, which keeps your odds from flattening out if one direction underperforms.
The Private SuperJeep Setup: Comfort, Control, and Group Size

Let’s talk about the shape of the group, because it directly impacts your experience. This is a private tour exclusively for your party, and up to 6 people can ride in one SuperJeep. The price is the same for 1 to 6 people, because you’re paying per vehicle.
That matters for value. If you’re traveling as a couple, the price is obviously still premium, but you’re buying control: a private guide experience and the time to set up photos and viewing without coordinating with a full group schedule. If you’re traveling as a small group, it becomes easier to justify the cost because the “per person” feeling drops quickly.
You’ll also appreciate that the SuperJeep format is suited to winter conditions. It operates in all weather conditions, and you’re specifically told to dress appropriately, which is a good sign that the operator expects real outdoor time rather than treating aurora viewing like a quick photo-op.
The Photo Plan: Getting Aurora Shots Without Extra Hassle
One of the best perks here is that you get free photos from the tour. The guide will make an effort to take photos of you with the northern lights in the background, with no extra charge.
This is more than a nice-to-have. In aurora hunting, people often focus too hard on getting their own phone shots and then miss the moment. With someone assigned to photo capture, you can spend more of your attention on watching the sky and less on fiddling with settings or gear.
Also, because your driver/guide is working toward likely viewing spots, the photo attempts aren’t random. They’re tied to where the aurora is most likely to show up, and that increases the odds you’ll come away with something more satisfying than a dark sky and a faint smear.
You can also read our reviews of more private tours in Reykjavik
What You Might See: Colors, Movement, and Expectations
Here’s the part that keeps things honest. The tour can’t guarantee the northern lights, and no Iceland operator can. But this hunt is designed to maximize your chances.
If conditions cooperate, you’ll likely see aurora in greenish-yellow tones, with a chance of white, red, or pink lights too. You may also notice the aurora moving overhead, swirling and shifting rather than staying fixed in one place.
I like having a sense of what’s possible because it changes how you watch. The lights can be subtle at first and then strengthen, so it helps to stay patient and keep looking even when you’re not sure you’re seeing anything.
The tour also suggests an interesting old Iceland idea: harsher frost nights can bring more intense color. You won’t need to believe it to appreciate the point—it’s another reminder that the best nights often come with colder, clearer conditions that create better visibility.
The Real Itinerary: What Happens From Pickup to Return

Here’s the practical flow you should expect, and how it plays out on the ground:
You’ll start with hotel pickup in Reykjavik around 8pm or 9pm. Then you drive out of town right away. Your guide’s goal is to reach the viewing area quickly while the sky is still worth chasing.
Once you’re out, you’ll be taken to viewing locations chosen for that night’s forecast. The direction and the next stop can change depending on cloud cover and aurora predictions. That’s a big advantage because it keeps you from wasting time staring into the wrong patch of sky.
Throughout the viewing time, the guide is working on two tracks: helping you see the aurora and making efforts for photos with the lights in the background. You’re not expected to do everything yourself.
You’ll then return to Reykjavik around 12am or 1am.
That’s the itinerary in a nutshell. The key detail is that this is a pursuit with flexibility, not a one-stop viewing ceremony.
Price and Value: Paying for a Private Vehicle, Not a Ticket
At $1,470.29 per group (up to 6), this is not a budget tour. It’s a premium purchase, and you should judge it by what you actually get.
What you’re paying for:
- A private SuperJeep experience (not shared logistics)
- Hotel pickup and drop-off
- National park fees and local taxes included
- A dedicated driver/guide
- Free photos attempts included
- A free rebook option if you don’t see the northern lights
Now the balanced take. If you go on a night when clouds swallow the sky, any aurora hunt feels frustrating. The difference here is that you get a second chance without paying again, and that can make the overall value much better than a one-and-done hunt.
Where it really shines is when you’re traveling with a small group. Because the price is per vehicle for up to 6, it’s easier to split the value across more people than with tours that charge per passenger.
And one more note: food and drinks are not included. That’s common on tours like this, but it’s worth planning snacks or a light meal before pickup so you’re comfortable during the viewing window.
Weather Reality Check: When the Tour Goes On, Pauses, or Changes
The tour is described as operating in all weather conditions, but it’s also clearly dependent on sky conditions. That means the vehicle may handle rough conditions, while the aurora still needs darkness and enough clear sky.
You’re also told to contact the operator around 5pm on the day of the tour to see if it’s on. That’s a smart way to avoid surprises when forecasts are shifting late.
If the tour goes ahead and you do not see the northern lights, you’ll be offered to try once again for free. If conditions are so poor that they need to cancel all your nights due to bad weather, you receive a full refund. So while the lights can be unpredictable, your money risk is managed better than many fixed-date aurora activities.
Best Fit: Who Will Love This Hunt (and Who Might Not)
This tour is built for people who want maximum effort from the start and don’t want to gamble with self-driving.
It’s a great fit if:
- You want a private experience rather than joining a larger group
- You care about being taken to likely spots based on the forecast
- You’re okay dressing for cold outdoor time and waiting for the sky to cooperate
- You value a second attempt if the aurora doesn’t show
It may be less ideal if:
- You’re trying to keep costs as low as possible
- You want a guaranteed show with no flexibility and no risk (because none exist in aurora hunting)
If you’re choosing between several northern lights tours, the private SuperJeep angle plus the free rebook option is the heart of the value.
The Guide Factor: When the Hunt Becomes Memorable
One of the strongest signals you should pay attention to is the role of the guide. A memorable hunt often comes down to how well someone reads the night and keeps things fun while you wait.
In particular, Omar is mentioned as a wonderful and knowledgeable guide who helped make the hunt memorable. That kind of guidance matters because it keeps your attention on the sky, not on confusion or delays. Even if aurora activity is unpredictable, the tone of the experience can still feel like a win.
Should You Book This Private Northern Lights SuperJeep Hunt?
Book it if you want a private, high-effort aurora plan with hotel pickup, flexible route decisions, and a genuine safety net if the lights don’t appear that night. The fact that the tour is designed around rebooking free of charge makes the premium price easier to swallow.
I’d especially consider this on your first night in town. If you get lucky, great. If you don’t, you still have the option to try again without feeling like you’re throwing away a whole evening.
Skip it if you’re chasing the lowest price or if you’d rather do aurora viewing on your own without paying for dedicated driving and photo support. In aurora country, simplicity can feel appealing, but it usually reduces your flexibility.
FAQ
What time does hotel pickup usually happen?
Pickup is typically at your hotel in Reykjavik around 8pm or 9pm, depending on the season.
How long is the tour?
The duration is approximately 3 hours 30 minutes to 4 hours 30 minutes.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private tour/activity exclusively for your group.
What is the maximum group size?
Up to 6 people can ride in one SuperJeep, and one SuperJeep is required per booking.
What’s included in the price?
Included are hotel pickup and drop-off, the driver/guide, local taxes, national park fees, private tour service, and free photos from the tour.
Are food and drinks included?
No. Food and drinks are not included.
What happens if we do not see the northern lights?
If you don’t see the northern lights during the evening tour, you may rebook for another evening free of charge.
Can the tour be cancelled due to weather?
Yes. The right is reserved to cancel depending on weather and sky conditions. If the tour is cancelled due to bad weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund if needed.
How do I confirm if the tour is on the day of?
You’re advised to contact the operator around 5pm on the day of the tour to check whether it is on.
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