aurora borealis canada

If seeing the northern lights in Canada has been on your bucket list for years, 2026 might be the year to finally make it happen. Not just because aurora viewing is magical — though it absolutely is — but because the conditions for seeing the northern lights are not expected to be this spectacular again for a decade.

For Canadians searching for the best places to see the northern lights, timing matters as much as location. And right now, both are aligning in ways that make the next few years particularly special for aurora tourism across Canada and beyond.

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Keep your eyes up Canada, because the northern lights are predicted to put on a show Thursday and Friday night and you won't want to miss it. Both Alberta and B.C. should have a good chance of seeing the aurora brighten the sky.

NOAA Space Weather Prediction Centre issued a severe geomagnetic storm watch and said that "highly elevated geomagnetic activity" is likely.

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If you don't want to miss what could be a "spectacular display" of the northern lights over Canada, keep your eyes on the skies over the next two nights!

Thanks to a massive solar flare that erupted from the sun earlier this week, a dazzling display of the aurora borealis could be lighting up the sky tonight (Thursday) and Friday night.

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If you haven't gotten your chance to see the northern lights in Canada, you'll want to keep your eyes on the skies this week.

The northern lights could be visible across the country this weekend as moderate solar storms are predicted to occur, sending the aurora far south when they do, even as far as parts of southern Ontario.

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Look up! The northern lights could be visible across Canada this weekend due to a major solar storm, and almost all of the country will have a chance to see it.

According to space weather forecasters, several bursts of plasma from the sun are likely to reach Earth, leading to "highly elevated" geomagnetic activity and the possibility of widespread auroras, even as far south as southern Ontario.

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