Visiting the North Pole? Here’s What You Need to Know
- Jan 18, 2021
- 2 min read

Traveling is one of the best things about life, and everybody who is alive on this planet knows it. So if you're the type who likes to go off the beaten path, chances are you will still be walking alongside other travelers - because everybody travels. However, there is a destination that not many get to visit, as it poses significant challenges, the least of which is a quite hefty travel budget. Interested? Let's talk about how you can get to the North Pole.
How Many People Travel to the North Pole?
The North Pole, to many of us, is associated with a well-known holiday figure who gives out presents at the end of the year to children who have been good. Or if you're an adult, you know it to be a place of never-ending cold. And it is true. Also known as the Geographic North Pole or the Terrestrial North Pole, the North Pole defines the geodetic latitude 90-degrees north, where the earth's axis meets its surface - and it is located in the middle of the Arctic Ocean amidst oceans with permanently shifting sea ice. This makes it far more challenging to visit than the South Pole, which lies on a continental land mass.
It is so challenging that, according to the director of a company that offers guided expeditions to both polar regions, only about a thousand people visit it every year. Antarctica, on the other hand, attracts nearly 20, 000 visitors annually.
Reasons to Travel to the North Pole
For those adventurous travel junkies who have been to the remotest pockets in the East, the West, and the South, an expedition to the North Pole may just be the experience that you need to finally complete your journey around the planet. Not many people do it, so you have bragging rights for the rest of your life. In addition:
You get to see a glimpse into the life that thrives in it.
An expedition to the North Pole will take you through regions that offer a look into the wildlife that persist in these cold conditions, such as polar bears, as well as Orca, Humpback, and Beluga whales. In addition, you can chance upon Svalbard reindeer sightings, and Inuit tribes that live in northern Alaska and Canada.
You can experience its seasons. It may be all ice, but it still has different seasons. July is said to be the warmest month, while temperatures can drop to 31 degrees below zero in February. Similarly, like Alaska and some places in Norway, the amount of daylight that you get on a certain day depends on the time of the year.
Sounds good, so far?
The next thing to do is prepare as much money as you can to finally get on an expedition. Guided tours to the North Pole start from at least $20,000 per person. Additionally, there are only around 5 trips to the region for a limited number of travelers, so if you want to get on board, make sure to ring up a trusted travel partner as soon as you can!




Comments