Illustrated cost comparison: three columns (budget/mid/luxury) with stacked bars showing costs

What a Week in Lapland Actually Costs (2026 Prices)

A week in Lapland costs somewhere between 1,200€ and 5,000€ per person. That’s an unhelpfully wide range, so let’s break it down properly.

The biggest factor isn’t what you do – it’s when you go. A December week at mid-range level runs 2,500-3,500€ per person. The same trip in March, with the same activities and deeper snow, costs 1,500-2,200€. Same huskies, same northern lights, same saunas. Just fewer tour buses and lower prices.

Below is a day-by-day cost breakdown at three budget levels, built from real 2026 season prices. These are per-person costs assuming two people travelling together (splitting accommodation and car rental). Solo travellers, add roughly 30-40% for the accommodation premium.

The Three Budget Tiers

Before the day-by-day breakdown, here’s what each tier looks like in practice. These aren’t arbitrary labels – they reflect genuinely different ways of experiencing Lapland.

  Budget (1,200-1,800€/week) Mid-Range (2,000-3,500€/week) Luxury (3,500-5,000€+/week)
Accommodation Hostel dorms, budget cabins Mid-range hotel or cabin Luxury cabin, glass igloo (1-2 nights)
Food Supermarket cooking + 1 meal out/day Mix of restaurants and self-catering Restaurants daily, some fine dining
Activities Free activities + 1-2 paid safaris 3-4 guided activities 5+ activities including premium options
Transport Overnight train + buses Flights + car rental Flights + car rental or private transfers
Season impact March: ~1,200€ / Dec: ~1,800€ March: ~2,000€ / Dec: ~3,500€ March: ~3,500€ / Dec: ~5,000€+
Local tip: Self-catering in a cabin with your own kitchen saves 30-50€ per person per day compared to eating out. K-Market and S-Market in every resort town are well stocked – you can eat well on supermarket food. Budget a proper restaurant meal every other night and cook the rest. That’s what Finns do on their own Lapland holidays.

Day-by-Day: Mid-Range Winter Week

This is what most first-time visitors spend. The example assumes a March trip (the sweet spot for value) with flights from the UK and a mid-range cabin or hotel. December visitors: apply roughly a 2-2.5x multiplier on accommodation and add 50-100€ to flights.

Day What Cost (per person)
Day 1 Fly to Rovaniemi or Kittilä. Check into cabin/hotel. Supermarket shop for the week. Evening sauna (own cabin). Flights: 150-400€ (return) · Accommodation: 75-125€ · Food: 25€
Day 2 Husky safari (2hr self-driven). Afternoon free – explore town or XC skiing. Restaurant dinner. Husky safari: 110-190€ · Accommodation: 75-125€ · Food: 50-70€
Day 3 Reindeer farm visit + short sleigh ride. Afternoon cross-country skiing (rental gear). Cook dinner. Reindeer visit: 35-60€ · Ski rental: 25-40€ · Accommodation: 75-125€ · Food: 30-40€
Day 4 Free day. Snowshoeing, XC skiing, or just walking in the forest. Public sauna experience. Public sauna: 15-30€ · Accommodation: 75-125€ · Food: 40-50€
Day 5 Snowmobile safari (2hr). Afternoon at leisure. Northern lights tour in the evening. Snowmobile: 100-160€ · Aurora tour: 75-100€ · Accommodation: 75-125€ · Food: 40-50€
Day 6 Downhill skiing or second free day. Restaurant dinner. Ski pass: 42-58€ · Accommodation: 75-125€ · Food: 50-70€
Day 7 Morning free. Fly home. Accommodation: 0 (checkout) · Food: 20-30€

Mid-range March total: roughly 1,500-2,200€ per person for the week, including flights, accommodation, food, and four guided activities.

The same week in December: Accommodation jumps from 75-125€/night to 180-310€/night per person. Flights are 50-100€ more. Activities are the same price but book out further in advance.

Total: 2,500-3,500€ per person. Same snow, same huskies. Just a different number on the calendar.

Day-by-Day: Budget Winter Week

Budget travel in Lapland is absolutely possible, but it requires more planning and fewer guided activities. The trade-off is worth it – free activities here are genuinely excellent, not consolation prizes.

Day What Cost (per person)
Day 1 Overnight train to Rovaniemi (sleeping cabin). Arrive morning. Check into hostel/budget cabin. Big supermarket shop. Train: 50-80€ (one way, sleeping cabin or seat) · Accommodation: 28-60€ · Food: 20€
Day 2 Free: cross-country skiing (or snowshoeing). Town exploration. Cook dinner in hostel/cabin kitchen. Ski rental: 25-40€ · Accommodation: 28-60€ · Food: 20-25€
Day 3 One splurge: husky safari (2hr self-driven). Cook all meals. Husky safari: 110-190€ · Accommodation: 28-60€ · Food: 20-25€
Day 4 Free: ice fishing (no licence needed for basic jigging), forest walk, own sauna at cabin. Accommodation: 28-60€ · Food: 20-25€
Day 5 Free: self-guided aurora hunting (drive or take a bus outside town). XC skiing. Accommodation: 28-60€ · Food: 20-25€
Day 6 Reindeer short visit or second free day. One meal out. Reindeer visit: 35-60€ · Accommodation: 28-60€ · Food: 30-40€
Day 7 Overnight train back to Helsinki. Train: 50-80€ · Food: 15-20€

Budget March total: roughly 1,200-1,500€ per person. December pushes this to 1,500-1,800€, mainly because accommodation prices jump even at budget level.

Local tip: Ice fishing with a basic jig (pilkki) requires no licence in Finland – it’s covered by jokamiehenoikeus, everyman’s right. Borrow or buy a simple jigging rod for under 15€ at a local sports shop and go to a popular spot so you can ask to borrow somebody’s auger. You’ve just replaced a 60-90€ guided activity with something that’s actually more authentic. Bring a thermos of coffee and a folding chair.

Day-by-Day: Budget Winter Week in Lapland

Day-by-Day: Luxury Winter Week

Luxury in Lapland doesn’t mean crystal chandeliers. It means a private cabin with a sauna and fell views, premium small-group safaris, and a night or two in a glass igloo watching the aurora from bed.

Day What Cost (per person)
Day 1 Fly in, transfer to luxury cabin. Evening private sauna, restaurant dinner. Flights: 150-400€ (return) · Accommodation: 150-300€ · Food: 80-120€
Day 2 Half-day husky safari with lunch. Afternoon at leisure. Restaurant dinner. Husky (half-day): 150-250€ · Accommodation: 150-300€ · Food: 80-120€
Day 3 Snowmobile safari (3hr+). Private smoke sauna experience with ice swimming. Snowmobile: 190-240€ · Sauna: 50-150€ · Accommodation: 150-300€ · Food: 80-120€
Day 4 Glass igloo night. Reindeer farm + cultural experience. Glass igloo: 400-990€/night (peak season, total – split between two) · Reindeer: 125-140€ · Food: 80-120€
Day 5 Small-group or private northern lights tour. Downhill skiing during the day. Aurora (private): 200€+ · Ski pass: 49-58€ · Accommodation: 150-300€ · Food: 80-120€
Day 6 Free day – XC skiing, snowshoeing, general relaxation. Fine dining evening. Accommodation: 150-300€ · Food: 100-120€
Day 7 Morning departure. Food: 30-40€

Luxury March total: roughly 3,500-4,500€ per person. December: 4,500-5,500€+.

Local tip: A glass igloo night adds 400-800€ to your total compared to a regular hotel room (glass igloos run 250-990€ per night vs 130-250€ for a mid-range hotel). The experience is memorable, especially if the aurora appears, but one night is enough. Spend the rest of your trip in a cabin with a proper sauna instead – you’ll sleep better too, since glass igloos can feel a bit fishbowl-like.

How Month Changes Everything

Season is the single biggest cost lever you can pull. Here’s how accommodation pricing shifts across the year, using a mid-range hotel (130-250€/night base rate in March) as the benchmark:

Month Price Multiplier What’s Happening
December 2.5x Christmas peak. Everything books out months ahead.
January 1.8x Kaamos (polar night). Deep cold – −25°C (−13°F) not unusual. Good aurora viewing.
February 1.5x UK half-term spike. Light returns. Popular for families.
March 1x (baseline) Best value for winter. Long days, deep snow, Finns’ own holiday month.
April 0.8x Spring skiing. Still snow, warmer days. Some activities winding down.
May 0.6x Mud season (kelirikko). Many operators closed. Not recommended.
June-August 0.6-1x Midnight sun. Hiking, fishing, berries. Different Lapland entirely.
September 0.7x Ruska (autumn colours). Hiking peak. Aurora season starts.
October-November 0.6-0.8x Shoulder season. Dark, possibly snowless. Budget-friendly if you time it right.

The practical upshot: a week that costs 3,000€ in December costs roughly 1,800€ in March and about 1,200€ in April. The snow is actually deeper in March. December’s premium buys you Christmas atmosphere and guaranteed darkness for aurora – nothing more.

How Destination Changes Cost

Where you base yourself matters, though less than timing. Rovaniemi is the most accessible – direct flights from London in winter, plus multiple daily Finnair services from Helsinki at 80-200€ return via Finavia airports at Rovaniemi, Kittilä, and Ivalo. It’s also the most touristy. Smaller resorts like Muonio, Inari, or Luosto are generally cheaper for accommodation and feel more authentically Lapland – but getting there adds transport costs.

Destination Accommodation Level Getting There Overall Cost Impact
Rovaniemi Full range, competitive pricing Easiest – direct flights, train Baseline
Levi Full range, slightly higher Fly to Kittilä (80-200€ return) Slightly higher
Saariselkä Good range, mid-priced Fly to Ivalo (80-200€ return) Similar to Rovaniemi
Inari Limited but characterful Fly to Ivalo + 40 min drive Accommodation comparable, fewer options
Muonio Fewer options, good cabins Fly to Kittilä + 80 min drive Often cheaper accommodation

Car rental adds 50-80€ per day (studded winter tyres are mandatory November through April and included in all rentals). If two people split it, that’s 25-40€ each. Worth it outside Rovaniemi, where activities and attractions are spread across large distances. In Rovaniemi itself, most safari operators offer hotel pickup, so a car is less essential.

The Big Totals

Here’s the full picture. All totals are per person for a 7-day/6-night trip, assuming two people travelling together. Prices are for the 2026 season and change annually – check operator websites or booking platforms for current rates.

  Budget (March) Mid-Range (March) Mid-Range (Dec) Luxury (March) Luxury (Dec)
Transport 100-160€ 120-250€ 175-350€ 150-300€ 200-400€
Accommodation (6 nights) 170-360€ 450-750€ 1,000-1,850€ 900-1,800€ 2,000-3,600€
Food (7 days) 140-175€ 280-420€ 280-420€ 560-840€ 560-840€
Activities 145-250€ 360-570€ 360-570€ 715-900€ 715-900€
Car rental (if applicable) 175-280€ 175-280€ 175-280€ 175-280€
TOTAL ~1,200-1,500€ ~1,500-2,200€ ~2,500-3,500€ ~3,500-4,500€ ~4,500-5,500€+

The numbers don’t lie. March is the value sweet spot for winter Lapland. If you have flexibility on dates, moving your trip from December to March can save 1,000€+ per person – and arguably gives you a better experience, with more daylight for activities and fewer crowds.

Local tip: The tourism industry doesn’t push March to international visitors because it doesn’t need to – December fills every bed at 2.5x the price without any marketing effort. March sells itself domestically to Finns, who know the snow is better and the days are longer. For international tourists, it’s arguably the best-kept open secret in Lapland pricing. Book early though: Finnish school holidays drive domestic demand for March cabins, especially those with saunas and fell views.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a week in Lapland cost for a family of four?

Roughly double the per-person totals above, since children share accommodation and many activities offer child discounts – check with operators when booking. A budget cabin with a kitchen is the biggest money-saver for families, cutting food costs dramatically compared to eating out every meal.

Is December worth the extra cost compared to March?

Only if Christmas atmosphere is specifically what you want – Santa Claus Village at its peak, festive lighting, the “holiday season” feel. For snow, northern lights, and activities, March is equal or better. You get 10+ hours of daylight versus near-total darkness in December, which makes activities more enjoyable and photography easier.

Can I visit Lapland for under 1,000€ for a week?

It’s tight but possible in shoulder season (April or late November). Take the overnight train, stay in hostel dorms, cook every meal, and stick to free activities – cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, ice fishing, and self-guided aurora hunting. You’d miss the guided safari experiences, but the landscape and silence are free.

Do Lapland prices include thermal clothing?

Guided safari prices include thermal oversuits, boots, and gloves for the duration of the activity. You don’t need to buy specialist Arctic gear. Bring warm base layers and a decent winter jacket – those aren’t provided. Some accommodation providers offer clothing rental separately – ask when booking.

The best week in Lapland isn’t necessarily the most expensive one. It’s the one where you picked the right month, mixed paid activities with free ones, and spent your money where it matters most to you – whether that’s a husky safari you’ll never forget or a cabin sauna you can use every night.


Best Booking Resources for Lapland

After years of travelling to and around Lapland, these are the booking tools I keep coming back to. They consistently offer the best prices, the most relevant options for northern Finland, and actually work well for Lapland-specific searches — which not all platforms do.

  • Skyscanner – The best flight search engine for Lapland routes. It catches the budget airlines and seasonal charters that other search tools miss, and the price alerts are genuinely useful for spotting deals on Helsinki-Rovaniemi or direct UK routes.
  • VR Finnish Railways – The only way to book Finland’s overnight trains. The Santa Claus Express from Helsinki to Rovaniemi is an experience in itself — book early for the cabin berths, they sell out weeks ahead in peak season.
  • DiscoverCars – Compares all the major rental companies at Lapland airports in one search. Crucially, they show which rentals include studded winter tyres — mandatory in Lapland and a detail other comparison sites bury in the fine print.
  • Booking.com – Has the widest selection of Lapland accommodation by far, including cabins, glass igloos, and small family-run guesthouses that don’t list elsewhere. Free cancellation on most properties makes it low-risk for planning ahead.
  • GetYourGuide – The largest marketplace for Lapland activities: husky safaris, snowmobile tours, aurora trips, reindeer visits. You can compare operators and prices side by side, and most bookings are cancellable up to 24 hours before.
  • SafetyWing – Travel insurance designed for adventurous trips. Covers winter sports, extreme cold activities, and medical evacuation — all relevant when you’re snowmobiling at -25°C. Affordable and the claims process is straightforward.
  • Holafly – eSIM that works in Finland from the moment you land. No hunting for local SIM cards at the airport, no roaming surprises. Set it up on your phone before departure and you’re connected in Lapland immediately.

Some of the links above are affiliate links — if you book through them, I earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend services I genuinely use and trust for Lapland travel.

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