How to celebrate the summer solstice in Sweden, Finland, Norway, and Denmark
Introduction
In the far north of Europe, the summer Solstice is not just an astronomical event — it is the year's most celebrated holiday. In a region where winter darkness can last for twenty hours a day, the arrival of the midnight sun carries a near-mystical significance. Across Sweden, Finland, Norway, and Denmark, Midsummer is celebrated with bonfires, outdoor feasting, flower garlands, dancing around decorated poles, and the distinctly Scandinavian tradition of staying up through the brief 'night' that barely darkens at all.
Sweden: Midsommar
Swedish Midsommar — celebrated on the Friday and Saturday between 19 and 25 June — is the country's most important non-religious Public Holiday after Christmas. The central ritual is the raising and dancing of the midsommarstång — the midsummer pole (related to the May Maypole tradition). The pole, decorated with birch branches, flowers, and garlands, is raised in the afternoon to the accompaniment of traditional folk music.
Families and communities dance around the pole in a series of traditional dances, the most beloved of which is 'Små Grodorna' (The Little Frogs) — a song-and-action game performed by adults and children alike with cheerful self-mockery.
Dalarna: The Heart of Swedish Midsommar
The province of Dalarna in central Sweden is considered the cultural heartland of Midsommar. The villages of Leksand and Rättvik on Lake Siljan host the country's largest public Midsommar celebrations, drawing tens of thousands of visitors in traditional Swedish folk costume (folkdräkt). The largest Midsommar pole in the world is raised at Leksand each year. The lakeside setting, folk music, and traditional dress create an atmosphere that feels genuinely rooted in centuries of tradition.
Traditional Midsommar Food and Drink
The Midsommar table centres on new potatoes — the first of the Swedish summer season — served with sill (pickled herring), sour cream, and chives. Strawberries with cream are the essential dessert. Aquavit (caraway-flavoured spirit) is the traditional Midsommar drink, consumed in shots accompanied by traditional drinking songs (snapsvisor). Crown wreaths of wildflowers, made by hand and worn in the hair, are the season's signature accessory.
Finland: Juhannus
Finnish Juhannus — celebrated on the Saturday between 20 and 26 June — is defined by the bonfire (kokko). Enormous bonfires are lit on lakeshores and coastal headlands at midsummer midnight, visible for miles across the water. Finland is the country of a thousand lakes, and the combination of a giant bonfire reflected in still water under a glowing midnight sky is one of northern Europe's most beautiful sights.
Juhannus is the quintessential Finnish family holiday, with an estimated two million Finns (in a country of 5.5 million) heading to their summer cottages (mökki) on lakeshores and islands. The festival involves sauna bathing, swimming in lakes, and the preparation of grilled sausages. Finnish Midsommar tradition also features numerous folk beliefs: gathering seven different types of flowers and placing them under your pillow is said to bring dreams of your future spouse.
Best Places for Juhannus in Finland
The most accessible public Juhannus celebration for visitors is Seurasaari Open-Air Museum in Helsinki, which holds a traditional midsummer event with folk dances, wedding ceremonies in period dress, and a midsummer bonfire on the island. The lake districts of Lakeland Finland — particularly around Savonlinna and Tampere — offer the most atmospheric bonfire experiences in a lakeside setting.
Norway: Sankthansaften
Norway's Sankthansaften (St John's Eve, 23 June) has Viking-era roots, though the holiday is now officially associated with the feast of St John the Baptist. Bonfires (sankthannsbål) along the fjords, especially in Bergen and the western fjord country, create spectacular midsummer views. In Bergen, the bonfire at Fana is one of the country's largest and oldest traditions.
Denmark: Sankt Hans Aften
Denmark's St Hans Aften on 23 June is primarily a bonfire festival. Danes gather on beaches and in parks to build and light bonfires on which a straw witch effigy — a tradition said to send witches away to Bloksbjerg mountain in Germany — is placed on top. The beaches of Copenhagen and Aarhus host large communal bonfire events, while smaller local gatherings are held throughout the country.
Practical Tips for Midsummer Travel
The Midsummer weekend is one of Scandinavia's busiest travel periods — book accommodation three to six months in advance, particularly in popular lake districts and in city centres where public events are held. Many Scandinavian businesses close for the long Midsummer weekend; stock up on supplies before the holiday. Pack for cool evenings even in high summer — temperatures in Scandinavia drop significantly after midnight even in June. Mosquito repellent is strongly recommended for outdoor celebrations near water.
Iceland: The Midnight Sun
Iceland, though geographically distinct from mainland Scandinavia, experiences the midnight sun phenomenon more dramatically than anywhere in Europe. In Reykjavik at the summer solstice, the sun dips below the horizon for only a few hours and the sky never fully darkens — a disorienting and beautiful phenomenon that draws visitors from around the world. The Secret Solstice music festival, held annually in late June, takes advantage of this extraordinary light: headline performances take place at midnight under full daylight. Iceland's summer is also the season of the National Day (17 June) and the Icelandic Horse Festival, making the weeks around the solstice one of the country's most vibrant periods.
Folk Beliefs and Midsummer Magic
The Scandinavian Midsummer's association with magic and the supernatural is ancient, predating Christianity and rooted in pre-Christian veneration of the summer solstice. The thin boundary between the natural and supernatural worlds at Midsummer — when daylight barely surrenders to darkness — generated centuries of folk beliefs across the Nordic countries. In Sweden, picking seven different wildflowers in silence on Midsommarafton (Midsummer Eve) and placing them under your pillow is said to bring prophetic dreams of your future spouse. In Finland, young women traditionally looked at their reflection in a well at midnight to see the face of their future partner. Bonfires at Midsummer served partly to drive away evil spirits and witches believed to be especially active at this liminal time of year — a belief shared across much of northern Europe and expressed in Denmark's St Hans bonfire tradition to this day.
What to Expect as a Visitor
The Midsummer weekend in Scandinavia is intensely family and community oriented — many events are open to the public but centred on local participation rather than tourism. The best approach for visitors is to seek connection with local families or community groups, either through accommodation hosts in rural areas, organised cultural experiences, or by attending the large public celebrations at Leksand in Sweden, Seurasaari in Helsinki, or town squares across Denmark and Norway. Dress in layers — the Nordic summer can shift from warm and sunny to chilly and rainy within hours. Bring a woven flower crown if you want to participate fully in the Swedish Midsommar tradition; they are sold at every market and garden centre in June and are worn enthusiastically by Swedes of all ages at Midsommar gatherings.