How to Photograph the Northern Lights on Your Phone
To photograph the Northern Lights on your phone, steady it on a tripod or solid surface, turn on Night mode (or switch to manual/Pro), set focus to infinity, and use a 3–10 second exposure. Phones from the last few years capture the aurora remarkably well — often greener than your eyes can see. The two mistakes that ruin most shots are handholding (blur) and leaving the camera on auto. Here is the full method, plus how to keep your phone alive in Tromsø's cold.
The 60-second setup
- Stabilise. Mount the phone on a small tripod, or rest it on a rock, wall or car roof.
- Kill the light. Turn off the flash. Lower your screen brightness so it doesn't blind you.
- Go long. Open Night mode and let it use its longest exposure, or switch to manual.
- Focus far. Set focus manually to infinity, or tap a bright star until it's sharp.
- Avoid shake. Use a 3-second timer (or a Bluetooth shutter) so tapping doesn't blur the shot.
Night mode vs. manual
Night mode (iPhone 11 and newer, recent Pixel and Samsung Galaxy phones) does most of this automatically — it takes a multi-second exposure and merges frames. For many people it's all you need: steady the phone, let it run for the full count, and don't move. Manual / Pro mode gives you more control if your phone has it, and it's the only way to shoot proper long exposures on some Android phones.
Manual settings cheat sheet
| Setting | Start here |
|---|---|
| Mode | Night mode, or Pro / Manual |
| Focus | Manual → infinity (or tap a bright star) |
| Shutter / exposure | 3–10 s (longer for faint aurora; shorter if it's bright and moving fast) |
| ISO | 800–3200 (lower it if the image is too bright/noisy) |
| Format | RAW if available — more room to edit later |
| Stabilisation | Tripod or solid surface, every time |
| Self-timer | 3 s, to avoid shake when you tap |
Cold-weather reality in Tromsø
- Batteries die fast in the cold. Keep the phone in an inside pocket between shots and carry a power bank.
- Wipe the lens. Frost and condensation form quickly; a quick wipe saves a foggy shot.
- Bring thin liner gloves. You'll want to use the touchscreen without bare fingers in sub-zero air.
- Mind your footing. Set up your tripod before the display peaks, not while fumbling in the dark.
Why your photo looks better than real life
Don't be disappointed if the aurora looks fainter to your eyes than on screen. Your camera gathers light for several seconds; your eyes can't. A soft grey-green glow overhead can render as vivid green in a photo — that's physics, not a filter. Knowing this also helps you spot a faint aurora: if you're unsure whether that pale band is the real thing, take a 5-second test shot and check the screen.
The best photo is the one you're there for. Check the live aurora status for Tromsø tonight so you're set up and ready the moment the lights actually appear — not scrambling after they fade.