Aurora Photography Settings: Camera Setup Guide for Northern Lights

A photographer's camera on a tripod set up for a long-exposure night photography shot
Photo by Jamie Street on Unsplash

Essential Camera Settings

Photographing the aurora requires capturing as much light as possible in a short exposure. The aurora moves, so exposures longer than 15-20 seconds will blur the curtain structures.

  • ISO: 1600-3200 (increase for faint aurora, decrease for bright)
  • Aperture: f/2.8 or wider (f/1.4-f/2.0 is ideal)
  • Shutter speed: 8-15 seconds for structured aurora, up to 25 seconds for faint activity
  • Focus: Manual focus set to infinity (use live view on a bright star to nail focus)
  • White balance: Auto or 3500-4000K (adjustable in post if shooting RAW)

Adapting to Conditions

The aurora varies dramatically in brightness. A Kp 2 display might need ISO 3200 and 15 seconds, while a Kp 6 storm can be captured at ISO 800 and 4 seconds. Adjust as conditions change — review your shots regularly.

Fast-moving aurora (Kp 5+) requires shorter exposures (4-8 seconds) to capture the curtain structure. Longer exposures smear the movement into a green blur.

Faint aurora needs longer exposures and higher ISO. Push to ISO 6400 if needed, but expect more noise.

Equipment

Camera

Any camera with manual controls and good high-ISO performance works. Full-frame DSLRs and mirrorless cameras excel, but modern APS-C sensors produce excellent results too.

Lens

Wide-angle lenses (14-24mm) capture more sky. A fast aperture (f/2.8 or wider) is critical — the difference between f/2.8 and f/4 is one full stop of light.

Tripod

Non-negotiable. Any exposure over 1 second requires a tripod. A sturdy one that handles Icelandic wind is worth the investment. Weight it down with your backpack in strong gusts.

Extras

  • Spare batteries: Cold drains batteries fast. Keep spares in an inside pocket close to your body.
  • Remote shutter or 2-second timer: Prevents camera shake from pressing the button.
  • Headlamp with red mode: Preserves night vision while adjusting settings.

Phone Photography

Modern flagship phones can capture the aurora. Use night mode or pro/manual mode:

  • iPhone: Night mode automatically activates. Prop the phone against something stable or use a phone tripod mount. Exposure times of 3-10 seconds.
  • Android: Use the pro/manual camera mode. Set ISO to 1600-3200, shutter to 8-15 seconds, and focus to infinity. A phone tripod mount is essential.

Results will not match a dedicated camera, but bright aurora (Kp 4+) can produce impressive phone photos.

Composition Tips

The aurora alone makes a good photo. The aurora over an iconic landscape makes a great one. Iceland offers exceptional foreground subjects:

  • Kirkjufell Mountain with Kirkjufellsfoss waterfall — the classic Iceland aurora shot
  • Jokulsarlon icebergs reflecting aurora — surreal, otherworldly results
  • Thingvellir’s continental rift plates — geology meets space weather
  • Churches and lighthouses — human scale against the cosmic display

Include something in the foreground. A silhouetted figure, a road leading into the distance, or a body of water reflecting the light all add depth and scale.

Post-Processing

Shoot in RAW format for maximum flexibility. In post-processing:

  • Boost green and cyan channels to enhance aurora color
  • Reduce noise with luminance noise reduction
  • Adjust white balance — cooler (bluer) temperatures make the green pop
  • Be careful not to over-saturate — the aurora is naturally vivid, and over-processing looks artificial

Check live aurora conditions on our Tonight page to know when to head out with your camera.

Track Aurora Conditions Live

Download Aurora Iceland for real-time scores, smart alerts, and 78 viewing spots across Iceland.

Get it on Google Play