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Geological · The Catlins Coast, Southland, New Zealand

Aurora Australis — Queenstown New Zealand

The aurora australis visible from New Zealand's South Island — particularly from Queenstown, the Catlins, and Stewart Island — is the southern hemisphere's most accessible aurora display for middle-latitude observers. On nights of strong solar activity (Kp index 5+), the southern lights are visible as far north as Christchurch, with Stewart Island (47°S) and the Catlins coast producing near-certain aurora on even moderate geomagnetic storm nights. The aurora australis' colours — green and magenta most commonly, with occasional red and blue arcs on strong events — photograph identically to the aurora borealis but in a southern sky familiar to New Zealanders from the Southern Cross star pattern above. The absence of light pollution on the Catlins coast and Stewart Island's zero development makes New Zealand the most accessible aurora destination for visitors from Australia and the Pacific who cannot reach Scandinavia.

When
Jan — Dec, peak Jun — Aug
Best viewing
On geomagnetically active nights, green and magenta aurora curtains rise above the southern horizon from dark coastal headlands with minimal light pollution. Sightings are never guaranteed, but the Catlins and Stewart Island offer New Zealand's best odds.
Category
Geological
Status
In season

About this spectacle

Standing on the Catlins coast on a clear, geomagnetically active night, you watch the southern horizon ignite — green curtains ripple upward, shifting to magenta as the display intensifies. The silence here is profound; the only sounds are surf against rocky headlands and wind through coastal bush. On strong events (Kp 5+), red arcs and blue fringes appear overhead, mirroring the drama of Scandinavian displays but framed by the Southern Cross wheeling above. Stewart Island, free of any light pollution, offers the most immersive experience — the aurora can fill the entire sky. The Catlins' dark coastline is far easier to reach, with gravel roads winding to clifftop viewpoints. Photographs capture the same vivid palette as the aurora borealis: long exposures reveal structure invisible to the naked eye. Even on moderate geomagnetic nights, southern Southland observers have a realistic chance of witnessing at least a faint glow on the southern horizon, while strong storms bring curtains well north toward Christchurch.

When to go

Jan — Dec, peak Jun — Aug

Getting there

Nearest airport: DUD. Nearest city: Invercargill.

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