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  5. Northwest Passage - Alaska to Greenland
Northwest Passage - Alaska to Greenland
HX ExpeditionsOME-GOH-0-AMNWP2607

Northwest Passage - Alaska to Greenland

Date

2026-08-10

Duration

25 nights

Departure Port

Seattle

United States

Arrival Port

Reykjavik

Iceland

Rating

Expedition

Theme

—

MS Roald Amundsen 1
MS Roald Amundsen 2
MS Roald Amundsen 3
MS Roald Amundsen 4
MS Roald Amundsen 5
MS Roald Amundsen 6
MS Roald Amundsen 7
MS Roald Amundsen 8
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HX Expeditions

MS Roald Amundsen

Launched

2019

Refitted

—

Tonnage

20,889 GT

Passengers

530

Cabins

265

Crew

150

Length

459 m

Width

23.6 m

Speed

15 knots

Adults Only

No

View Details

Itinerary

Day 1

Day 1

Seattle

Seattle

Seattle, the Pacific Northwest's rain-kissed metropolis, commands one of America's most spectacular urban settings — a skyline of glass towers reflected in Elliott Bay with the white cone of Mount Rainier presiding over the horizon on clear days. Pike Place Market, one of the oldest and most vibrant public markets in the country, overflows with Dungeness crab, wild salmon, and blooms of tulips from the Skagit Valley. The neighbourhood of Capitol Hill pulses with independent bookshops and craft breweries; the Space Needle delivers sweeping views of the Cascades and the Olympic Peninsula. Summer, from June through September, offers Seattle's most generous sunshine.

Day 2

Day 2

Nome

United States
Nome

Nome, Alaska, United States, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including HX Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 3

Day 3

Bering Strait

Day 4

Day 4

At Sea

Day 5

Day 5

At Sea

Day 6

Day 6

At Sea

Day 7

Day 7

Herschel Island

Canada

Herschel Island (Qikiqtaruk) is a remote Arctic territorial park off Yukon's north coast, rich in Inuvialuit heritage and 1890s whaling history preserved in permafrost. Visitors arrive by Zodiac to explore tundra wildflowers, coastal erosion sites, and restored whaling-era buildings at Pauline Cove. The narrow visiting window of mid-July to early September offers midnight sun and beluga whale sightings.

Day 8

Day 8

Smoking Hills

Smoking Hills

Day 9

Day 9

Ulukhaktokk

Canada

Ulukhaktokk, Canada, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including HX Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 10

Day 10

At Sea

Day 11

Day 11

Cambridge Bay

Canada

Cambridge Bay, Canada, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is October through April, when cooler temperatures and lower humidity create ideal conditions. Cruise lines including Aurora Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 12

Day 12

Gjoa Haven

Gjoa Haven on King William Island is where Amundsen wintered during his first Northwest Passage navigation, and where Franklin's doomed expedition met its end — a place where polar exploration history is told by the Nattilik Inuit who witnessed it. Must-dos include the Nattilik Heritage Centre, cultural performances of drum dancing and throat singing, and learning about the Franklin ship discoveries. The brief August-to-September expedition season offers tundra wildflowers and continuous Arctic daylight.

Day 14

Day 14

At Sea

Day 15

Day 15

Coningham Bay

Canada

Coningham Bay on Somerset Island — the world's largest uninhabited island — offers expedition cruise passengers a High Arctic encounter with muskoxen, Peary caribou, and polar bears amid a landscape of 450-million-year-old fossil-rich limestone and vast tundra horizons. Accessible only during the brief August-to-September Northwest Passage season, every Zodiac landing is weather-dependent. This is one of Earth's purest wilderness experiences, where geological deep time and Arctic wildlife converge.

Day 16

Day 16

Fort Ross

Fort Ross is a remote former fur-trading outpost on British Columbia's northern coast, accessible only by water and surrounded by pristine temperate rainforest and rich marine ecosystems. Must-do experiences include watching grizzly bears fish for salmon, spotting orcas in the channels, and tasting freshly caught spot prawns. Visit between June and August for optimal weather and peak wildlife encounters.

Day 17

Day 17

Beechey Island

Canada
Beechey Island

Beechey Island, Canada, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including Aurora Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 18

Day 18

Croker Bay

Canada

Croker Bay on Devon Island — the world's largest uninhabited island — features twin tidewater glaciers calving dramatically into dark Arctic waters, creating one of the Canadian High Arctic's most spectacular glacial amphitheatres. Must-dos include Zodiac cruises along the glacier faces, watching for polar bears and narwhals, and witnessing the thunderous calving of ancient ice. Accessible only by expedition cruise ship from late July through early September, weather and ice permitting.

Day 19

Day 19

Dundas Harbour

Canada
Dundas Harbour

Dundas Harbour is an abandoned RCMP outpost on Devon Island at the mouth of Lancaster Sound, established in 1924 to assert Canadian Arctic sovereignty and now a haunting heritage site with graves, ruins, and whale bones on the beach. Must-dos include exploring the settlement remains, watching for polar bears and narwhals, and reflecting on the human stories embedded in this remote landscape. Expedition ships visit from late July to early September, weather and ice permitting.

Day 20

Day 20

Pond Inlet

Canada
Pond Inlet

Pond Inlet (Mittimatalik) is an Inuit community on Baffin Island's northern coast, one of the world's most reliable locations to observe narwhal pods at the Arctic floe edge, surrounded by the glaciers of Bylot Island and 4,000 years of Inuit hunting culture. Must-dos include narwhal watching at the floe edge, experiencing Inuit throat singing, and Zodiac cruising among icebergs in Eclipse Sound. Visit July for 24-hour daylight and peak narwhal activity.

Day 21

Day 21

Vis

Vis

Vis is Croatia's most remote and unspoiled inhabited island, a former military base that emerged from isolation with ancient Greek ruins, unique Vugava wine, and Mediterranean fishing-village life intact. Must-dos include visiting the Blue Cave on Bisevo, tasting komiza pogaca bread and fresh-grilled fish under a peka, and swimming at the cliff-enclosed Stiniva beach. June and September offer warm seas and manageable crowds.

Day 22

Day 22

Ilulissat

Greenland
Ilulissat

Ilulissat sits beside the Northern Hemisphere's most prolific glacier — the UNESCO-listed Sermeq Kujalleq, which calves forty-six cubic kilometers of icebergs annually into a fjord of almost incomprehensible frozen spectacle. Visit June through August via Silversea or Hapag-Lloyd for midnight-sun zodiac cruises among hundred-meter icebergs, Knud Rasmussen's childhood museum, and the light show that transforms Greenland's ice into one of Earth's most transformative visual experiences.

Day 23

Day 23

Sisimiut

Greenland
Sisimiut

Sisimiut is Greenland's adventure capital, a colourful Arctic town of 5,500 people just north of the Arctic Circle on the west coast. Must-dos include hiking the Arctic Circle Trail, whale watching for humpbacks and narwhals, and exploring the colonial-era museum. Summer brings midnight sun and hiking conditions, while winter offers dog-sledding, skiing, and northern lights.

Day 24

Day 24

Evighedsfjorden

Greenland
Evighedsfjorden

Evighedsfjorden is Greenland's 'Fjord of Eternity' — a seventy-five-kilometer passage flanked by ice-capped peaks and tidewater glaciers that provides one of expedition cruising's most profound Arctic landscape encounters. Navigate July through August via Ponant or Seabourn for midnight-sun glacial photography, humpback whale encounters echoing off cliff faces, and a passage so vast it transforms the concept of eternity from abstraction to sensory reality.

Day 25

Day 25

Nuuk Godthaab

Greenland
Nuuk Godthaab

Nuuk, Greenland's diminutive capital, is a city of vivid contrasts — colourful colonial houses against Arctic granite, Inuit heritage alongside contemporary Nordic culture, and world-class museums steps from untamed fjords. Visitors should not miss the Greenland National Museum's Qilakitsoq mummies and a Zodiac excursion into the surrounding iceberg-studded fjord system. The prime cruising season runs from June through September, when extended daylight illuminates the landscape in an ethereal sub-Arctic glow and waters remain navigable for expedition vessels.

Day 26

Day 26

Reykjavik

Reykjavik

Reykjavik, the world's northernmost capital, distils the entire improbable beauty of Iceland into one compact, creatively charged city. The soaring basalt columns of Hallgrímskirkja dominate a skyline of primary-coloured rooftops, while the Harpa Concert Hall shimmers beside the harbour like a captured aurora. Day trips from the city unlock the Golden Circle's geysers and Geysir hot spring, the black sand beaches of Vík, and the ethereal glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón. Geothermal pools — from the legendary Blue Lagoon to intimate neighbourhood hot pots — offer warmth year-round. June and July bring the bewitching midnight sun.

Day 1

Seattle

Seattle

Seattle, the Pacific Northwest's rain-kissed metropolis, commands one of America's most spectacular urban settings — a skyline of glass towers reflected in Elliott Bay with the white cone of Mount Rainier presiding over the horizon on clear days. Pike Place Market, one of the oldest and most vibrant public markets in the country, overflows with Dungeness crab, wild salmon, and blooms of tulips from the Skagit Valley. The neighbourhood of Capitol Hill pulses with independent bookshops and craft breweries; the Space Needle delivers sweeping views of the Cascades and the Olympic Peninsula. Summer, from June through September, offers Seattle's most generous sunshine.

Day 2

Nome

United States
Nome

Nome, Alaska, United States, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including HX Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 3

Bering Strait

Day 4

At Sea

Day 5

At Sea

Day 6

At Sea

Day 7

Herschel Island

Canada

Herschel Island (Qikiqtaruk) is a remote Arctic territorial park off Yukon's north coast, rich in Inuvialuit heritage and 1890s whaling history preserved in permafrost. Visitors arrive by Zodiac to explore tundra wildflowers, coastal erosion sites, and restored whaling-era buildings at Pauline Cove. The narrow visiting window of mid-July to early September offers midnight sun and beluga whale sightings.

Day 8

Smoking Hills

Smoking Hills

Day 9

Ulukhaktokk

Canada

Ulukhaktokk, Canada, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including HX Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 10

At Sea

Day 11

Cambridge Bay

Canada

Cambridge Bay, Canada, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is October through April, when cooler temperatures and lower humidity create ideal conditions. Cruise lines including Aurora Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 12

Gjoa Haven

Gjoa Haven on King William Island is where Amundsen wintered during his first Northwest Passage navigation, and where Franklin's doomed expedition met its end — a place where polar exploration history is told by the Nattilik Inuit who witnessed it. Must-dos include the Nattilik Heritage Centre, cultural performances of drum dancing and throat singing, and learning about the Franklin ship discoveries. The brief August-to-September expedition season offers tundra wildflowers and continuous Arctic daylight.

Day 14

At Sea

Day 15

Coningham Bay

Canada

Coningham Bay on Somerset Island — the world's largest uninhabited island — offers expedition cruise passengers a High Arctic encounter with muskoxen, Peary caribou, and polar bears amid a landscape of 450-million-year-old fossil-rich limestone and vast tundra horizons. Accessible only during the brief August-to-September Northwest Passage season, every Zodiac landing is weather-dependent. This is one of Earth's purest wilderness experiences, where geological deep time and Arctic wildlife converge.

Day 16

Fort Ross

Fort Ross is a remote former fur-trading outpost on British Columbia's northern coast, accessible only by water and surrounded by pristine temperate rainforest and rich marine ecosystems. Must-do experiences include watching grizzly bears fish for salmon, spotting orcas in the channels, and tasting freshly caught spot prawns. Visit between June and August for optimal weather and peak wildlife encounters.

Day 17

Beechey Island

Canada
Beechey Island

Beechey Island, Canada, offers an authentic North American experience where stunning natural landscapes meet communities of genuine character. Visitors should explore the surrounding wilderness and sample the honest, locally sourced cuisine that defines the region. The ideal visiting period is June through August, when the midnight sun bathes the landscape in golden light for nearly twenty-four hours. Cruise lines including Aurora Expeditions feature this port on their most compelling itineraries. Whether you have a few hours or a full day, the port rewards exploration at every pace and in every direction.

Day 18

Croker Bay

Canada

Croker Bay on Devon Island — the world's largest uninhabited island — features twin tidewater glaciers calving dramatically into dark Arctic waters, creating one of the Canadian High Arctic's most spectacular glacial amphitheatres. Must-dos include Zodiac cruises along the glacier faces, watching for polar bears and narwhals, and witnessing the thunderous calving of ancient ice. Accessible only by expedition cruise ship from late July through early September, weather and ice permitting.

Day 19

Dundas Harbour

Canada
Dundas Harbour

Dundas Harbour is an abandoned RCMP outpost on Devon Island at the mouth of Lancaster Sound, established in 1924 to assert Canadian Arctic sovereignty and now a haunting heritage site with graves, ruins, and whale bones on the beach. Must-dos include exploring the settlement remains, watching for polar bears and narwhals, and reflecting on the human stories embedded in this remote landscape. Expedition ships visit from late July to early September, weather and ice permitting.

Day 20

Pond Inlet

Canada
Pond Inlet

Pond Inlet (Mittimatalik) is an Inuit community on Baffin Island's northern coast, one of the world's most reliable locations to observe narwhal pods at the Arctic floe edge, surrounded by the glaciers of Bylot Island and 4,000 years of Inuit hunting culture. Must-dos include narwhal watching at the floe edge, experiencing Inuit throat singing, and Zodiac cruising among icebergs in Eclipse Sound. Visit July for 24-hour daylight and peak narwhal activity.

Day 21

Vis

Vis

Vis is Croatia's most remote and unspoiled inhabited island, a former military base that emerged from isolation with ancient Greek ruins, unique Vugava wine, and Mediterranean fishing-village life intact. Must-dos include visiting the Blue Cave on Bisevo, tasting komiza pogaca bread and fresh-grilled fish under a peka, and swimming at the cliff-enclosed Stiniva beach. June and September offer warm seas and manageable crowds.

Day 22

Ilulissat

Greenland
Ilulissat

Ilulissat sits beside the Northern Hemisphere's most prolific glacier — the UNESCO-listed Sermeq Kujalleq, which calves forty-six cubic kilometers of icebergs annually into a fjord of almost incomprehensible frozen spectacle. Visit June through August via Silversea or Hapag-Lloyd for midnight-sun zodiac cruises among hundred-meter icebergs, Knud Rasmussen's childhood museum, and the light show that transforms Greenland's ice into one of Earth's most transformative visual experiences.

Day 23

Sisimiut

Greenland
Sisimiut

Sisimiut is Greenland's adventure capital, a colourful Arctic town of 5,500 people just north of the Arctic Circle on the west coast. Must-dos include hiking the Arctic Circle Trail, whale watching for humpbacks and narwhals, and exploring the colonial-era museum. Summer brings midnight sun and hiking conditions, while winter offers dog-sledding, skiing, and northern lights.

Day 24

Evighedsfjorden

Greenland
Evighedsfjorden

Evighedsfjorden is Greenland's 'Fjord of Eternity' — a seventy-five-kilometer passage flanked by ice-capped peaks and tidewater glaciers that provides one of expedition cruising's most profound Arctic landscape encounters. Navigate July through August via Ponant or Seabourn for midnight-sun glacial photography, humpback whale encounters echoing off cliff faces, and a passage so vast it transforms the concept of eternity from abstraction to sensory reality.

Day 25

Nuuk Godthaab

Greenland
Nuuk Godthaab

Nuuk, Greenland's diminutive capital, is a city of vivid contrasts — colourful colonial houses against Arctic granite, Inuit heritage alongside contemporary Nordic culture, and world-class museums steps from untamed fjords. Visitors should not miss the Greenland National Museum's Qilakitsoq mummies and a Zodiac excursion into the surrounding iceberg-studded fjord system. The prime cruising season runs from June through September, when extended daylight illuminates the landscape in an ethereal sub-Arctic glow and waters remain navigable for expedition vessels.

Day 26

Reykjavik

Reykjavik

Reykjavik, the world's northernmost capital, distils the entire improbable beauty of Iceland into one compact, creatively charged city. The soaring basalt columns of Hallgrímskirkja dominate a skyline of primary-coloured rooftops, while the Harpa Concert Hall shimmers beside the harbour like a captured aurora. Day trips from the city unlock the Golden Circle's geysers and Geysir hot spring, the black sand beaches of Vík, and the ethereal glacier lagoon at Jökulsárlón. Geothermal pools — from the legendary Blue Lagoon to intimate neighbourhood hot pots — offer warmth year-round. June and July bring the bewitching midnight sun.

Cabin Categories

Expedition Corner Suite 1
Expedition Corner Suite 2
Expedition Corner Suite 10

Expedition Corner Suite

Suite
215–323 m²Max 2
MCMF

Aft corner suite with private balcony and jacuzzi, various sizes, large windows, flexible sleeping arrangements, some w/sofa, TV, mini-bar, amenity kit, bathrobe, kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker

DoubleShowerToiletries ProvidedFree Mini BarTVCoffee Machine+5
US$44,297 /person+ US$0 taxes & fees
View Details
Expedition Large Suite 1
Expedition Large Suite 2
Expedition Large Suite 3

Expedition Large Suite

Suite
378 m²Max 4
MD

Large corner suite with private balcony, flexible sleeping arrangements, sofabed, TV, mini-bar, amenity kit, bathrobe, kettle espresso maker, adapted for guests with wheelchair ]

DoubleShowerToiletries ProvidedFree Mini BarMini Bar (Additional Cost)TV+6
View Details
Expedition  Suite 1
Expedition  Suite 2
Expedition  Suite 10

Expedition Suite

Suite
236–301 m²Max 4
ME

Suites with private balcony, different sizes, top-high decks, flexible sleeping arrangements, some with sofabed, TV, mini-bar, amenity kit, kettle, tea and coffee, bathrobe, espresso maker

DoubleShowerWhirlpool BathToiletries ProvidedTVHair Dryer+4
US$32,864 /person+ US$0 taxes & fees
View Details
Expedition XL Suite 1
Expedition XL Suite 2
Expedition XL Suite 15

Expedition XL Suite

Suite
474–517 m²Max 4
MAMB

Extra large corner suite with private balcony, most spacious cabins w/flexible sleeping arrangements, large windows, sofa bed, TV, mini-bar, amenity kit, bathrobe kettle, tea and coffee, espresso maker

DoubleSofa BedShowerToiletries ProvidedTVCoffee Machine+6
US$41,489 /person+ US$0 taxes & fees
View Details
Arctic Superior  1
Arctic Superior  2
Arctic Superior  4

Arctic Superior

Balcony

Arctic Superior

161–290 m²Max 4
TTTYXTXTDXTJXY

High deck cabins with balcony. Spacious cabins, different sizes, flexible sleeping arrangements, some with sofabed, TV, kettle, tea and coffee. With limited view.

DoubleShowerToiletries ProvidedRoom Service AvailableTVCoffee Machine+6
US$25,642 /person+ US$0 taxes & fees
View Details
Polar Outside 1
Polar Outside 2
Polar Outside 3

Polar Outside

Outside
204–247 m²Max 2
RRRS

Cabins on middle decks, double bed, TV

DoubleTwinShowerToiletries ProvidedTVHair Dryer+4
US$23,436 /person+ US$0 taxes & fees
View Details

Interested in This Voyage?

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(+886) 02-2721-7300Contact Advisor