Live Aurora Outlook
Northern Lights in New Hampshire
Tonight's Live Forecast
New Hampshire needs a Kp index of roughly 6+ for visible aurora. Below is tonight's answer, computed from the live Kp reading — updated hourly, explained calmly.
Can you see the northern lights in New Hampshire tonight?
Unlikely in New Hampshire tonight
The Kp index is currently 0, below the roughly Kp 6 that New Hampshire needs for visible aurora. Watch for geomagnetic storm alerts — when Kp reaches 6+, tonight's answer changes.
Aurora in New Hampshire
What New Hampshire Needs for a Display
New Hampshire's aurora country is the Great North Woods above the White Mountains — Pittsburg, Colebrook, and the Connecticut Lakes region, where a G1–G2 storm (Kp 5–6) can show low on the horizon. Elevation helps: an open north-facing overlook beats a valley floor, since the mountains themselves can hide a low display.
The northern counties respond at Kp 5–6; the White Mountains block low-horizon views from some valleys. Aurora visibility depends on geomagnetic latitude — which differs from map latitude by up to 15 degrees — so these thresholds come from NOAA SWPC's storm-level view-line estimates, not simple map position. Treat them as odds, not guarantees: at the threshold Kp, expect a glow low on the northern horizon rather than overhead curtains.
Approximate Kp Needed by Location
Based on NOAA SWPC G-scale view-line estimates
Best Viewing Spots in New Hampshire
When to Look
10 PM – 2 AM local time, centered on midnight. September through March offers the darkest skies. Avoid full-moon nights and city light domes — even 30 minutes of driving makes a real difference.
Don't Refresh This Page All Winter —
get a Kp alert instead
Aurora visibility in New Hampshire is driven by the Kp index, so a Kp storm alert is effectively an aurora heads-up. The ResonanceOne app sends free push notifications when the Kp index reaches geomagnetic storm level (Kp 5+) — watch for readings of 6+ to match New Hampshire's threshold.
To be clear: ResonanceOne is not a dedicated aurora app — no aurora map, no location-based visibility forecast. It tracks the underlying signals (Kp index, solar flares, Schumann Resonance) in one calm Activity Index, and alerts you when they spike.
Common Questions
Northern Lights in New Hampshire: FAQ
Can you see the northern lights in New Hampshire tonight?
It depends on the live Kp index. New Hampshire needs roughly Kp 6 or higher for aurora to be visible from its darkest northern areas. This page compares tonight's live Kp against that threshold and gives a real-time answer, updated hourly.
What Kp index do you need to see the aurora in New Hampshire?
Roughly Kp 6 for a glow low on the northern horizon from the state's best locations. The northern counties respond at Kp 5–6; the White Mountains block low-horizon views from some valleys. Southern parts of the state typically need 1–2 Kp steps more, and an overhead display needs a stronger storm than a horizon glow.
Where is the best place in New Hampshire to see the northern lights?
Connecticut Lakes region near Pittsburg; Milan Hill State Park; North-facing White Mountains overlooks. The pattern behind all of them: dark skies, a low, unobstructed view to the north, and distance from city light domes.
What time should I look for the aurora in New Hampshire?
Between 10 PM and 2 AM local time, centered on local midnight — when your location rotates under the densest part of the auroral oval. September through March offers the darkest skies; check the moon phase too, since a full moon washes out faint displays.
How do I get an alert when the aurora might be visible in New Hampshire?
Aurora visibility is driven by the Kp index, so a Kp storm alert works as an aurora heads-up. The ResonanceOne app sends free push notifications when Kp reaches geomagnetic storm level — and New Hampshire's threshold of roughly Kp 6 is exactly that storm territory. ResonanceOne has no aurora map; it gives you the underlying geomagnetic signal, which you pair with this page's guidance.
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