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Holidays in hot places? That’s old hat. How about chilling out – truly – on your next big trip?

To travel somewhere super-cold is to fall in love, as temperatures plummet, with this planet’s wildest sides. With all their snow, ice and sub-zero summits, the coldest places on Earth are invariably the remotest, most rugged and most challenging to access. Yet many of the globe’s most glacial spots can – and definitely should – be on serious travelers’ lists.

From an Alaskan national park to Scandinavian glaciers and a Japanese snow corridor, these destinations are sure to send more than a shiver of excitement down your spine.

A whale breaches in Antarctica
Fabulous wildlife awaits in Antarctica’s frigid waters © Getty Images / iStockphoto

Antarctica

Intoxicatingly otherworldly, Antarctica is covered by the world’s largest ice sheet, which reaches an extent of around 19 million sq km (7.3 million sq miles) in winter. It’s as freezing as this planet gets – and getting here is no picnic. A typical 10-day trip via expedition vessel from Ushuaia in Argentina takes a couple of tempestuous days via the squally Drake Passage. The reward? Five days of soaking up unforgettable nature, from whales to wackily shaped icebergs.

Dusk in the town of Longyearbyen, Svalbard, Norway
Longyearbyen is the last sizeable European settlement before the North Pole © Nigel Killeen / Getty Images

Longyearbyen, Svalbard, Norway

The northernmost permanently populated place of any size in the world, Longyearbyen is the capital of Svalbard, a glaciated archipelago constituting the last landfall between Europe toward the North Pole. It is so snowy here that you usually need a snowmobile to get around, and venturing anywhere out-of-town is permitted only if accompanied by an armed guide to protect against patrolling polar bears. Trips to spot Arctic wildlife and some of the planet’s finest aurora borealis displays are among the frigid thrills awaiting visitors.

Two musk ox bulls clashon Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada
Ellesmere Island is one of the few places in the world with a population of wild musk oxen © Getty Images

Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada

Of the many frozen places across northern Canada, Ellesmere Island in Nanavut province stakes a great claim to being the most hyperborean of the bunch. The planet’s most northerly landmass (other than Greenland) has secured the top spot in the rankings of year-end coldest-in-Canada spots year after year. And the Inuit community of Grise Fjord here is probably the frostiest permanently inhabited locale on Earth. The icefield-packed island’s gobsmacking topographical variety brings an unrivaled diversity of Arctic fauna: it’s one of the last places where musk oxen survive in the wild, and also hosts significant polar bear and Arctic wolf populations. The easiest way to visit is as a stop-off on an Arctic cruise.

A scenic shot of sled dogs on the snow, Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland
You may need some help getting around icy Ittoqqortoormiit © Wirestock Creators / Shutterstock

Ittoqqortoormiit, Greenland

After landing on Greenland, you don’t need long to register the irony of the name. The most northerly land in the world is mostly white, 80% of it blanketed by the gigantic Greenland ice sheet. And what is not ice, is rock: no month of the year averages anywhere close to the 10°C (50°F) thought to be the minimum required to support tree life, which means green is not a color regularly seen on the spectrum here. In Ittoqqortoormiit on the east coast, one of the remotest permanently inhabited communities on Earth, hardcore travelers are lured by outstanding wildlife-watching – the local population of polar bear, musk ox, walrus and narwhal outnumbers the human one – and the presence of the world’s largest national park, .

Mt McKinley (aka Denali) on a clear morning with alpenglow, Alaska, USA
There are few bad views of snow-capped Denali © iStockphoto / Getty Images

Denali National Park, Alaska, USA

The very name “Alaska” makes you want to crank up the central heating. So contemplate, if you will, how low temperatures get on the slopes of the state’s highest mountain, Denali. (Hint: very low.) The summit is the planet’s coldest and third-most prominent peak, where even the heights of summer can sink the mercury to a numbing -30°C (-22°F). And the expanse of billowing foothills, tundra and taiga forest around Denali can get pretty cold, too. Denali National Park is one of the few US national parks where off-trail trekking is permitted, attracting adventurers aplenty. Of the marked routes, short but steep delivers exquisite views of the mountain.

A mountain with a sailing boat out on the water in front of it at Hornstrandir Nature Reserve, Westfjords, Iceland
Nature is truly untamed in Hornstrandir, in Iceland’s wild northwest © Richard McManus/ Getty Images

Hornstrandir Nature Reserve, Iceland

This northwesterly appendage of Iceland is not a nature reserve as you might be imagining: you won’t find any neatly waymarked trails or placards indicating local wildlife here. There is not much of anything, in fact. Long cut off from the rest of Iceland by the Drangajökull glacier, Hornstrandir’s chilly zone of untamed peaks, tundra, titanic cliffs and storm-tossed shore will feel especially cold to visitors – because to really see it, you have to hike through it and camp out in it. Historically renowned as a place of exile for Icelanders (including the father of fabled Viking Erik the Red), this is now one of Europe’s wildest trekking destinations. The bogs and river crossings get hikers sodden fast, and best-case scenario temperatures rarely reach double digits, making drying off difficult. The light at the end of the tundra? Such cold delivers phenomenal natural beauty.

A snowy corridor in Aomori Prefecture, Japan
The cleared highway into Aomori, Japan is a picture-perfect winter attraction © amana images / Getty Images

Hakkōda Mountains, Japan

No self-respecting list of freezing places would be complete without a mention of the Hakkōda Mountains, often considered the snowiest part of the planet. Just below the peaks, Aomori, the world’s snowiest city, is buried under many meters of white stuff for around four months of the year. The coolest thing to do here is to hit up , offering some of Japan’s best backcountry snow sports. An attraction in itself, though, is the annual clearing of snow from the highway into Aomori after its wintertime closure: the month-long endeavor creates a corridor flanked by walls of snow around 8m (16ft) high, making wonderful wintertime social-media pics.

A man in a parka stands in front of the harbor at night, Bergen, Norway
Even when overcast, Bergen in Vestland County twinkles © Sunphol Sorakul / Getty Images

Vestland County, Norway

This fjord-serrated swathe of western Norway holds all sorts of weather records thanks to its excessive wetness and snowiness. Start your shudder-inducing sojourn in Bergen, one of the wettest cities in Europe, where the prospect of precipitation looms more than half the time. Then forge northeast to , surrounding continental Europe’s mightiest glacier, or journey southeast via another gargantuan glacier, Folgefonna, for snow sports at , the ski center that gets this snowy nation’s deepest drifts of powder.

Equestrian statue of Genghis Khan on a sunny winter day, Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia
National hero Genghis Khan presides over Ulanbaatar in all seasons © Dmitry Erokhin / Shutterstock

Ulanbaatar, Mongolia

A fairly high elevation, a location far from any coastline that might usher in milder fronts and a position on the receiving end of the Siberian anticyclone’s bitter embrace all ensure that Ulanbaatar is the world’s coldest capital city. Come in winter, and temperatures in the -30° to -40°C (-22° to -40°F) range are commonplace. Mongolia is most celebrated for its captivatingly wild landscapes of mountains, steppe and desert – but if you can brave the biting chills, the capital has lots to waylay you as well. Start at its striking main square, flanked by statues to national heroes Genghis Khan and revolutionary Damdin Sükhbaatar, and visit the ornate center of Mongolian Buddhism, Gandantegchinlen Monastery.

Magellanic penguins by the sea in Magdalena Island, Strait of Magellan, near Punta Arenas, Chile
The area’s many penguins don’t seem to mind the fierce wind that whips through Punta Arenas and southern Patagonia © Shutterstock

Punta Arenas, Chile

It’s the wind that chills you to the bone in Punta Arenas, one of Chile’s (and the planet’s) southernmost settlements. Overlooking the solemn waters of the Strait of Magellan in Chilean Patagonia, this city gets gusts buffeting at an average of over 22km/h (14 mph) – that’s the equivalent of a constant year-round moderate breeze on the Beaufort Scale. On average. Why would you come all the way down here, to almost the end of the world as we know it? The city is the jumping-off point for trips of a lifetime to the otherworldly trekking hub of Torres del Paine, or onward to Antarctica.

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