Aurora Expeditions
Aurora Expeditions has been quietly setting the standard for small-ship polar exploration for more than three decades. Founded by mountaineers and built around genuine adventure, Aurora blends serious expedition credentials with contemporary comfort—taking travelers deeper into Antarctica, the Arctic, and beyond with purpose and precision.

Aurora Expeditions was founded in 1991 by legendary Australian adventurer Greg Mortimer, and that origin story still shapes the brand today. This isn’t a cruise line that added kayaks as an afterthought. Aurora was built by explorers, for explorers—designed to land more often, go further, and immerse guests in the environment rather than simply observe it from the deck. Their pioneering spirit includes being one of the first to introduce passenger ship landings in East Antarctica and consistently pushing the envelope on what small-ship expedition travel can look like.
Their purpose-built vessels—like the Greg Mortimer and Sylvia Earle—reflect that philosophy. With advanced Ulstein X-BOW® designs for smoother sailing in rough polar waters, a strong sustainability focus, and limited guest capacity, these ships are engineered for access and agility. Fewer passengers mean more meaningful landings, less crowding on Zodiacs, and more one-on-one time with the expert expedition team, which often includes marine biologists, historians, glaciologists, and polar veterans.
But Aurora isn’t about discomfort or endurance for the sake of bragging rights. The experience strikes a thoughtful balance: serious exploration by day, refined comfort by night. Think polar plunges and kayaking among icebergs followed by excellent dining, comfortable staterooms, and intelligent conversation in the lounge. For travelers who want to feel like participants—not spectators—in the polar regions, Aurora delivers an expedition that’s immersive, responsible, and deeply rewarding.













