Bright green and purple aurora borealis over Lake Superior in Minnesota. Photo captured by Vincent Ledvina, The Aurora Guy

United States (Lower 48)

Northern Lights can often be seen from the contiguous United States, even under quiet geomagnetic conditions.

Northeast

NEOC StarCam (Twin Lakes, Maine)
(NEW) Bar Harbor, Maine
  • YouTube link may change
Post Observatory (Trenton, Maine)
(NEW) MIT Wallace Astronomical Observatory (Westford, MA)
(NEW) Averted Vision Observatory (Wilton, NY)
Hope, New Jersey (low quality)
South Brunswick, New Jersey
  • sometimes offline
Westport Astronomical Society (Westport, Connecticut; low quality)
White Hall, Maryland (low quality)

Midwest

Michigan

Bay Port, Michigan
Allen, Michigan
Naubinway, Michigan
Ludington, Michigan
Norway, Michigan
(If the above webcams are not loading, it is because the YouTube links change frequently. Check the channel that runs the webcams: https://www.youtube.com/@MichiganWeatherNetwork)
Cedar Springs, Michigan
North Shore Webcam (Isle Royale National Park, Michigan) - NORTH VIEW
North Shore Webcam (Isle Royale National Park, Michigan) - SOUTHWEST VIEW
North Shore Webcam (Isle Royale National Park, Michigan) - NORTHEAST VIEW
Keweenaw Mountain Lodge (Copper Harbor, Michigan)

Minnesota

Live Dark Sky Views from Ely, Minnesota
Chik-Wauk All-Sky Camera (Gunflint Trail, Minnesota)

Other states

NoDDAC (Grand Forks, North Dakota)
Chippewa Valley Astronomical Society (Fall Creek, Wisconsin)
Sullivan, Illinois (low quality)
Warrensburg, Missouri (low quality)

Western United States

Hills Resort Live Beach Cam (Priest Lake, Idaho)
Aspen Snowmass, Colorado
Dusty Star Observatory (Glacier National Park, Montana)
Skunk Bay Weather (Skunk Bay, Washington)
Kent, Washington
Bend, Oregon

Southeast United States

Gatlinburg, Tennessee
SkyShack Observatory, (Deerlick Astronomy Village, Georgia; low quality)
Marco Island, Florida (low quality)

Southwest United States

Imperial, California
Sedona, Arizona
Linuxkidd's AstroShed (Mayhill, New Mexico)