In the Baltic summer, night behaves differently. It softens rather than falls, lingering at the horizon in a wash of lilac and pale gold. During Latvia’s midsummer celebration, Jāņi, darkness never fully arrives. Instead, twilight stretches across the sky in a quiet glow while bonfires flicker across the countryside and the scent of meadow flowers drifts through the streets of Riga.
It is here, on the edge of the UNESCO-listed Old Town, that Grand Hotel Kempinski Riga offers an elegant vantage point from which to witness one of the Baltic’s most deeply rooted traditions.
For Latvians, the summer solstice is far more than a date on the calendar. It marks the peak of the solar year and is celebrated with rituals that have endured for centuries. Officially tied to the astronomical solstice on June 21, the country’s true festivities unfold a few days later, on the night of June 23 into June 24. By then the entire nation seems to lean into the light.
Across the city and beyond its borders, people gather in gardens, parks and countryside clearings. Wreaths woven from wildflowers and oak leaves appear everywhere, worn as crowns or hung on doorways. Tables fill with traditional foods, laughter carries long into the evening, and as the sky glows in its endless twilight, the celebrations deepen.
One of the most beloved customs arrives with the lighting of bonfires. Couples clasp hands and leap together across the flames — a symbolic act said to burn away misfortune and invite prosperity for the year ahead. Nearby, friends and families keep watch over the fire, singing folk songs that echo through the luminous night.
Then there is the curious tradition of searching for the mythical fern flower. Botanically impossible yet culturally irresistible, this elusive bloom has become one of Jāņi’s most poetic symbols. Legend says it appears only once a year, during the solstice night, granting happiness and love to those who find it. In reality, the search offers something else entirely: a gentle excuse to wander into nearby forests or parks beneath the lingering sunset, sharing quiet moments away from the celebrations.
Morning brings its own ritual. According to folklore, washing one’s face in the midsummer dew ensures beauty and renewed vitality for the year ahead — a fitting close to a night that honours nature’s abundance.
Back at Grand Hotel Kempinski Riga, the atmosphere shifts from celebration to restoration. The hotel’s Pirts Suite Journey at Kempinski The Spa draws inspiration from Latvia’s traditional bathing culture, combining enveloping heat, aromatic infusions and birch whisk treatments designed to invigorate both body and mind.
Afterwards, the city calls again. As evening approaches — though the light never fully fades — the rooftop Stage22 Bar & Restaurant offers a front-row seat to the spectacle. From here, guests can sip herbal liqueur or a chilled local beer while watching the horizon glow softly over Riga’s rooftops.
For a few fleeting nights each year, the rhythm of modern city life bends to something older and more elemental. In Riga, midsummer is not simply observed — it is felt, shared and carried through the luminous hours of a night that never quite ends.
To find out more about celebrating the summer solstice in the Grand Hotel Kempinski Riga, visit the links below:
Grand Hotel Kempinski Riga
Aspazijas bulvāris 22
Centra rajons
Rīga
LV-1050
Latvia
Web: kempinski.com
Tel: +371 67 671 111
Email: reservations.riga@kempinski.com
Instagram: @kempinskiriga