Open 2.6.–31.12.2025, Mon-Fri from 9am to 4pm.
Closed 28.-30.10.2025 and 24.–26.12.2025.
Opening hours for the next year will be announced later.
We reserve the rights to make changes.
Cafe is closed.
To the fell and trails - welcome to the Yllästunturi Visitor Centre
A visit to the Yllästunturi Visitor Centre Kellokas is a must for every visitor to Ylläs. Our customer service guides you to the Pallas-Yllästunturi National Park and its finest hiking trails. The visitor centre is accessible and suitable for families with children. The Meän elämää, Our life, exhibition introduces you to the local nature and culture. At the same time, you can visit the changing art exhibitions and the Logging Museum.
Free entry. Free parking. Pets are welcome.

Metsähallitus' Customer Service Points are Closed Exceptionally from 28 to 30 October 2025
Information and tips about destinations and trails are available 24/7 at luontoon.fi.
Read moreThe exhibition Common Ground by the UMFORMATTED artist group at Gallery Kellokas
The exhibition Common Ground by the UMFORMATTED artist group of the Artists' Association of Lapland will be on display at Gallery Kellokas from September 15 to October 29, 2025, Monday to Friday from 9 AM to 4 PM. The opening event will be held on Friday, September 12, 2025, from 2 PM to 4 PM. Gallery Kellokas is located in the Yllästunturi Visitor Centre Kellokas in Äkäslompolo.
Read moreRakkaudella suurtuntureille – Merja Paakkanen’s photography exhibition at Meän Gallery
Rakkaudella suurtuntureille – Merja Paakkanen’s photography exhibition at Meän Gallery. The exhibition is on display from September 2 to December 31, 2025. Meän Gallery is located in the Yllästunturi Visitor Centre Kellokas in Äkäslompolo.
Read moreGalleria Kellokas - Still water
Visitor Centre Kellokas, Gallery Kellokas. Art exhibition, Susi Nousiainen - Still water 28.7. – 9.9.2025 Mon-Fri 9am to 4 pm. Still Water is an installation centered around a handwritten poem. At its core, the work juxtaposes two landscapes. The digital realm — marked by disembodied, often disconnected human encounters — and the ridge forest, where the force of nature’s seasons is viscerally present.
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