A honey-hued treasure hunt is playing out once again along the windswept shores of Northern Europe, where powerful storms are transforming ordinary beaches into glittering fields of “Baltic gold.” After intense winter weather in early 2026, waves along the Baltic Sea have churned up remarkable quantities of amber, drawing locals and gem-loving tourists to the coasts of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia and Denmark in search of these luminous prizes.
Amber — fossilized tree resin formed 40 to 50 million years ago — is one of the few gemstones that quite literally floats. Its relatively low density allows it to ride atop saltwater, making it uniquely susceptible to nature’s whims. When storms agitate the seabed, they dislodge amber from layers of sediment known as “blue earth,” sending it drifting through the sea until it washes ashore tangled among seaweed and driftwood.
More than 90% of the world’s amber originates from the Russian-controlled region of Kaliningrad, wedged between Poland and Lithuania along the Baltic coast. This area remains the epicenter of both natural amber deposits and industrial production. Each year, an estimated 38 tons of amber are naturally swept onto nearby beaches — fueling spontaneous “amber weekends” when collectors can gather dozens, even hundreds, of pieces in a matter of hours.
Social media posts from Poland’s northern coastline this year show tables covered in freshly collected amber, with enthusiasts celebrating unusually rich hauls following February storms. The excitement has sparked a modern-day treasure rush, with visitors rising at dawn to comb beaches for the golden nuggets, often finding them nestled in piles of seaweed.
While beachcombing offers a romantic, hands-on experience, the vast majority of amber is still sourced through industrial mining at the Kaliningrad Amber Combine in Yantarny — the world’s only large-scale amber mining operation. There, workers extract amber from deposits buried 50 to 60 meters below ground. Using powerful jets of Baltic seawater, they break apart dense “blue earth” clay, creating a slurry that is pumped to processing plants where the amber is separated.
The scale is impressive: the combine produces between 500 and 600 tons of amber annually, with reserves estimated at more than 53,000 tons — enough to sustain operations for at least another century. Individual workdays can yield several tons, with occasional large nuggets weighing more than a kilogram.
Despite this industrial output, the allure of finding amber by hand remains irresistible. Each piece carries a sense of wonder, often containing ancient inclusions — tiny insects or plant fragments preserved in time. It’s this blend of natural beauty, history and chance that continues to captivate collectors.
From ancient trade routes to modern beach hunts, amber has been treasured for thousands of years. And thanks to the restless Baltic Sea, that fascination shows no signs of fading.
Credit: Amber on sand photo (cropped) by Laima Gūtmane (simka…, CC BY-SA 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons. Amber closup photo by АО «Калининградский янтарный комбинат», CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.