Food hoarding is often considered an adaptive behaviour to extend the period of availability of food resources. Finding the right caching site for storage and retrieval is of paramount importance, yet how caching sites are selected is poorly known. Here, we examine site selection for egg caching by a tundra predator, the arctic fox, Vulpes lagopus, which can overcome large seasonal prey variations by extensive caching. During the short arctic summer, colonial breeding birds like geese produce in a short time period many eggs, which provide a large quantity of predictable resources for consumption and caching. We predicted that foxes would select caching sites with specific characteristics, such as shallow permafrost, and tall hummocks (small mounds in tundra landscapes, which should facilitate caching and provide visual cues for subsequent retrieval). We sampled the main physical characteristics of 48 caches and paired random sites inside a Greater Snow Goose (Chen caerulescens) colony. Our study shows that foxes favour cache sites characterized by hummocks nearly twice as higher than at nearby random sites. The depth of the active layer of permafrost did not influence cache site selection. Foxes may select tundra features that possibly enhance caching efficiency and retrieval probability. Our study elucidates one aspect of food hoarding behaviour in extreme habitats characterized by strong variations of resource availability.