We present data on ice nucleating particles (INPs) from three Antarctic locations, a region for which INP measurements are still rare: the German Neumayer research station, contributing two years of data; the Belgian Princess Elisabeth Station with samples from two austral summer seasons; and the region of the Antarctic Peninsula, adding data from a research cruise and subsequent land-based sampling. While often land masses are INP sources, we found especially low INP concentrations for the two stations furthest south, Neumayer and Princess Elisabeth. No clear annual cycle could be identified at Neumayer. No strong signal from biological particles, as known to occur e.g., in the summertime Arctic, was observed. Our findings suggest that Antarctica lacks INP sources, especially from the biosphere, which exist elsewhere, even in the Arctic. Furthermore, a simple INP parameterization was developed, based on the Neumayer dataset and tested for data from Princess Elisabeth Station.