Cloud phase has important impacts on Arctic surface temperatures, and there is substantial circumstantial evidence that dust aerosols have strong impacts on cloud phase over the Arctic on a regional scale. We used seven years of satellite observations and model and reanalysis products to control for co-varying meteorology, and to assess how dust and other aerosols impact cloud phase over the summertime sea ice. We focus on clouds at 3 km, where dust modeling is most accurate. Dust aerosols caused about 4.5% of clouds below -15 °C to change phase, with smaller effects at higher temperatures. Sulfate has a smaller impact on cloud phase. Dust is associated with cloud-mediated surface cooling of up to a 6.3 W m-2 below single-layer clouds at ~3 km in June. Lastly, we discuss the optimal meteorological conditions for future in situ studies to maximize insight into the mechanisms driving the observed dust effects.