Det Hanseatiske Hotel Bergen

The current buildings date from after the great fire of 1702, but centuries-old timber walls have been preserved inside. All 37 rooms are different. Exposed beams, dark wood, velvety textiles in deep colours, floors that creak. This is the only hotel actually inside one of Bryggen's original timber structures.

You're sleeping inside a UNESCO World Heritage site. The Finnegaarden trading house dates to the 1500s, and the hotel leans all the way into it: crooked timber corridors, dark velvet upholstery, exposed beams, leather sofas. The whole place feels like wandering through a very well-furnished medieval fever dream. If cookie-cutter Scandics make you want to scream, this is the antidote.

The trade-off is everything that comes with a 500-year-old building. Standard rooms are small, with tiny windows that let in minimal daylight. Corridors are narrow. For something special, book a suite (pictured). Stairs are steep. Elevators don't reach every floor or section. Dragging a heavy suitcase up to your room is an event. Anyone with mobility issues should book elsewhere.

Then there's the noise. Bergen's bar scene sits right outside, and weekend nights get loud. Street-facing rooms catch the worst of it. No air conditioning either, so summer means a choice: open the window and hear every passing reveler, or keep it shut and sweat. Book a room facing the backyard if sleep matters to you.

Three restaurants share the building, from fine dining at Finnegaardsstuene to Mexican at Casa del Toro, which is convenient on rainy Bergen evenings. The breakfast is excellent, a proper spread that earns its reputation. The Fløibanen Funicular is a two-minute walk, and the Fish Market is just as close. Location is not a problem here. Comfort might be.


Consider the junior suites or suites (pictured) if budget allows, they are really spacious. All rooms are different so if you want a specific room you see in the pictures, you have to let the hotel know.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Boutique

Neighbourhood vibe


You're standing in the middle of Bergen's tourist epicenter. Every major attraction is within a 10-minute walk, but that also means weekend bar noise and crowds during peak season.

What to do nearby


0.6km
Permanenten is the oldest of Kode's four downtown Bergen museums, and this is the one to visit if you have any interest in decorative arts, Scandinavian craft or Chinese art.
0.7km
Bergen's primary venue for rotating contemporary art exhibitions, housed in a functionalist building and covered by the same ticket that gets you into all four Kode museums.
0.7km
The third-largest Munch collection in the world, displayed in a 1916 mansion where you can see his paintings without fighting a crowd.

Other hotels nearby


0.3km Insider pick
A 1920s neoclassical stone building at the centre of Bryggen. Originally Bergen's harbour master's office. The rooms are comfortable chain-hotel standard (this is a Strawberry hotel). What sets it apart is the meal deal. Breakfast, afternoon meal with waffles or pancakes, and a light evening meal are all included in the room rate.
0.4km
The unobstructed, across-the-water view of Bryggen from a harbor-facing room is the best hotel view in Bergen.
0.4km
A full kitchen and washing machine in central Bergen, saving you money on food and laundry in an expensive city.