Grand Hotel Terminus Bergen

Steps from Bergen Railway Station with a knockout breakfast and an award-winning whiskey bar in a beautiful 1920s building. Built for Bergen's 1928 National Exhibition and still carrying the title of the city's "Grand Old Lady."

Dark wood paneling, chandeliers, and the kind of lobby that makes you stand up a little straighter. Grand Hotel Terminus opened in 1928 and the common areas still carry that weight. Bergen Classicism, they call it. The bar, Bar Amundsen, is a proper whiskey bar with a library atmosphere and a genuinely massive selection. It's also where Roald Amundsen made his last public appearance before vanishing in the Arctic. 

The location is brutally convenient: steps from Bergen Railway Station. Arriving late with luggage or catching an early train, not much else in town competes on proximity. Bryggen is a 10-15 minute walk. The immediate surroundings are more transit hub than postcard, a big shopping mall and bus stops, but everything you'd want to see is within walking distance.

Now, the rooms. Do not book the cheapest single or standard double. The smallest rooms are coffin-tight. Opening a large suitcase on the floor may not be physically possible. Pay up for a Superior or Deluxe. Book a garden-facing room on a higher floor. Street-facing rooms look onto the train station roof, and with no air conditioning, summer means open windows and noise.

The breakfast spread is exceptional, served in a beautiful brasserie, and a cut above the usual Norwegian hotel buffet. There's also a free self-service guest laundry, which is almost unheard of in Norwegian hotels. Ask reception for access.

Want to stay near the station in i a more modern environment, check out the stylish Zander K nearby.


Free self-service guest laundry is available. Ask reception for the key. Extremely rare perk in Norway and a real money-saver mid-trip.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Boutique

Neighbourhood vibe


A transit hub, not a beauty spot. Bergen Station is right there, a large shopping mall sits nearby, and buses run constantly. Everything touristy is a 10-15 minute walk away.

What to do nearby


0.3km
Art museum in a functionalist 1930s concrete building, previously hosing the Bergen power company.
0.4km
The third-largest Munch collection in the world, displayed in a 1916 mansion where you can see his paintings without fighting a crowd.
0.5km
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.

Other hotels nearby


0.1km
The Grand Hotel Terminus's next-door sibling and its stylistic opposite. Where the Terminus is wood panelling and whisky, Zander K is raw concrete, blond wood, and blue glass. Scandinavian minimalism that borders on austere.
0.4km Insider pick
A brand-new design hotel with a Michelin-starred sushi restaurant on a great Bergen street. The aesthetic is Japandi: Scandinavian minimalism crossed with Japanese wabi-sabi. Light wood, neutral tones, low-profile furniture. Spa opened in January 2025.
0.5km Insider pick
A family-owned boutique hotel with real heritage, exceptional beds, and one of Norway's best hotel breakfasts, right in the centre of Bergen. A small exhibition about the composer's life sits on the lower level. Live piano at breakfast.