Klosterhagen Hotel Bergen

An outstanding homemade breakfast and genuine hospitality at a price that won't wreck your Bergen budget. Rooms are compact and no-frills. No lift, no air conditioning, no minibar. If you need five-star amenities, look elsewhere. If you want a clean, honest stay in Bergen's most local neighbourhood at a price that doesn't hurt, Klosterhagen is hard to beat.

A converted 1880s building on the Nordnes peninsula. Nordnes itself is quiet, residential, full of white wooden houses and empty on Sundays. The Fish Market and Bryggen are 10 to 15 minutes on foot. Bergen is expensive, and Klosterhagen tends to undercut comparable options while including breakfast.

The breakfast is the star. Homemade breads, local ingredients, proper jams. Not a sad hotel buffet, but something closer to eating at a Norwegian grandmother's table. Complimentary waffles and coffee in the afternoon, too, which is a nice touch in a city that charges 70 kroner for a plain waffle on the waterfront.

The rooms are compact and simple. Every one is different, which means some are better than others. The building is old wood, so expect to hear footsteps overhead and the occasional hallway conversation. Bathrooms are wet-room style, meaning the whole floor gets soaked when you shower. Some rooms run cool in winter.

No elevator. The stairs are steep and the building has several floors. Heavy suitcases and bad knees are a real problem here. The walk back from Bryggen also involves a cobblestone uphill stretch, which gets old fast with a rolling bag.


The hotel is run as a work training center for people re-entering the job market. That social mission gives the place a different energy than your average hotel. The staff are trainees, and the service is warm, attentive, and unhurried. It's a small operation with a big heart, and you feel it the moment you walk in.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Boutique

Neighbourhood vibe


Nordnes is a quiet residential peninsula with cobblestone streets and white wooden houses. Peaceful, especially on Sundays, but a 10-15 minute uphill walk back from the city center.

What to do nearby


0.8km
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.
0.9km Insider pick
A free, one-hour hike from Bergen's city centre to a 320-meter summit with fjord views and a trail network stretching well beyond the tourist zone.
1.0km
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


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A beautifully converted 1862 stock exchange at the absolute dead center of Bergen, with one of Norway's best hotel breakfast rooms. Pinstriped wallpaper, herringbone parquet, houndstooth upholstery. Details that nod to the financiers who once worked these floors without hitting you over the head.
0.7km Insider pick
Free evening meals (Mon-Thu, outside summer) and an exceptional breakfast make this the best food-value hotel in Bergen.
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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.