Bryggen Museum

Walk on suspended pathways directly over the excavated 12th-century foundations of Bergen's oldest settlement and see medieval runic messages carved into wooden sticks.

Bryggens Museum sits at the far end of Bergen's wooden wharf, built directly on top of a massive archaeological dig that ran for 13 years after a fire gutted this section in 1955. You walk on suspended pathways over the actual stone foundations of 12th-century buildings. The lighting is deliberately dim to protect the materials below your feet, which gives the whole place a quiet, almost subterranean feel. The small text on display placards is hard to make out in the low light.

The runic sticks are carved wooden messages from everyday medieval life: love notes, business deals, gossip, even spells. Look for the Guddal garment too, a nearly thousand-year-old piece of clothing that's one of very few intact medieval garments found in Norway.

The museum is small. Budget 60 to 90 minutes. The narrow walkways get congested when cruise groups arrive, typically mid-morning. Show up at opening or after 14:00 to avoid the bottleneck. Entry is around 16 EUR. Children under 18 get in free. A Bergen Card cuts the price in half.

Pair It

Combine this with a visit to Schotstuene, the Hanseatic assembly rooms nearby. Together they cover Bergen's trading history in a single afternoon. If archaeology isn't your thing and you're short on time, the outdoor UNESCO wharf alone gives you the visual story. This museum gives you the underground one.

Free lockers in the lobby make it a practical first stop before exploring the rest of Bryggen. Stash your rain gear and backpacks here. There's a small cafe and restrooms on the ground floor. Open year-round, with summer hours running 10:00 to 17:00 and winter hours closing at 15:00. Closed late December through the first week of January.


Free lockers in the lobby make this a practical first stop on Bryggen. Drop your bags and rain gear here before exploring the rest of the wharf.

Highlights


Suspended walkways over original 12th-century stone foundations let you look straight down into Bergen's earliest settlement layers.
A collection of carved runic sticks with everyday medieval messages, from love poems to business transactions to spells.
The Guddal garment, a nearly thousand-year-old piece of clothing and one of the rarest intact medieval textiles found in Norway.


Best time to go


Morning or late afternoon to avoid peak cruise ship crowds.

Time needed


1 to 2 hours

Getting there


A flat 10-minute walk from the Tourist Information Center and Fish Market, following the wooden wharf buildings to the far end. The Bryggen bus stop is steps from the entrance.

What to do nearby


0.1km Insider pick
A preserved Hanseatic trading wharf where narrow wooden alleyways behind the facade hold artisan studios, small galleries, and centuries of layered architecture.
0.3km Insider pick
Bergen's harbour is a compact, walkable waterfront where centuries-old Hanseatic timber buildings meet an active working port. Get there early in the morning before the cruise crowds arrive.
0.3km
The only surviving original Hanseatic assembly rooms in the world, with smoke-blackened walls and cramped apprentice bunks that show the conditions behind Bryggen's wooden facades.

Hotels nearby


0.1km Insider pick
A genuinely atmospheric heritage building right on the Bryggen wharf, with included breakfast, afternoon waffles, and evening meal.
0.2km
Recently renovated rooms and an outstanding breakfast, steps from Bryggen but away from the worst tourist crush.
0.2km Insider pick
Free evening meals (Mon-Thu, outside summer) and an exceptional breakfast make this the best food-value hotel in Bergen.