Amerikalinjen Hotel Oslo

A boutique hotel with real personality, two minutes from the airport train, in a building with more character than anything else in central Oslo.

The lobby at Amerikalinjen is the kind of place where locals show up on purpose. High ceilings, velvet furniture, a covered courtyard called Haven, and a basement jazz club that pulls a real crowd on weekends. This is a hotel that doubles as a social venue, built inside the 1919 headquarters of the Norwegian America Line. The maritime history is everywhere, from designer lamps to objects from the original shipping company. It works.

The rooms are a problem. For a hotel this price, Standard and Superior categories run as small as 15 to 20 square meters. If the budget allows, upgrade to at least a Deluxe. The beds are excellent, the bathrooms have heated floors and Sprekenhus toiletries, and the mosaic tile work is sharp. But the square footage in the cheaper rooms will test your patience.

Location is hard to beat for convenience. Oslo Central Station is across the street, which means the airport express train is a two-minute walk. The Opera House and Munch Museum are right there. Karl Johans gate starts at your door. The flip side: trams screech past Jernbanetorget constantly. Rooms facing the square get the noise. Request a courtyard-facing room if sleep matters more than the view.

The breakfast at Atlas Brasserie is a cut above, with à la carte dishes like eggs benedict alongside the buffet, and the in-house bakery makes proper bagels. Cash is not accepted anywhere on the property.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Boutique

Best Breakfast
Design Forward
Historic Gem

Request a room facing the inner courtyard (Haven) if you're a light sleeper. You lose the city view but gain silence. Rooms facing Jernbanetorget get tram noise all night.


Jernbanetorget is the transit hub of Oslo. Busy, loud, full of commuters and tram lines. Not scenic, but unbeatable for getting anywhere fast.

What to do nearby


2.9km Insider pick
A preserved polar exploration ship with connected exhibition galleries that let visitors board the vessel and examine original expedition equipment and ship construction in close detail.
3.0km
See and stand underneath the original balsa wood raft that Thor Heyerdahl sailed 8,000 kilometers across the Pacific in 1947 to prove ancient peoples could have crossed oceans

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