Clarion Hotel The Hub Oslo

Oslo's biggest hotel. New and fresh. Rooftop bar with fjord views, three minutes from the airport train. Rooms are unremarkable chain-hotel fare. But the rooftop alone makes it a sharper pick than the faceless business hotels nearby, and the location is hard to fault for convenience.

Norway's largest hotel sits three minutes from the airport express train platform. Roll your suitcase off the Flytoget, cross the street, and you're in the lobby. For pure transit convenience, nothing in Oslo comes close.

The lobby is a spectacle, all soaring ceilings, a massive hanging light installation, and curated art on the walls. The energy is closer to an airport terminal than a hotel. Over 800 rooms means crowds at every bottleneck: reception, elevators, the breakfast hall. During morning rush, 8:30 to 9:30, expect queues for the elevators that test your patience.

The standard rooms are a problem. They're small, borderline claustrophobic, with hanging rails instead of closets and barely enough floor space for an open suitcase. Some face an internal atrium, which means staring at other windows instead of the city. If you're spending money here, upgrade to a Superior or higher on an upper floor facing the fjord.

The breakfast spread is enormous, with an omelet station, fresh smoothies, organic produce, and solid vegan options. But the room where you eat it can feel industrial when 800 guests descend at once. Go early, right when it opens, and it's a different experience entirely.

Up on the 13th floor, the Norda restaurant has panoramic views over the city and the Oslofjord. The rooftop terrace in summer is worth a drink even if you're not staying here. There's a pool in the basement, but pool is generous, it's more of a heated plunge pool that gets crowded fast.


Download the Strawberry app for mobile check-in and a digital key. The reception lines can be brutal, and this skips them entirely.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Neighbourhood vibe


You're at Oslo's main transit hub, steps from Karl Johans gate and a five-minute walk to the Opera House. Busy, urban, and well-connected in every direction.

What to do nearby


1.6km
Oslo's largest commercial gallery by exhibition space with multiple rooms and a retail stock of thousands of works available for purchase.
1.8km
3,000 color-changing LED lights hanging from pine trees that pulse like breathing or swaying grass, creating the sensation of entering a bioluminescent forest.
2.3km
Inner-Oslo island where substantial 12th-century Cistercian monastery ruins sit alongside visible quarry geology and 19th-century military remains, all reachable by a short ferry from the city.

Other hotels nearby


1.0km Insider pick
125 years old. Rooms are individually decorated with hand-picked art, and the lobby bar, Bar Boman, houses one of the country's largest private collections of Edvard Munch prints. But the real draw is Theatercaféen, the grand Viennese-style restaurant on the ground floor, with its high ceilings and mirrored walls. It's been the place in Oslo where actors, politicians, and locals meet for over a century. Nationaltheateret station is 100 metres from the front door.
1.1km
A central, no-nonsense base where you can reach most major sights on foot in under 15 minutes.
1.2km
Steps from Mathallen and walking distance to dozens of bars and restaurants, priced lower than comparable options closer to the centre. Rooms are plain Scandic. The neighbourhood does the heavy lifting. Book a river-facing room.