Grand Hotel Oslo

The most historically significant hotel address in Norway, steps from the Parliament and the Royal Palace.

The Grand Hotel is 150 years old and looks it, in the best possible way. Heavy chandeliers, marble floors, velvet everything. The lobby buzzes with politicians, tourists, and locals treating the place like a living room. This is where Nobel Peace Prize laureates stay. That kind of hotel.

Location is the headline. Stortinget, the Parliament building, is across the street. The Royal Palace is a five-minute walk up Karl Johans gate. You're standing in the geographic center of tourist Oslo.

The trade-off is noise. Karl Johan is a main artery with trams, crowds, and the occasional parade. Street-facing rooms will remind you of that at midnight. Request a room facing the inner courtyard if sleep matters more than the Parliament view.

Standard rooms are small. You're paying for the address and the history, not the square footage. The renovated suites are a different story, but so is their price tag. Expect dated furnishings in the lower categories.

The Artesia Spa has a heated pool, sauna, and steam room, but access costs 250 NOK per day on top of your room rate. Palmen Restaurant and the Grand Café are institutions in Oslo and frequented by locals and tourists alike.


Star rating
5

Hotel category
Luxury

Historic Gem
Spa & Wellness
The Splurge

Afternoon tea at Palmen Restaurant inside the hotel, under a glass ceiling, is an institution. Better than most tourist cafés in the area.


Dead center of Oslo's tourist axis. Stortinget metro station is right there, the Royal Palace is up the hill, and Oslo Domkirke is around the corner. Busy, loud, and convenient.

Other hotels nearby


1.7km
Three included meals a day in one of Europe's most expensive cities, inside a building with actual character.
2.2km
A rooftop terrace with city and fjord views at hostel prices, in a clean, modern building next to Oslo's hipster neighborhood.