Home Hotel Gabelshus Oslo

Three included meals a day in one of Europe's most expensive cities, inside a building with actual character.

An ivy-covered brick building from 1912 with Persian rugs, Chesterfield sofas, and a fireplace in the lobby. The Gabelshus looks like a wealthy aunt's country house, not a hotel. That atmosphere is the draw, and it's real, not staged.

The economics here are hard to argue with. Breakfast, afternoon waffles and coffee, and a light dinner are all included in the room rate. In Oslo, where a mediocre restaurant meal runs 300-400 NOK per person, that adds up fast. The dinner is a simple buffet, usually soup, salad, and one hot dish. Don't expect culinary fireworks, but it's solid, and it's free.

The trade-off is space. Standard rooms are small. Not "European small", more like "open your suitcase on the bed because there's no floor" small. Standard rooms starting at a ridiculous 12 sqm. The building is over a hundred years old, and it shows in the room dimensions. Old wooden floors creak, and sound travels between floors. Ask for a top-floor room to avoid hearing footsteps overhead.

Frogner is embassy-row Oslo: quiet, leafy, expensive-looking townhouses. Skillebekk tram stop is a short walk, and from there it's ten minutes to the city center. The garden terrace is a rare luxury in this city, worth using in summer. There's also a basement sauna and steam room that most people seem to walk right past.


Ask for a top-floor garden-view room. You dodge the creaky-floor noise from above and the street noise. The basement sauna and steam room are often empty.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Neighbourhood vibe


Frogner is Oslo's quietest upscale neighborhood: embassies, old townhouses, leafy streets. Safe and calm, but you're a tram ride from the action.

What to do nearby


2.6km
Experience Oslo's original sauna village with architecturally unique wood-fired saunas including the city's only wheelchair-accessible floating sauna, and guided Aufguss rituals that commercial sauna boats don't offer.
2.7km Insider pick
The world's largest Munch collection, 13 floors of it, with free entry on Wednesday evenings and three versions of The Scream rotating throughout the day.

Other hotels nearby


2.3km Insider pick
Built in the former headquarters of the Norwegian America Line, the company that shipped thousands of emigrants to the US in the early 1900s. More character than anything else in this part of Oslo. The cocktail bar sits in the old booking hall where passengers once collected their tickets, all dark wood and low lighting. Two-minute walk from the airport train platform.
2.3km
Three included meals per day make this one of the best-value hotels in one of Europe's most expensive cities.
2.3km
A 19th-century station building with real architectural character, three minutes from the airport train platform, literally inside Oslo Central Station.