Hotel Bristol Oslo

A century-old grand hotel with a walk-everywhere location wrapped in 1920s atmosphere.

Heavy chandeliers, dark wood panelling, velvet everywhere. The Bristol opened in 1920 and the lobby still looks like it's waiting for a jazz band to walk in. Moorish arches, theatrical lighting, the whole production. The Winter Garden, the hotel's central gathering space, fills up with locals on weekends, piano music drifting through the room. It's a proper social hub, not a sterile hotel lobby. That's part of the appeal and part of the problem: it gets loud and crowded, especially Friday and Saturday evenings.

The breakfast is exceptional, even by the fairly high Norwegian hotel standards. High-quality local ingredients, beautifully executed. It's one of those breakfasts that changes your morning plans because you keep going back for more.

Now, the rooms. The public spaces are grand. The standard rooms are not. They're compact, and the furniture, while handsome in an antique sort of way, eats into already limited floor space. Skip the standard category (starting at 14 m2) if the budget allows. Superior and Deluxe rooms are more comfortable, although not large. L'Occitane toiletries, Nespresso machines, good bedding in all rooms.

Summer can be tricky. The building is over a hundred years old, and the air conditioning doesn't always win the fight on hot days. Lower-floor rooms facing internal courtyards get stuffy and viewless. Ask for a higher floor facing the street.

The spa is additional charge and no discounts for guests.

Location is a one-block walk from Karl Johans gate, five minutes to the National Theatre, ten to the Royal Palace. No pool, no pets, no cash payments.


Star rating
5

Hotel category
Luxury

Best Breakfast
Historic Gem
The Splurge

Book the Afternoon Tea in the Winter Garden weeks in advance, even as a hotel guest. The hot chocolate here is legendary in Oslo: thick, rich, served with a bowl of whipped cream.


One block off Karl Johans gate, Oslo's main pedestrian street. The National Theatre, Parliament, and Royal Palace are all within a ten-minute walk. Hard to get more central.

What to do nearby


2.2km
Over 40 sculptures by Dalí, Rodin, and Louise Bourgeois scattered through a wild forest overlooking the fjord. Stand where Edvard Munch painted The Scream's background, all with free 24-hour access.
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.
2.3km
The most famous angry face in Norway. It captures a universal human emotion so perfectly that it makes people laugh in recognition, regardless of their language.

Other hotels nearby


0.9km
You're three minutes on foot from Oslo's upscale waterfront area, packed with shops and restaurants.
1.0km
Direct connection to Oslo Central Station and the best high-rise views in the city.
1.0km
You can't get much closer to the Airport Express Train without camping on the platform.