Hotel Continental Oslo

A 125-year-old family-run hotel with real character, a private Munch collection, and one of the city's most iconic restaurants on the ground floor.

Step off the Flytoget airport express at Nationaltheatret station and the hotel entrance is 50 meters away. No taxi, no dragging luggage through slush. That alone puts the Continental in a different category from every other high-end hotel in Oslo.

This is a family-run place that's been open since 1900, and it feels like it, in a good way. The lobby corridors double as a gallery of original Edvard Munch lithographs. Downstairs, Theatercaféen is a Viennese-style grand café that's been pulling in locals for over a century. It's loud, theatrical, full of suits and scarves. Not a tourist trap.

The rooms are a different story. Entry-level singles and petite doubles clock in around 18 to 20 square meters. That's tight for what you're paying. The finishings are high quality, the beds are absurdly comfortable, and bathrooms come with proper toiletries, separate shower and tub. But the square footage is modest. You're paying for the address and the service, not the space.

Rooms facing Stortingsgata get street noise, especially on weekends. Request a room facing the inner courtyard if sleep matters more than the view. Dead silent back there.

No pool. No spa. The gym is fine, TechnoGym equipment, open 24 hours, but windowless. If you want a rooftop pool and a buzz, Sommerro is more for you. Also check you the Grand Hotel a stone throw away, featuring both a pool and a spa. The Continental is for people who'd rather drink coffee in classic surroundings than pose by an infinity edge.


Star rating
5

Hotel category
Luxury

Best Breakfast
Historic Gem
The Splurge

Skip the airport transfer. The Flytoget drops you at Nationaltheatret station, literally across the street. 25 minutes, a fraction of the taxi cost.


Dead center of Oslo. The Royal Palace is a two-minute walk, Aker Brygge waterfront and National Gallery five minutes. You're on top of the main transit hub and surrounded by restaurants, theatres, and parks.

What to do nearby


1.5km
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.
2.1km
Norway's oldest botanical garden (established 1814) with free admission to 6.5 hectares of geographically organized plant collections, a Victorian Palm House from 1868, and modern climate-controlled greenhouses.
2.1km
See the original full-size plaster casts that became Vigeland Sculpture Park's famous bronzes and granites, and tour the artist's preserved 1943 apartment with custom-designed furniture inside his former studio building.

Other hotels nearby


0.9km
Oslo hotels are pricey, but Citybox is the exception. It is completely autonomous (self-check-in kiosks), so there is no reception staff, which keeps the price down. The rooms are simple and clean.
0.9km
Spacious, well-designed apartments with full kitchens in Oslo's most upscale residential neighborhood.
0.9km
Three included meals a day, with a location five minutes from Oslo Central Station.