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Karl Johan Hotel Oslo

The most central address in Oslo, directly across from the Parliament, with everything walkable.

Step out the front door and the Norwegian Parliament is across the street. The Royal Palace is a five-minute walk uphill. Central Station is a five-minute walk downhill. The Nationaltheater Flytoget stop, connecting you to the airport, is around the corner. No hotel in Oslo puts you closer to everything.

The building dates from 1899, and some of that history survived the 2021 renovation. A spiral staircase and stained glass windows in the lobby give it personality that chain hotels can't fake. Inside the rooms, it's clean Scandinavian design, modern and crisp.

The standard doubles are small, roughly 15 to 18 square meters. Two open suitcases on the floor and you're climbing over them. If space matters, pay up for a Superior. The top floor has loft-style rooms with sloped ceilings, which sounds nice until you're 185 cm tall and banging your head.

Noise is the real trade-off. Street-facing rooms catch trams, weekend crowds, and street performers well into the night. Request a courtyard-facing room when booking. You lose the Parliament view but you gain sleep.

Breakfast is served under a glass roof on the top floor with views over the city's rooftops. Smoked salmon, brunost, the full Norwegian spread. It's included in the rate, which in a city where a café lunch costs 200 NOK, matters.

One thing to watch: the hotel has a separate budget wing with noticeably lower room standards. Check which wing you're booking before you pay.


The hotel spans three connected buildings, creating a maze of corridors. Request a room in the main building to avoid long walks to your room and confusing elevator banks.


Star rating
4

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Neighbourhood vibe


You're on Oslo's main pedestrian drag. Shops, restaurants, trams, and tourists surround you from morning to midnight. Quiet it is not.

What to do nearby


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See and stand underneath the original balsa wood raft that Thor Heyerdahl sailed 8,000 kilometers across the Pacific in 1947 to prove ancient peoples could have crossed oceans
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A single-block granite column that compacts over a hundred interlocked human figures into the park's central, monumental focal point, offering close-up study of Vigeland's figure work.

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