Karl Johan Hotel Oslo

You're on Oslo's most central street, steps from the Parliament, the Palace, and the train station.

The address tells you everything. Karl Johans gate 35 puts you on Oslo's main artery, roughly 100 meters from the Parliament building, with the Royal Palace visible up the street. The airport express train drops you a five to seven minute walk away. You won't need a taxi for anything central.

The building is 19th-century Berlin Baroque, and the interior reflects that. High ceilings, winding staircases, a sense of weight and history that the glass-box hotels near the Barcode district can't replicate. It feels established without being stuffy. And the hotel was mentioned in the Michelin Guide 2025 as one of only eight hotels in Oslo.

The rooms are the catch. This is a converted historic building, so sizes vary wildly. Some standard doubles are fine. Others are cramped with odd layouts and small bathrooms. There's no predicting which you'll get. Ask for specifics when booking.

Noise is the other big trade-off. Karl Johans gate is loud, especially on weekend nights. Street-facing rooms catch all of it. The air conditioning in some rooms can't quite keep up on warm summer days, and opening the windows to compensate just invites more noise. It becomes a choose-your-discomfort situation: stuffy or loud.

The breakfast buffet is solid, with good smoked salmon, fresh bread, and Norwegian cheeses. A tea and coffee maker sits in every room. There's a small gym on site and a 24-hour front desk. Check-in doesn't start until 4 PM, which is late. No cribs or extra beds available, and the hotel only accepts cash for payment.


Request a courtyard-facing room (sometimes called 'quiet room'). You lose the street view but gain silence. Non-negotiable for light sleepers on weekends. Top floor rooms (5th or 6th) give a direct view over the Parliament and Spikersuppa park, if you don't mind the street noise.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Boutique

Neighbourhood vibe


You're smack bang in the tourist center of Oslo. Parliament is next door, luxury shops and cafes line the street, and it's busy and noisy until late, especially on weekends.

What to do nearby


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Norway’s national opera and ballet in a purpose-built, walkable waterfront building. Walk straight up the marble roof for free and get a view that covers half the city.
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Sample a wide range of Oslo’s best casual food and local producers under one roof at Oslo´s largest food hall.
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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.

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