The Thief Oslo

Built around an art collection that most galleries would envy. Every room has original work, there's a dedicated curator, and the spa has a 12-metre pool and a proper Turkish hamam. Your room key gets you into the Astrup Fearnley Museum next door for free. The rooftop terrace on a clear evening is hard to beat. The price tag is matching.

Dark velvet, gold accents, contemporary art on every wall. The Thief doesn't look like a Norwegian hotel. It looks like a nightclub that happens to have beds. The lobby is moody, the hallways are dim, and the whole place leans hard into a kind of international rockstar aesthetic. Your room key gets you free entry to the Astrup Fearnley Museum next door, which is a nice touch since the hotel's own collection of 102 works already makes it feel like you're sleeping in a gallery.

The beds are excellent, topped with Røros Tweed wool blankets and proper down duvets. Turndown service comes with tea and a brownie, which is a small thing that Scandinavian hotels almost never bother with. The Geneva sound systems in the rooms are a welcome upgrade from the usual Bluetooth speaker. The hotel is not new, some furniture is starting to show scuffs and wear, which feels wrong when you're paying top-tier rates.

Standard rooms are around 24 square metres, small but a decent size for Oslo. Ask for a higher floor facing the fjord, because lower rooms facing the canal get foot traffic on the boardwalk right outside your window.

Tjuvholmen is beautiful but remote by Oslo standards. The walk to Oslo Central Station takes a solid 20 to 30 minutes. No tram nearby. The closest bus stop is at Vika Atrium, and the nearest train station, Nationaltheateret, where the Airport trains stop, is a 15 minute walk away. Grab a taxi if you're arriving with bags.

The spa has a pool, hamam, and sauna, but access costs around 295 NOK unless you've booked a spa treatment. At this price point, that stings. For a more authentic sauna on the water experience, check out KOK Aker Brygge 5 minutes away.


The spa pool costs 295 NOK extra unless you book a treatment. In summer, skip it entirely and swim at the free city dock right outside the hotel, or check out the KOK Saunas at Aker Brygge.


Star rating
5

Hotel category
Luxury

Neighbourhood vibe


Tjuvholmen is a polished, modern waterfront district full of galleries and restaurants. Gorgeous to walk around, but it's at the far end of Aker Brygge, a long haul from central Oslo on foot.

What to do nearby


0.7km
Experience the public storytelling side of the Nobel Peace Prize through an immersive dark room with 1,000 fiber-optic laureate portraits, see an actual gold peace medal, and engage with current year exhibitions about conflict resolution 50 meters from where the actual prize ceremony happens.
0.8km
Experience the human story of Norwegian resistance during Nazi occupation (1940-1945) through atmospheric dark-to-light museum design, illegal newspapers hidden in firewood, saboteur equipment concealed in fish barrels, and the Heavy Water Sabotage that stopped Germany's nuclear program
0.9km
A functioning municipal seat that doubles as a concentrated gallery of postwar Norwegian civic art and the annual host venue for the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony.

Other hotels nearby


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A restored 1930s power station with original Art Deco tilework, a rooftop pool overlooking the city, and seven restaurants under one roof. There's nothing else in Oslo like this. If you want a hotel that makes you cancel your afternoon plans because you'd rather stay in, this is it.
1.0km
Three included meals a day in one of Europe's most expensive cities, inside a building with actual character.
1.0km Insider pick
125 years old. Rooms are individually decorated with hand-picked art, and the lobby bar, Bar Boman, houses one of the country's largest private collections of Edvard Munch prints. But the real draw is Theatercaféen, the grand Viennese-style restaurant on the ground floor, with its high ceilings and mirrored walls. It's been the place in Oslo where actors, politicians, and locals meet for over a century. Nationaltheateret station is 100 metres from the front door.