Thon Hotel Cecil

Free evening meals Monday through Thursday smack in the middle of Oslo

Two blocks from the Norwegian Parliament, on a quiet side street off Karl Johans gate. You're in the dead center of Oslo, and yet the noise level is surprisingly low. The vibe inside is clean Scandinavian corporate, not exciting, but calm and well-run. Staff are sharp and helpful without the forced cheer.

The rooms are small. Standard Oslo small, meaning two open suitcases on the floor and you're climbing over them. The decor is functional, not ugly, not memorable. Many rooms face an internal atrium, which means silence but also very little natural light. If daylight matters, ask for an upper floor facing Rosenkrantz' gate or Stortingsgata.

The big draw here is the food. Breakfast is a proper Scandinavian spread, fresh smoothies, quality fish, hot options, well above the standard hotel buffet. Then Monday through Thursday, there's a complimentary light evening meal, soup, salad, bread, and a hot dish. In a city where a mediocre restaurant dinner runs 400-500 NOK per person, that's real money saved over a multi-night stay.

The catch on the food: the free evening meal disappears during summer (late June through late August) and major holidays. Book outside those windows and you get the full benefit. The Flytoget airport train stops at National Theatre station, a five-minute walk away. Cash is not accepted at check-in, cards only.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Mid-Range

Business Hotel
Crowd Pleaser

Light sleepers: book an atrium-facing room for total silence. Book an upper floor room facing Stortingsgata for a Parliament glimpse.


You're on Oslo's main axis, Parliament on one side, Royal Palace a short walk up the hill. Restaurants, bars, and shops in every direction, no transit needed.

What to do nearby


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A preserved polar exploration ship with connected exhibition galleries that let visitors board the vessel and examine original expedition equipment and ship construction in close detail.
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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.
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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.

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