This 361-meter zipline launches you off the top of Holmenkollen Ski Jump, 60 meters above the ground, tracing the same flight path professional ski jumpers follow during World Cup events. You drop 107.5 vertical meters while accelerating to 60-70 km/h before automatic brakes catch you at the bottom. The zipline operates seasonally, typically April through October (closed November-March when the hill is used for actual ski competitions and World Cup preparations). Verify current opening dates before making the trip, as they vary year to year.
You enter through the Ski Museum, take the elevator to the top of the jump tower (the same route athletes use), get strapped into a harness that leans you forward like a ski jumper's aerodynamic position, and step off the edge. The view before jumping shows the entire city of Oslo spread below with the Oslofjord in the distance. This is objectively the best panoramic view in Oslo. During the ride, you fly over the city with the fjord stretching out behind the urban grid.
The harness setup differs from typical ziplines. Instead of hanging vertically in a sitting position, you lean forward mimicking ski jumpers. This position is disorienting at first and makes the initial step off the platform psychologically harder. Once you release, acceleration happens fast. The glide smooths out after 3-4 seconds, then you coast to the bottom where automatic braking catches you.
Cost is about 800 NOK per person, in addition you need to purchase access to the Ski Museum at about 200 NOK. Weight limits are strict: maximum 110-120 kg (240-260 lbs), minimum around 30 kg. The limits adjust based on daily wind conditions. If it's too windy, the zipline closes even if downtown Oslo is sunny and calm. Holmenkollen sits exposed on a hill and catches weather differently than the city below.