Oslo Badstuforening Sukkerbiten

Experience Oslo's original sauna village with architecturally unique wood-fired saunas including the city's only wheelchair-accessible floating sauna, and guided Aufguss rituals that commercial sauna boats don't offer.

A cooperative-run collection of architect-designed saunas floated on the Oslo fjord, operated by a non-profit association that began in 2016. The project started with a single driftwood raft sauna and has grown into Sukkerbiten, Norway's largest floating sauna village, where bespoke small saunas sit side by side with larger, architect-designed units. The association mixes volunteer management, paid sauna masters and a membership model to run daily shared sessions, private hires and organised rituals. 

What sets Sukkerbiten apart is the variety of individual sauna designs and the direct access to fjord bathing. Some units offer roof terraces, diving boards or bathing ladders, one new sauna was built with universal design in mind and an external amphitheatre sits on the pier. Facilities at the site include lockable changing rooms, freshwater showers, cold plunge pools and a staffed dock where a sauna master will meet arriving guests. The site runs scheduled shared sessions alongside bookable private slots and offers occasional themed rituals and nudity-designated sessions in specific saunas.

All saunas are wood-fired burning birch, creating soft rolling heat that smells like camping. Temperatures hit 80-90°C. You sweat, step outside, jump into the Bjørvika inlet, gasp from cold shock, climb back up. The water here circulates better than Langkaia according to locals, often feeling cleaner. The view from water level shows the massive grey Munch Museum tower looming on one side and the white marble Opera House on the other.

The pier feels slightly more removed from commuter foot traffic than Langkaia despite being equally central. You get more peace while still being 200 meters from the city center. Unlike Langkaia's cold-water-only rinse, Sukkerbiten often has a warm freshwater shower available on the pier.


Aufguss rituals elevate the experience dramatically. Check the schedule for "Badsturitualer." An aufgussmeister uses essential oils, towel waving, and sometimes meditation to create a guided sensory session. Same price as regular tickets but completely different experience.

Highlights


Trosten is the only accessible option. If someone in your group uses a wheelchair or has mobility limitations, this is the only floating sauna in Oslo with a proper ramp. Book Trosten specifically.
Wednesday naked sauna breaks Oslo's swimwear rule. The sauna Anda hosts textile-free sessions on Wednesdays. This is the only day you can experience traditional Nordic sauna culture (nude) in Oslo's urban saunas. Every other day requires swimwear.
Aufguss rituals elevate the experience dramatically. Check the schedule for "Badsturitualer." An aufgussmeister uses essential oils, towel waving, and sometimes meditation to create a guided sensory session. Same price as regular tickets but completely different experience.


Best time to go


Weekday mornings 7-9am or off-peak slots 10am-2:30pm (165 NOK), October through March. Check the schedule for Badsturitualer (Aufguss rituals) and book those specifically if available. Avoid weekend afternoons when both locations of Oslo Badstuforening get packed with both locals and tourists.

Time needed


30–120 minutes depending on whether you swim and linger

Getting there


Walk from Oslo Central Station: Head toward the Opera House, walk past it along the waterfront, cross the small bridge toward the Munch Museum, continue to the end of the pier. Look for wooden structures with chimney smoke rising. Total walk: 12 minutes.

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