Slottsplassen

A compact ceremonial forecourt that provides the classic axial view along Karl Johans gate and direct access to the Royal Palace and Palace Park.

This large red gravel ceremonial square sits directly in front of the Royal Palace, marking the culmination of Karl Johans gate (Oslo's main street) and serving as the primary stage for royal events and official ceremonies. The vast open space surfaced with distinctive red gravel creates a monumental link between monarchy and city. Car-free except for official royal vehicles, open 24/7 year-round, completely free access.

Be here at 1:30PM for the daily Changing of the Guard ceremony . The square is the main viewing area where you can stand right at the edge watching soldiers march up from the main street.

The bronze equestrian statue of King Karl Johan (Charles III John) dominates the center. Standing at the statue's foot looking east gives you a perfect straight line of sight down Karl Johans gate to the Oslo Cathedral spire and distant hills. The perspective is especially beautiful at sunset or when the street is illuminated for Christmas.

May 17th (Constitution Day) transforms this square into the epicenter of national celebrations. Thousands of children from Oslo's schools march up Karl Johans gate to wave at the Royal Family standing on the palace balcony overlooking the square.


The King's gaze is political messaging. The statue looking down Karl Johans gate toward Parliament isn't random sculpture positioning. It's deliberate 19th-century symbolism showing royal power watching over legislative power. The entire urban axis was designed for this spatial relationship.

Highlights


Watch the Changing of the Guard at 1:30pm daily from the square's edge. Standing here gives you front-row viewing of soldiers marching up from Karl Johans gate and performing the ceremony at the palace entrance.
Experience May 17th Constitution Day if your Oslo visit coincides. Thousands of schoolchildren marching up to wave at the Royal Family on the palace balcony transforms the square into Norway's most patriotic space.

Best time to go


Late afternoon for sunset perspective looking east down Karl Johans gate (summer 7-9pm, winter 3-4pm depending on season). Daily 1:30pm for Changing of the Guard ceremony viewing from the square's edge.

Time needed


30–60 minutes (longer if you add the palace park or nearby museums and cafés).

Getting there


The entrance to the Palace Square is right next to Nationaltheateret Metro station.

What to do nearby


2.3km
Norway's oldest botanical garden (established 1814) with free admission to 6.5 hectares of geographically organized plant collections, a Victorian Palm House from 1868, and modern climate-controlled greenhouses.
2.4km
A single urban complex that houses Norway's most extensive natural science collections together with a historical botanical garden and interactive mineral and climate displays.
2.4km
Inner-Oslo island where substantial 12th-century Cistercian monastery ruins sit alongside visible quarry geology and 19th-century military remains, all reachable by a short ferry from the city.

Hotels nearby


1.2km
A well-equipped apartment with a washing machine and kitchenette, five minutes from Oslo Central Station.
1.3km
Oslo hotels are pricey, but Citybox is the exception. It is completely autonomous (self-check-in kiosks), so there is no reception staff, which keeps the price down. The rooms are simple and clean.
1.3km
Three included meals per day make this one of the best-value hotels in one of Europe's most expensive cities.