Oslo's major sights are clustered along the waterfront and in a handful of walkable neighbourhoods, which means you can cover a lot without ever needing a car or spending half your day on public transport. Most of what's worth seeing sits between Bjørvika in the east and Bygdøy in the west, with a few stops in Frogner and Grünerløkka along the way.
The city has had a serious museum boom in recent years. MUNCH opened in 2021, the National Museum followed in 2022, and the new Museum of the Viking Age is under construction on Bygdøy. If you visited Oslo ten years ago, the cultural landscape looks very different now. The older institutions are still strong, but the newer ones have raised the bar on what to expect from a Nordic museum visit.
Explore the locations
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.
A centrally located, seasonal public winter event that combines a public ice rink, chalet-style stalls with Norwegian seasonal food and crafts.
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.