Houses For Sale In Norway

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Pull up to Skjærgårdsveien on a July evening and the light does something you won't forget. The Norwegian summer sun hangs low over the Smøla archipelago, painting the skerries in amber, and the only sounds are the creak of the boathouse door and the soft slap of water against the hull of your boat. This is Veiholmen — a tight-knit coastal community on one of Norway's most wind-carved, sea-soaked islands — and this three-bedroom country home sits right at the heart of it. Built in 1939, the house carries the kind of quiet confidence that only comes with age. Original Norwegian coastal architecture: solid, unhurried, built to face Atlantic weather without flinching. It's been kept in good condition over the decades, and that history is part of the appeal. Walk through the front and you're not buying a show home — you're buying something real. The bones are excellent. The 139 square metres of interior space across three floors feels generous and human-scaled, with rooms that invite you to actually use them rather than just admire them. The southeast-to-west wrapping veranda is where you'll spend most of your time between May and September. Morning coffee in the sun. Late dinners that stretch past 10 p.m. because the sky still hasn't fully darkened. Children running down into the 720-square-metre freehold garden while adults argue pleasantly about whether to take the boat out before or after lunch. The garden is flat, well-maintained, and fully fenced — practical in the way that real holiday-home living demands. Inside, the living room windows frame a view across the seascape that shifts with every tide and weather front. On clear days you can watch fishing vessels tracking their way through the outer skerries. When a we ... click here to read more

Presented by EiendomsMegler 1 v/Morten Høvik at Skjærgårdsveien 866
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Step outside on a February morning and the silence hits you first. Then the cold — clean, sharp, the kind that makes you feel genuinely alive. The cross-country trail begins just 250 metres from the front door of this four-bedroom chalet on Persbuåsen, and by the time you've clipped into your skis and pushed off into the tree line, the rest of the world has completely ceased to exist. That's the daily reality of owning a second home in Vegglifjell, and this particular cabin makes it very easy to stay a little longer than planned. Built in 2005 and kept in genuinely good shape, the chalet sits at around 813 metres above sea level in the highlands of Numedal, about 170 kilometres northwest of Oslo via the E134. It covers 99 square metres across two floors, with four bedrooms, two separate living rooms, and a bathroom with a private sauna — the kind of layout that works equally well for a family of five as it does for two couples sharing costs on a winter weekend. The ground floor sets the tone immediately. You come in through a practical entrance hallway with room for all the boots, jackets, and ski poles that mountain life demands, and from there the main living space opens up around a wood-burning stove. On a cold evening, that stove is the heart of everything — people gravitate toward it without thinking, dragging blankets from sofas, filling glasses of akevitt, recounting the day's run down Norefjell or the afternoon's skate-ski loop through the Vegglifjell terrain. The kitchen sits in open connection with the dining and living areas, fitted with solid wood cabinetry and a wooden countertop that feels more cabin-honest than showroom-slick. A glazed door off the kitchen leads directly onto the main veranda — 31 square ... click here to read more

Welcome to Persbuåsen 8! A beautiful cabin with excellent ski trails right outside the door.
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Step out onto the terrace on a clear July morning, coffee in hand, and the whole of Byglandsfjorden opens up in front of you — that deep, glacier-carved water catching the early light, a rowing boat cutting silently across the surface somewhere below. This is the daily reality at Hagenes 25. Not a view you admire once and forget. One that keeps changing, keeps pulling you back outside. Built in 2008 and sitting on a gently elevated plot at Hagenesodden in Bygland municipality, this two-bedroom cabin is the kind of place southern Norway does better than almost anywhere in Europe. It's solid, thoughtfully put together, and in genuinely good condition — no renovation projects lurking beneath the surface. Just a well-kept retreat ready to be lived in from the first weekend you own it. The setting is what stops you. At roughly 220 meters above sea level, the cabin looks out over Byglandsfjorden — one of Norway's great inland fjords, stretching nearly 40 kilometers through the Setesdal valley. Down at the waterline, a short walk from the front door, there's a private dock. You can moor a boat there, cast a line for pike or perch at dusk, or simply sit with your feet over the edge and let the silence do its work. In summer, the water is warm enough to swim. That detail surprises most visitors who arrive expecting Norwegian waters to be freezing — Byglandsfjorden's sheltered position means swimming from mid-June through August is genuinely pleasant. Inside, the layout is sensibly designed — everything on a single level, which matters more than you'd think once you've spent a full day hiking and don't fancy stairs. The open-plan living and kitchen area is bright, with high ceilings and large windows framing the fjord on one si ... click here to read more

Welcome to Hagenes 25! Photo: Vidar Godtfredsen.
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Early on a Saturday morning in July, the mist sits low over Borrevannet. You pull on a sweater, step out onto the front veranda at Vikveien 160, and the only sounds are birdsong and the faint rustle of birch leaves somewhere behind the tree line. The lake is a seven-minute walk down the road. By the time you get there, the sun has burned through, and the water is already flashing silver. This is what mornings look like when you own this cabin. Built in 1936 and sitting on just over 4,500 square metres of freehold land in Nykirke, Horten municipality, this is a one-bedroom Norwegian leisure cabin with genuine character. Not the kind of character that's code for "falling apart" — the structure is solid and the property is in good condition — but the kind that comes from decades of proper Norwegian cabin life. High ceilings in the living room. A wood stove for when October turns serious. A loft sleeping area with a skylight that lets in more sky than you'd expect. A separate annex out back, built around 2005, with bunk beds that have probably seen three generations of cousins. At 48 square metres in the main cabin, this isn't a sprawling retreat. It's deliberately compact — the kind of space that forces you outside, which is the whole point. The covered front veranda faces the view across the natural landscape toward Borrevannet, and it's where you'll spend most of your time anyway. Morning coffee. Afternoon card games. Late dinners in the long Nordic summer light when the sun doesn't fully set until well past ten. The kitchen is generously proportioned for the footprint of the cabin, with real counter space and proper storage — not an afterthought. It opens directly into the living room, so whoever's cooking doesn't get ... click here to read more

Welcome to Vikveien 160. Photo: Kristian T. Bollæren
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Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in February, the kind where the air has that sharp, clean bite that wakes you up faster than coffee. You pull on your ski boots at the front door of your own cabin at Bekkekollhellinga 16, clip into your cross-country skis, and glide straight onto the groomed trail that runs less than 50 meters below the property. No shuttle. No parking lot. No queue. Just you, the pines, and about a thousand square meters of Norwegian mountain silence surrounding you. That's the daily reality at this 65-square-meter chalet sitting at roughly 600 meters above sea level in the Blefjell/Åslandseter area — a well-established mountain retreat zone in Numedal, Telemark, about two hours south of Oslo. Lampeland sits at the foot of this plateau, and from the cabin you're positioned centrally between Blestølen and Blestua, which puts you within easy reach of virtually everything this region offers while keeping the property itself tucked away and genuinely private. The south-facing exposure is one of the first things you notice. On clear days — and there are many, especially in spring and early autumn — the terrace catches sun from mid-morning until evening. The 25-square-meter outdoor deck is partially covered, so a light rain doesn't send you inside. There's a custom-built outdoor fireplace out here too, which extends the usable season considerably. Come September, when the birch trees turn gold and the nights cool fast, you can still sit outside long after dark with a fire going and a glass of something warm. That's the kind of detail that turns a holiday cabin into a proper second home. Inside, the layout is open and sensible. The living room, dining area, and kitchen flow together without feeling cram ... click here to read more

Welcome to Bekkekollhellinga 16! Photo by Arild Brun Kjeldaas
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Picture this: it's seven in the morning, the light over Kåfjord is doing something extraordinary, that low Nordic gold that bounces off the water and fills the whole cabin before you've even made coffee. You open the terrace door from the main bedroom, and the sound that greets you is mostly silence — a gull somewhere, the soft knock of a hull against a dock below, the faint exhale of the sea. This is what mornings look like at Oddeheia 18. Sitting on a private 1,124-square-meter plot on the coast of Lindesnes, southern Norway's southernmost municipality, this three-bedroom chalet is the kind of property that makes you recalibrate what a holiday home should feel like. Built in 2006 and kept in genuinely good condition — not "estate agent good condition," but the kind where things actually work and nothing needs immediate attention — it sits above the water with unobstructed views across the archipelago toward the island of Hille. The orientation is southwest-facing, which in Norway is not a small thing. It means the terraces catch sun from mid-morning until the long summer evenings stretch past ten o'clock, and the surrounding topography buffers the coastal winds that would otherwise chase you indoors. The cabin measures 103 square metres of indoor living space, and it's used well. The open-plan kitchen and living area sits at the heart of the home, with windows framing the sea on multiple sides. Natural light moves through the space differently throughout the day — sharp and bright in the mornings, warm and horizontal by early evening. From the kitchen there's a direct step out to one of several terraces, which matters more than it sounds when you're carrying a plate of grilled fish and someone's already poured the wi ... click here to read more

Welcome to Oddeheia 18!
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Step outside on a February morning at Bekjordsvegen 36 and you'll hear almost nothing — just the soft compression of snow under your boots and, somewhere in the tree line, a woodpecker working at a birch. Strap on your skis, and within three minutes you're on a groomed cross-country trail threading through the Numedal valley. That's not a selling point dressed up in fancy language. That's just Tuesday here. Lyngdal i Numedal sits in the long, quiet valley of the Numedalslågen river, roughly two hours from Oslo by car along the E134. It's the kind of place Norwegians have been keeping to themselves for generations — serious hiking territory in summer, a cross-country skier's paradise from November through March, and in between, a landscape that shifts from amber birch forests to frozen lakes with an unhurried confidence. The village has a petrol station, a local shop, and the kind of community noticeboard that still gets used. That's part of the appeal. The chalet at Bekjordsvegen 36 is a solid three-bedroom cabin in good condition, sitting on a leasehold plot of approximately 1,000 square metres. At 80 square metres of internal living space, it's not enormous — but the layout is well thought out. A living room with large windows pulls in the treeline views and the generous daylight that arrives in midsummer from before 5am. The wood-burning stove anchors the room. On a cold January evening with the stove going and snow banking up against the glass, it earns its place in a way no underfloor heating system ever quite does. The kitchen is functional with pine-fronted cabinets and a laminate worktop — honest, unpretentious, and perfectly usable. It won't win any design awards, and buyers who want a showroom kitchen will w ... click here to read more

Welcome to Bekjordsvegen 36!
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Early on a July morning at Grepperødveien 28, the smell of pine resin and damp earth drifts through the bedroom window before you're even fully awake. You pull on a fleece, step out onto the 68-square-meter terrace, and the only sound is a woodpecker somewhere deep in the birches. Then the water appears through the trees—Vansjø, glittering flat and silver, maybe two minutes' walk away. Your boat is already moored at your private dock. That's when it clicks: this is actually yours. Sperrebotn sits on the northeastern shore of Vansjø, the largest lake in Østfold county. It's not a place most international buyers stumble across by accident, which is exactly why the handful of cabins along Grepperødveien feel so genuinely unhurried. No holidaymakers clutching maps. No ice cream queues. Just a working Norwegian landscape of forest, farmland, and glassy lake water that has barely changed in fifty years. The chalet itself was built in 1965 and wears its age honestly—wooden panel walls, warm plank floors, the kind of craftsmanship that gets more satisfying to live with every year rather than less. At 54 square metres the layout is tight but cleverly so: an entrance hall that catches wet boots and rain jackets, a simple toilet room, two bedrooms, and a single open living and kitchen space that becomes the gravitational centre of every stay. The fireplace is the room's anchor. On a wet October afternoon, when the birches outside have gone gold and the lake is running steel-grey, you'll light it within ten minutes of arriving and not regret a single thing about owning this place. The kitchen has been updated in recent years. Freestanding appliances, a manual water solution—yes, there's no running water, which is common across le ... click here to read more

ASK Meglergaarden presents Grepperødveien 28
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Step outside on a February morning at Silkedalsporten 52 and the air hits you before anything else — sharp, clean, at 1,014 meters above sea level it has a particular bite that wakes you up faster than any coffee. The Silkedalsløypa trail is less than 100 meters from your front door. Within minutes you're moving through a landscape of birch and snow-laden spruce, tracks stretching out ahead for 150 groomed kilometers, the kind of stillness that feels earned. This is Rauland. Not a purpose-built ski resort, not a sanitized alpine village — a genuine Norwegian mountain community in the heart of Telemark, where the culture runs as deep as the snow. The cabin at Silkedalsporten 52 sits right inside it. Built from massive Norwegian timber and hand-carved with artistic motifs by local artist Ellen Øygarden, the cabin is immediately unlike anything you'll find in a modern development. The log construction isn't decorative — it's structural, authentic, the kind of craftsmanship that was already disappearing in Norway when this place was built. Øygarden's carved details run through doorframes, beams, and interior panels with a quiet confidence, never shouting for attention. You notice them differently every time you walk through a room. That's how good craft works. The layout across three floors gives you 178 square meters of interior living space, and the flow makes sense for a mountain property. The main floor is anchored by a living room that's built around a proper fireplace — not an insert, not a wood-burning stove shoehorned into a corner, but a central fireplace that radiates heat you can feel from across the room. Above it, an internal balcony from the loft level looks down into the space, a detail the current owners h ... click here to read more

Welcome to Silkedalsporten 52, a very beautiful and unique log cabin over three floors with 11 beds in 2 bedrooms, 2 loft rooms, and annex.
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Step out onto the west-facing terrace at six in the evening, coffee in hand, and watch the light go copper across the Kyrkjebygdheia ridgeline. The forest below is quiet except for wind moving through spruce. No traffic. No notifications that feel urgent. Just 1,772 square meters of Norwegian highland freehold and that particular kind of silence that you only find at 700 meters above sea level. This is what owning a cabin in Nissedal actually feels like. Holmvassvegen 56 sits on the Kyrkjebygdheia plateau in Telemark county — a part of inland Norway that doesn't make the Instagram reels but absolutely should. Nissedal municipality covers a sprawling landscape of lakes, bog-pine forest, and open mountain terrain that locals have been quietly treasuring for generations. The cabin itself is a solid, well-kept two-bedroom Norwegian hytte on a generous freehold plot, priced at €123,000 — which, by any reasonable measure of what you're getting, is serious value for a freehold mountain property in Scandinavia. The 46-square-meter footprint is classic Norwegian cabin proportions: enough space to live comfortably with family or a group of friends, compact enough that maintenance never becomes a second job. You walk in through a proper entrance hall — wide enough to actually hang wet hiking gear and kick off boots without it becoming a chaotic pile — and into a living room where large windows pull the forest right into the room. The ceiling height gives the space a lightness you don't expect from a small cabin. A sofa corner, space for armchairs, a natural dining area. On winter evenings the wood stove does exactly what a wood stove should do in Norway. The kitchen works. Profiled cabinet fronts, solid timber countertops, open ... click here to read more

Welcome to Holmvassvegen 56 – a beautiful family cabin.
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Wake up to the sound of water lapping against the pier, coffee in hand, watching the early mist lift off Åbyfjorden. That's what mornings look like at Vinjestranda 119 — a four-bedroom chalet on the Norwegian coast that sits close enough to the sea that you can hear it change mood with the weather. Stathelle sits in the heart of Bamble municipality, a stretch of coastline in Telemark county that Norwegians have quietly treasured for generations. The Bamble archipelago is right on your doorstep — a jagged scatter of skerries, inlets, and sheltered bays that rewards anyone willing to get out on the water or pull on a pair of boots. The kyststien, Norway's beloved coastal trail, runs directly through this area. On a clear July morning, that path takes you past blueberry thickets and smooth pink granite slabs that drop straight into the sea. In October, those same rocks glow copper and rust as the birches turn. This is a vacation home that earns its mooring. Literally — a 3-meter boat berth is included in the sale, giving you direct access to some of the best recreational waters on the Telemark coast. You can cast a line for mackerel before breakfast, explore hidden coves by kayak in the afternoon, and be back on the 75-square-meter terrace with a cold Aass Fatøl before the sun dips. The outdoor furniture stays too, so you're not arriving to an empty deck. The chalet itself was built in 2009 and covers 83 square meters spread across two floors. It's in good condition — maintained properly, not in need of renovation work, which matters when you're buying from abroad and can't be on-site every week. The ground floor has a practical layout: an entrance hall, four bedrooms, a full bathroom with laundry plumbing (washing machi ... click here to read more

From the terrace you have a wonderful view towards Åbyfjorden, with the Bamble archipelago as a good neighbor.
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Early on a Saturday morning in July, you step off the train at Brusand station — a ten-minute walk from your front door — and within twenty minutes you're standing barefoot on one of the longest uninterrupted stretches of sand in northern Europe. No crowds. Just the low Atlantic roar, cold clean air, and the kind of silence that actually does something to your nervous system. That's what owning a holiday home at Steinabakken feels like. Not a fantasy. A very specific, very repeatable reality. Brusand sits on the Jæren coast in southwestern Norway, a stretch of coastline that locals have quietly loved for generations while the rest of the world looked north toward the fjords. The landscape here is singular: flat, wind-shaped dunes rolling back from a wide pale beach, farmland pressing up close behind, and on clear days a horizon that goes all the way to nothing. The light in summer is extraordinary — the sky stays bright well past ten in the evening, and the golden hour lasts so long you start to lose track of time. The chalet at Steinabakken is part of a small, carefully conceived project of three homes. One has already sold. This one — four bedrooms, one bathroom, 98 square meters of thoughtfully arranged living space — sits on its own private plot and is built to a standard you'd expect from Norwegian construction at its most considered: real materials, proper insulation, the kind of craftsmanship designed to handle coastal winters without complaint. The home is move-in ready. You won't be managing a renovation from another country. Inside, the living room and kitchen open into each other under ceilings that sit higher than standard, which makes the space feel considerably larger than the footprint suggests. Large w ... click here to read more

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Step outside on a crisp October morning, coffee in hand, and watch the frost on the valley floor melt as the sun clears the ridge above Nystølåsen. At 890 metres above sea level, the air is different up here. Sharper. Quieter. The kind of quiet where you notice birdsong you'd forgotten existed. This three-bedroom mountain chalet at Knatten 37 in Etnedal sits on 1,003 square metres of solid Norwegian bedrock, and it earns every kroner of its asking price in the currency of uncomplicated living. No neighbours crowding the terrace. No traffic noise drifting up through the pines. Just a southwest-facing slope, a genuinely snow-secure winter, and a small pond glinting 200 metres down the trail. The cabin was built in 1999 and has been looked after with the kind of quiet diligence that only shows up when you actually inspect the details — exterior stain applied regularly to both the main building and the insulated outbuilding, terraces treated with Møre Tyri, everything structurally sound and move-in ready. The current owners are willing to sell it fully furnished, which means the kitchen, the bunk beds, even the dining chairs hand-painted with capercaillie motifs, all stay if you want them. You could realistically arrive on a Friday afternoon, light the fireplace, and have nowhere to be until Monday. That fireplace anchors the 22.3-square-metre living room — the social heart of the cabin. Large windows pull the mountain panorama inside, and when the wood is burning and the light is going golden across the valley, it's difficult to think of a reason to be anywhere else. The kitchen is compact and honest: a practical U-shape at 7.5 square metres with upper cabinets and enough counter space for serious post-hike cooking. The ... click here to read more

From the parking area
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Step outside on a January morning and the entire valley is white, dead quiet except for the faint scrape of your own skis. Gaustatoppen sits right there across the ridge, its pyramid silhouette sharp against a pale Nordic sky. From the veranda of this cabin at Finntoppvegen 48, that view is yours every single day you're here. Not a postcard. The real thing. Skirvedalen is one of those corners of Telemark that Norwegians guard a little jealously. The valley sits inside Tinn municipality, tucked into the highland plateau at roughly 878 meters above sea level, and it has none of the overbuilt, après-ski busyness you'd find closer to Rauland or Geilo. What it has instead is 109 kilometers of groomed cross-country trails threading through birch and pine, almost total quiet on weekday mornings, and the kind of air that makes you feel like you've been doing something wrong by breathing city air for so long. This chalet was built in 1998 and has been properly refreshed in 2024 — new bathroom, updated laundry and technical room, fixtures that don't feel like an afterthought. The overall condition is good throughout. It's 54 square meters of interior space, which sounds compact until you're actually inside and realize the open-plan layout between the living area and kitchen makes the whole main floor feel generous and social. Big windows pull the landscape in. On a clear afternoon the light off Gaustatoppen pours through and pools across the wooden floor in a way that genuinely stops you mid-conversation. The fireplace is the heart of winter evenings here. Get back from a few hours on the trails — the groomed cross-country network starts just 178 meters from the front door, which in practice means you click into your skis on th ... click here to read more

Welcome to Finntoppvegen 48!
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Step outside on a January morning and the first thing you notice is the silence — not the absence of sound, but the particular hush of fresh snow settling over the Setesdal mountains. The sledding hill starts literally at the edge of the terrace. The kids are already pulling on boots before breakfast is ready. This is daily life at Nordlivegen 31. Perched on a natural knoll in the Nordli area of Bykle, this four-bedroom mountain chalet sits at 776 meters above sea level with a southwest-facing outlook that pulls in sunlight from morning through late afternoon. The views across the ridgeline are the kind that don't get old — not after a weekend, not after a decade. And at 49 square meters, the timber terrace isn't a small afterthought you squeeze a table onto. It's a proper outdoor room where July dinners stretch well past nine o'clock. The chalet itself was originally built in 2009, then comprehensively renovated in 2025. That combination matters. The bones are solid mountain-build. The interiors now reflect current standards — clean finishes, quality materials, underfloor heating in both bathrooms, modern kitchen fittings, and a layout that actually works for groups rather than just looking good in photographs. On the ground floor, the living room anchors the space. Large windows frame the mountains and bring the light inside, while a fireplace handles the atmospheric heavy lifting on cold evenings. You can smell the woodsmoke before you're through the door after a long day on the trails. The dining area flows naturally from the kitchen — spacious enough for eight, comfortable for four. One bedroom sits on this floor, useful for guests who'd rather not manage stairs after a day of skiing. Both bathrooms are split acr ... click here to read more

Private terrace at the front of the cabin
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Step out onto the terrace at Lisbetstranda 5 on a July morning and the Trosbyfjord is right there — silver and still, the kind of quiet that makes you exhale slowly. The smell of salt air drifts up the slope. Somewhere below, a wooden boat knocks against a dock. This is what a Norwegian summer is supposed to feel like, and this chalet delivers it every single day. Built in 1977 and given a thorough, top-to-bottom renovation in 2013, the property sits at an elevated position above the fjord that gives it something genuinely rare on this stretch of coastline: almost uninterrupted light from morning through late evening. In July, that means sun from before 5am. Even in October, the south-facing terraces catch enough warmth to sit outside with a coffee. The orientation wasn't an accident — whoever chose this plot knew exactly what they were doing. Inside, the main living area has that open, breathing quality that good coastal architecture always gets right. The kitchen, dining zone, and living room flow together without feeling forced or open-plan in a sterile, hotel-lobby way. White profiled cabinetry runs along one wall, anchored by a central island that becomes the natural gathering point whenever people are over. The side-by-side refrigerator and clean wall panels between countertop and upper cabinets make the space practical without sacrificing any warmth. Large windows pull the fjord view directly into the room — you're cooking pasta and watching a kayak drift past. It's that kind of proximity. The wood-burning fireplace in the living room changes everything once September arrives. Norwegian coastal autumns are genuinely beautiful — low amber light, the water going deep blue, the islands of Stråholmen and Jomfruland ... click here to read more

Welcome to Lisbetstranda 5! Photo: A7Media
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The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Kilegrendsvegen 1182 is the silence—not the empty kind, but the full kind. Birdsong across the water. A light wind moving through the pines. The faint creak of a rowboat you're allowed to keep moored right on Dåstjønn, just waiting. This is what you came to Norway for. Treungen sits in the Nissedal municipality of Telemark, and it's the kind of place that doesn't shout about itself. No crowds, no tourist queues. Just clear glacial lakes, forest trails ribboning out in every direction, and a sky that turns genuinely extraordinary in late August when the bilberries ripen and the light goes golden low across the hills. The cabin at Kilegrendsvegen 1182 sits within a small, quiet cabin community right between lakes Drang and Dåstjønn—two of the most swimmer-friendly lakes in the area, with sandy-edged shores and water so clear you can see the bottom a meter down. At 47 square meters, this two-bedroom chalet is compact but not cramped. The layout makes sense for the way people actually use a cabin: you come in, you drop your gear, and you're comfortable. The living room has dark wood paneling that gives off that specific warmth you only get in properly old-school Norwegian hytte interiors—the kind that takes the edge off a cold evening after a long day on the trails. The wood-burning stove does the rest. You sit in front of it with a bowl of something hot and you genuinely don't want to be anywhere else. The kitchen has been recently renovated and fitted with new cabinetry, a refrigerator, and a gas stove. Practical, clean, and more than adequate for cooking proper meals—think slow-cooked reindeer stew on a winter weekend, or a pan of pan-fried perch pulled from Dåstjønn th ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kilegrendsvegen 1182!
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You wake up to silence. Not the muffled, negotiated silence of a city apartment with double glazing — actual silence, broken only by the creak of log walls contracting in the cold and the faint whisper of wind moving through spruce trees. Pull back the curtain and there's a metre of fresh snow on the sod roof, the ski trail groomed and waiting less than fifty metres from your front door. That's the morning this cabin offers, over and over again. Sitting at 652 metres above sea level in the Nøklåkjølen area of Rendalen, this compact, well-built log chalet has a clarity of purpose that a lot of mountain properties lack. It was built to be used hard, to feel warm the moment you step inside, and to send you back outdoors recharged. At 58 square metres across the main cabin, with a separate annex and a timber outbuilding on a 926 m² freehold plot, it delivers on all three counts. The construction is solid log — not a decorative finish, actual stacked log walls that date to 2011 — topped with a traditional sod roof that keeps the interior at a remarkably even temperature year-round. Inside, the open-plan living room and kitchen is anchored by a fireplace that does real work. After a long day on the trails, you come in, peel off your layers in the entrance hall (dimmable spotlights, generous boot storage), and within twenty minutes you're horizontal on the sofa with the fire going and steam rising off your coffee. The kitchen is fitted with aged-painted fronts, a solid wood worktop, and gas-powered appliances — practical, unhurried, exactly right for the setting. The dining area sits beside it, with space for a proper long table where everyone can eat together at the end of a day. Two bedrooms handle the sleeping arrangement ... click here to read more

Welcome to Nøklåkjølen 115! Photo: EFKT. Photographer: Johan Anderson.
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Step outside on a February morning at 874 meters above sea level, and the silence hits you first. Not the absence of sound exactly, but the kind of deep, textured quiet you only find in the Norwegian mountains — a crow somewhere distant, the creak of snow settling on the roof, and the faint hiss of wind threading through the birch trees beyond the fence line. The kettle is on inside. The fireplace still holds last night's embers. This is Slåsætra, and once you've spent a weekend here, the idea of not owning a place in these hills becomes genuinely hard to sit with. The chalet at Linviksetervegen 131 sits on a generous, fenced 1,706 square meter plot in one of Innlandet county's most quietly sought-after mountain communities. Fåvang itself — the nearest village, about 10 kilometers down the valley — is small and functional in the best way: a grocery store, a train station on the Oslo-Trondheim line, and the kind of low-key infrastructure that lets you arrive on a Friday evening and not have to think about logistics again until Sunday. Up here at Slåsætra, though, the village may as well be a different world. The chalet measures 75 square meters and is in good condition throughout. It's not a renovation project — you can use it from day one. The ground floor opens into a combined living and kitchen area with high ceilings and large windows that pull the mountain view right into the room. On a clear April afternoon, the light in here is almost unreasonably good, that particular Nordic gold that comes in low and warm and seems to make everything glow slightly. A fireplace anchors the living area. You will use it constantly. On the coldest nights in January, with the solar panels quietly doing their job and the woodstove ti ... click here to read more

Welcome to Linviksetervegen 131!
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The first thing you notice on a still July morning at Haltlandveien 30 is the light. It comes off the water at a low, almost sideways angle, cuts right through the big living room windows, and lands on the wooden floor in long pale strips. Grab a coffee, open the terrace door, and you're standing 100 meters from the Norwegian Sea before the rest of the world has had breakfast. That's not a bad way to start a day. Sandstad sits on Hitra, the large coastal island in Trøndelag that serious anglers, kayakers, and anyone who genuinely loves wild Norwegian nature have known about for decades. Getting here is easier than people assume. Drive across the Hitra Tunnel from the E39 corridor — about an hour southwest of Trondheim Airport Værnes — and you arrive on an island where the roads are quiet, the coastline is dramatic, and the pace of life adjusts itself downward almost immediately. It's the kind of place where the agenda for a Tuesday might be: fish in the morning, grill on the terrace in the afternoon, wood stove in the evening. Haltlandveien 30 is a timber chalet built in 1979, sitting on roughly 1,000 square meters of privately owned land. The plot is generous for its 42-square-meter footprint, which means outdoor living is as much a part of this property as anything inside. Mature trees wrap the site, doing a proper job of creating seclusion without making the place feel closed in. The garden has enough flat, usable ground for a fire pit setup, kids running around, or simply a hammock between two birches. Privacy here isn't a marketing claim — the surrounding natural vegetation earns it. Inside, the floor plan is compact and honest. The living room does what a cabin living room should: wide windows angled toward the ... click here to read more

Welcome to Haltlandveien 30!
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Step outside on a July morning, coffee in hand, and the fjord is already catching the light. The hills across the water are still half in shadow. A wooden terrace stretches out ahead of you — 103 square metres of it — and the only sound is wind through birch trees and the faint lap of water somewhere below. This is what you drove to Norway for. This is what you actually own. Lybergsviksvegen 58 sits in the Ottestad cabin area at Rødven, a cluster of leisure properties above the Romsdalsfjord in Rauma municipality — a region that serious hikers and outdoor people have known about for decades, but that still hasn't been overrun. The chalet itself was built in 2008 and covers 101 square metres of interior living space, with an additional outbuilding with carport and a total lot of 3,462 square metres. That includes an undeveloped neighbouring plot of 1,406 square metres — blank canvas for whatever comes next. Inside, the main floor opens through a proper hallway into a generous living room. Big windows pull the landscape indoors; on clear days you can see across to the mountains that ring this part of the Romsdal valley. A wood-burning stove sits at the heart of the room, and on an October afternoon when the temperature drops sharply and the first dusting of snow appears on the ridgelines, you will be very glad it's there. The kitchen is practical and well-fitted — nothing fussy, everything functional. Two bedrooms sit off the main floor, along with a bathroom, a separate toilet, a storage room, and — genuinely one of the property's highlights — a sauna. A proper sauna, not an afterthought. Come back from a day on the Romsdalseggen ridge trail, which stretches 10 kilometres between Åndalsnes and Vengedalen with views that ... click here to read more

Welcome to Lybergsviksvegen 58!
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Stand on the upper terrace on a July morning, coffee in hand, and watch the Oslofjord catch the early light. The water below shifts from steel grey to something almost gold, and the only sounds are birdsong, wind through the pines, and the faint knock of a boat hull somewhere far off. That's what it feels like to own this 1966 cabin at the top of Torødveien 82 in Torød — a pocket of southern Nøtterøy where the sea is always visible and the pace of life adjusts itself accordingly. Nøtterøy is the kind of place Norwegians don't talk about too loudly. It sits just south of Tønsberg — one of the oldest towns in Scandinavia — connected to the mainland by bridge, yet separated from it in every way that matters. The island's southern reaches, where Torød sits, are all granite outcrops, juniper-scented paths, and small wooden cabins tucked into the hillsides. Locals come here to swim at Østre Bolærne, kayak the skerries around Nøtterøy's ragged coastline, and eat shrimp straight off the boat at Brygga in Tønsberg harbour. Summer here has a particular intensity — long evenings that never quite go dark, the smell of sunscreen and grilled mackerel, children running barefoot across warm rock. This cabin sits at the end of its lane, which matters more than it sounds. There's no through traffic, no noise from the road. A short walk from the shared parking on Torødveien leads you up through the hillside, past neighbouring cabins, until the path opens onto the property's 1,615 square metres of natural terrain — rock formations, open patches of grass, clusters of mature trees. The plot feels genuinely untamed. Nothing has been over-manicured or forced. The landscape simply is what it is, and the cabin works with it rather than against ... click here to read more

Welcome to this charming cabin on idyllic Nøtterøy!

Step outside on a January morning at Trollsetlie 28 and the cold hits your face before you've even pulled on your gloves. The groomed cross-country track starts literally a hundred meters from the front door — you can hear the hiss of skis on packed snow from the kitchen window while the coffee brews. That's not a marketing line. That's Tuesday morning at Nesfjellet, 904 meters above sea level in the Norwegian highlands, where life operates on a different, slower, better clock. Built in 2018, this two-bedroom chalet with a substantial loft sits on a 1,614 sqm freehold plot in one of Norway's most consistently popular mountain cabin areas. At 82 sqm on the main floor — plus 41 sqm of usable loft space above — the layout punches well above its size. This is not a cramped weekend box. It's a proper mountain home, designed to sleep a group comfortably and still feel spacious when it's just two of you. Walking through the entrance hall, the underfloor heating is the first thing you notice underfoot — a small luxury that earns its weight every single time you stomp back in from a full day on the trails. The entrance is tiled, wide enough to hang dripping ski jackets without chaos, and fitted with proper closet storage. From there, the open living and kitchen area opens up with large windows framing the treeline outside. Late afternoon in winter, the low Nordic light turns everything golden through those windows. The fireplace — actual, functional, not decorative — does the work of heating the space and setting the mood simultaneously. There's something about eating pasta at a pine table with a fire going and snow falling outside that makes even a regular weeknight feel like an occasion. The kitchen is practical in the best ... click here to read more

Privatmegleren Hallingdal v/ Thea Viko Eidsgård presents Trollsetlie 28! Photo: Per Andre Andresen

Step outside on a February morning and the ski slope is literally a five-minute walk up the road. The snow muffles everything except the occasional crack of a branch and the distant hiss of skis. You come back an hour later, stomp your boots on the step, and the wood-burning stove is still warm. That's the daily rhythm at Ringkollveien 583 — and it never gets old. This two-bedroom cabin sits on a generous freehold plot of roughly 2,885 square metres in the Ringkollen hills outside Hønefoss. Built in 1967 with a well-considered extension added in 1997, the 53-square-metre interior has been kept honest to what a Norwegian cabin should feel like: wood, warmth, and nothing unnecessary. The open-plan kitchen and living area catches afternoon light through large windows that frame the natural terrain in every season. In winter it's all white and blue shadow. By late June, you're looking at birch and spruce in full green against a long Scandinavian sky that barely darkens past midnight. The covered terrace — nine square metres of sheltered outdoor space — is where mornings really happen. Coffee, a wool blanket if needed, the sound of birds working through the treeline. The plot around you is mostly natural terrain, which means privacy without effort. No tidy hedges to maintain. The land just does what it does, and you live inside it. Practically, the cabin punches above its size. It connects to the electricity grid, so you're not managing generators or propane deliveries. Water comes from a private borehole — reliable and genuinely independent. Heating runs off electric panels and a wood-burning stove with fireplace, so you control the atmosphere as much as the temperature. The bathroom has a shower niche running on a 12V pu ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom presents Ringkollveien 583

Step outside on a February morning, clip into your cross-country skis right at the edge of the property, and push off into a white plateau that stretches further than you can see. No shuttle bus. No queue. Just you, the track, and the particular hush that only falls on a Norwegian mountain when fresh snow has settled overnight. That's the daily reality at Nørdre Einarsetlie 9 — a well-kept mountain chalet on Golsfjellet that has been quietly doing its job for decades, and doing it well. Gol sits in Hallingdal, a valley that Norwegians have been escaping to for generations. It's not a secret, exactly, but it's far enough from Oslo's orbit — about two and a half hours by car along the E16 — that it retains the unhurried rhythm that makes a proper mountain retreat worth having. The Golsfjellet plateau above the town is where the cabin culture thrives, and Nørdre Einarsetlie is one of its most established addresses. Neighbouring cabins are spread apart generously. You hear wind and birds, not neighbours. The chalet itself was originally built in 1973. Fifty-plus years is a long life for a mountain building, and this one has earned it — updated progressively over the years rather than left to quietly deteriorate. The result is a structure that feels honest and lived-in rather than a showroom renovation. Thick walls, a fireplace, a wood-burning stove that you'll want lit by late afternoon even in September. When the stove is going and the large living-area windows have gone dark with evening, there's a particular quality of warmth in here that newer builds tend to miss. The layout across the 72 square metres is practical without feeling cramped. An entrance hall handles the wet gear — boots, skis, poles, all of it — before ... click here to read more

Privatmegleren Hallingdal v/ Thea Viko Eidsgård presents Nørdre Einarsetlie 9!

Sometime around six in the morning in late September, you step onto the deck at Nekkåbjørga 276 and the valley below is wrapped in low mist. The birch trees have gone gold overnight. Somewhere across the ridge, a dog barks once, then silence. That's it. That's the whole morning. This is what you came for. Flaknan sits in the Selbu municipality of Trøndelag, a part of central Norway that doesn't make it onto the tourist posters but absolutely should. The landscape here is the kind that makes you put your phone down — rolling forested ridges, open cultural heathland worn smooth by centuries of summer grazing, and a sky that in winter turns shades of violet and orange you genuinely cannot photograph accurately. At roughly 459 meters above sea level, the air has a sharpness to it that city lungs take a day or two to adjust to. After that, you won't want to breathe anything else. The chalet itself dates to 1975, built the way Norwegian mountain cabins were built back then — pine floors, tongue-and-groove paneling on the walls and ceilings, everything in wood, everything warm. There's a wood-burning stove in the living room that's not decorative. Come November, it does real work. The room is large enough for two seating groups, which matters when you've got family spread across the sofas on a rainy afternoon and someone's working a jigsaw puzzle at the table by the window. Speaking of that window — the view out of it does most of the decorating. You don't need much on the walls when you've got the Trøndelag ridgeline outside. The kitchen is original and entirely functional, running on gas rather than grid electricity. Preparing a simple meal of slow-cooked reinsdyrgryte — Norwegian reindeer stew — while the window frames a ... click here to read more

Front view of the property

The first thing you notice on a crisp October morning at Bjørkestubben 24 is the silence. Not the uncomfortable kind — the rare, earned kind that only arrives when you're sitting at 920 metres above sea level, wrapped in a wool blanket, watching mist lift off the Hallingdal valley below while a birch log crackles in the stove behind you. That's the daily reality of this place. Not a simulation of Norwegian mountain life, but the genuine article. This is a Hallingstue — a traditional timber log structure rooted in the architecture of the Hallingdal region — built in 1913 and originally part of the fabric of Robru before being carefully relocated to Sjauset in the early 1970s. The annex arrived later, moved piece by piece from Vestre Gausdal in 2000, itself a former retirement home with its own quiet history. Two buildings, two stories, one remarkable property sitting on 1,000 square metres of freehold mountain land just outside Gol in the heart of Numedal and Hallingdal's most celebrated outdoor country. The logs are dark with age in the best possible way. Inside the main cabin, the walls tell you immediately that this is not a flat-pack weekend house. Exposed timber, low beams, and a fireplace that dominates the living room create a warmth that central heating simply can't replicate. Upstairs via a narrow wooden staircase, a loft opens into sleeping spaces that feel tucked away from the world — perfect for children or guests who want their own corner of the mountain. The main bedroom is proper-sized, grounded, comfortable. The kitchen is one of those rooms you want to cook in: solid wood cabinetry painted in a deep, slightly weathered blue, a chunky wood countertop, a freestanding induction hob, and a wood-burning stov ... click here to read more

EIE Fjellmegleren presents Bjørkestubben 24!

Step outside on a September morning and the whole valley is yours. Cloudberries glowing orange in the low sun, the outline of Gaustatoppen sharp against a pale sky, the smell of birch and cold air coming off the plateau. That's the daily reality at this timber chalet on Kultanvegen, sitting at 681 meters above sea level in Tuddal — one of Telemark's most quietly rewarding mountain communities, and still a genuine secret compared to the more trafficked Norwegian ski resorts further north. Built in 2009 by Norsk Fjellhus, a builder with a long reputation for getting the Norwegian mountain cabin right, this 98-square-meter property wears its credentials lightly. Turf roof. Solid timber walls that take on a deeper warmth as the years go by. The kind of construction that isn't trying to look like a traditional Norwegian hytte — it simply is one, without the affectation. Pull open the front door and the main living space opens up immediately. The kitchen and living area share one connected room, framed by exposed ceiling beams and warmed by a two-way fireplace you can watch from the sofa or the dining table. After the kitchen was extended in 2021, there's now real counter space — induction cooktop, oven, dishwasher, fridge-freezer all integrated — without the cramped, make-do feel of so many mountain kitchens. The large windows above the dining area frame Gaustatoppen, Gaustaknea, and Bonsnos like a painting that changes with every season. In January, those peaks are white and severe. In July, they turn green-grey under long evening light that barely fades. Everything in the chalet sits on a single level, which makes it genuinely practical for families. No stairs to navigate after a 20-kilometer ski loop or a long day picki ... click here to read more

EiendomsMegler1 v/Halvor Østerli presents Kultanvegen 286

Stand on the stone-paved terrace on a late June evening, the sky still pale gold at ten o'clock, a low fire crackling in the outdoor fireplace, and the smell of salt air drifting up from Dreggavik marina just down the path. That's the rhythm of life at this cabin on Dreggjavikveien 12. Not a fantasy — a Tuesday. Sandnes sits on the edge of the Gandsfjord in Rogaland, a county that Norwegians have quietly kept to themselves for decades while the rest of Europe chased Lofoten headlines. The Bersagel shoreline here is the kind of place where families have been launching rowboats and lighting grill fires for generations. The cabin itself carries that same unhurried quality — pine-planked floors worn just enough to feel honest, wood-paneled walls that hold warmth the way only timber does, a wood-burning stove that becomes the gravitational center of the room the moment October arrives. The living space is more generous than you'd expect for 69 square meters. Large windows pull in southern light for most of the day, and the open arrangement means the kitchen, dining nook, and sitting area all flow together rather than feeling chopped up. There's a proper spot by the window to eat breakfast while watching the birch trees move in the morning breeze — one of those small domestic pleasures that ends up mattering more than any feature list ever could. The kitchen has profiled cabinet fronts and enough counter space to actually cook, not just reheat. The main bedroom fits a double bed comfortably and shares that same close-grained timber cladding that runs through the rest of the interior. Off it, a practical alcove provides sleeping space for two more — grandkids, friends, whoever shows up for the July crab season. The bathroom ... click here to read more

Welcome to Dreggjavikveien 12!

There's a particular kind of quiet that settles over Rævesand early on a July morning. The sea sits almost glassy in Gjessøysund, a cormorant perches on a nearby rock, and the smell of salt and pine drifts through a window that's been cracked open since sunrise. This is the daily opening scene from Sildevikveien 18 — a 1923 Norwegian cabin on the southern shore of Tromøy island, sitting on 2,213 square metres of coastal land, complete with its own jetty and boathouse. It's a renovation project, yes. But it's also one of those rare chances to build something exactly right, in a place where people have been returning summer after summer for a hundred years. The cabin itself is 106 square metres of original Norwegian hytte construction — thick timber walls, a layout that was designed for gathering rather than impressing. The bones are solid. What's needed now is vision. Strip it back, and you have a framework that most coastal property hunters would spend decades searching for: a private plot this size with direct-access water infrastructure is genuinely uncommon along the Aust-Agder coastline. The boathouse and jetty in Gjessøysund are included in the sale, just a short walk from the front door, and the shoreline itself is roughly 100 metres away. On a warm evening, that's about the distance it takes to finish your coffee before your feet hit the sand. The 35-square-metre balcony faces the sun for most of the day. South-facing plots on Tromøy are sought after precisely because the island's topography creates pockets of shelter that retain warmth well into September — the kind of evenings where you're still eating outside without a jacket when friends back on the mainland have already retreated indoors. Tromøy is connect ... click here to read more

Welcome to Sommerro, a leisure property at Rævesand on beautiful Tromøy.

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Kvernhusmyra 1 is the light. It hits the water just west of Juvågen before seven o'clock, throwing long reflections across the terrace boards while the fjord sits glassy and still. You pour coffee in the open kitchen, slide back the glass door, and step outside before anyone else in the neighborhood is awake. That quiet — just the lap of water and the occasional gull — is what this place is really about. Built in 2013 and designed by an architect who clearly had opinions about how a holiday home should feel, this chalet on the western edge of Skodje municipality occupies a 1,172-square-metre plot roughly 100 metres from the shoreline. It's not a rustic cabin. It's not a cookie-cutter box either. The split-wing layout — east and west loft sections each with their own staircase — gives the interior an almost village-like quality, where different corners of the house take on their own personalities over the course of a day. Kids claim the loft bedrooms. Adults settle into the ground-floor living room. Everyone ends up on the terrace. The main living area is genuinely airy, thanks to extra-high ceilings and a bank of large windows that track the sun from mid-morning into the long Norwegian evenings. In July, the sky doesn't fully darken until well past ten. In the three-level layout, 107 square metres of floor space feels considerably more generous than that figure suggests, because the vertical scale keeps the rooms from ever feeling closed in. The kitchen runs a clean, practical line of veneered fronts and laminate worktops — enough counter space to actually cook a proper meal rather than just reheat things — and it opens partway into the living room so whoever is cooking ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kvernhusmyra 1! Photo: JC Foto (John Colbensen)

Step outside on a February morning and the world is white and absolutely still. The birches are frosted solid, the air bites clean at the back of your throat, and a kilometer down the trail the first set of groomed ski tracks is already laid. Back inside, the wood stove is still throwing heat from the night before, and the smell of pine smoke drifts through every room. This is what a cabin in Etnedal actually feels like — not a brochure version of Norway, but the real thing. Stuvelivegen 270 sits at around 909 meters above sea level in Etnedal municipality, a quiet corner of Innlandet county that most international buyers haven't discovered yet. That's part of what makes it interesting. The valley runs roughly northwest from Dokka, the nearest town of any size, and the landscape here is high, open, and honest — rolling fells, dense spruce forest, frozen lakes in winter, wildflower meadows in July. The cabin sits at the very end of the road. No neighbors to glance at through the window. No through traffic. Just the creak of timber and, if you time it right, the distant percussion of a woodpecker working a dead trunk somewhere across the clearing. The cabin itself dates from 1948, which tells you something about its bones. Norwegian mountain cabins from that era were built to last, not to impress, and this one wears its age well. The roof is new, the windows are newer double-glazed units, and the exterior cladding has been replaced — so the envelope is tight and well-maintained. Inside, 60 square meters is efficiently used across three bedrooms, a proper living area, kitchen, and a cabin bath with shower and toilet. It's not a sprawling estate. It's a place designed for people who actually want to be outside most of the ... click here to read more

Welcome to Stuvelivegen 270!

Step outside on a February morning and the world is completely white and completely quiet. The cross-country trail runs just 120 meters from the front door — you can hear the sound of your own skis cutting through fresh snow before the rest of the valley is even awake. This is Fetlia, a small cluster of cabins sitting at 395 meters above sea level in the Sunnmøre Alps, and this particular chalet has been holding its own here for years with a kind of unpretentious confidence that's hard to fake. The setting hits you first. Large windows across the main living space look straight out at Nysætervatnet, the lake below shifting color through the day — silver in the morning light, deep blue-green by afternoon, then a flat pewter grey as the peaks catch the last of the sun. The vaulted ceiling climbs nearly five meters overhead, which sounds like a detail on a spec sheet until you're actually standing in it and realize how rarely Norwegian mountain cabins feel this open. There's no sense of compression, no low beams making you duck. Just space, light, and a fireplace in the corner that does exactly what a fireplace should: takes the edge off a cold evening and gives everyone a reason to sit still. The kitchen is the work of Mørekjøkken — a local craftsman workshop out of the region — built in a classic L-shape from solid wood that has aged into itself rather than against itself. Integrated oven, cooktop, provisions for a washing machine. It's not a showpiece kitchen designed to be photographed; it's one designed to be used, and there's a meaningful difference. The dining area sits right alongside it, open to the living room so conversation carries easily from the stove to the sofa. Up to twelve people can sleep comfortably he ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fetlia – a beautiful cabin in scenic, peaceful surroundings near the Fjellsætra ski resort!

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in February, the thermometer outside reads minus eight, and you're standing at the kitchen window in thick wool socks watching fresh snow pile up on the spruce branches while the coffee brews. The Balmielva river is frozen solid just down the slope, and the ski trail to Fjellandsbyen cuts right below the cabin, maybe forty metres away. You can hear nothing. That particular, almost physical silence that only exists at altitude, in winter, in Norway. That is what Naustbuktveien 3 actually feels like. Sulitjelma sits at roughly 498 metres above sea level in the mountains of Nordland, about 75 kilometres east of Fauske and the E6 highway. It's not a place most international buyers stumble across — and that's precisely its value. The village grew out of one of Norway's most significant copper mining operations, and the legacy of that industrial past gives the place a grittier, more authentic character than the polished ski resorts further south. The Sulitjelma Mining Museum up the road documents the whole story, from 19th-century tunnels to the early-20th-century boom years, and it's genuinely worth an afternoon. But most people come here for the landscape, and the landscape does not disappoint. The chalet itself is compact at 46 square metres — two bedrooms, a living room, and a functional kitchen — but the layout makes clever use of every square metre. The entrance hall keeps the cold at the door. The living room catches the afternoon sun, and the views across the open terrain are the kind that make you put your book down. The property is sold fully furnished: sofa, dining table, refrigerator with freezer, TV. You could drive up on a Friday evening and be entirely comfortable by the t ... click here to read more

Welcome to Naustbuktveien 3

Step outside on a July morning and within ninety seconds your feet are on warm sand. That's the reality at Rognstranda 4. The Norwegian sun, which in midsummer barely dips below the horizon, has already been baking the south-facing terrace for hours by the time you pour your first coffee. This is not a compromise cabin hidden behind trees with a distant water view — it sits on a generous corner lot where sunlight tracks across the property from sunrise to well past nine at night. The chalet itself was built in 1958, and there's an honesty to that era of construction — solid wood floors, panelled walls, a wood-burning stove that means you can crack the place open in late March or keep it running into October without shivering through dinner. At 66 square metres split between a main cabin and a detached annex, the layout is compact but genuinely functional. Two proper bedrooms sit on the ground floor, plus two sleeping alcoves for when the kids bring friends or the cousins arrive unannounced in August. The living room catches afternoon light through wide windows that frame the surrounding coastal landscape — birch, granite, salt air — and the wood stove anchors the room without overwhelming it. The kitchen is straightforward and practical, with custom-built cabinetry and a back door that opens directly onto the yard. That detail matters more than it sounds: you're carrying groceries in from the car, setting up the outdoor kitchen on the patio, moving between inside and outside constantly the way you do when you're actually on holiday. The bathroom is a decent size — toilet, mirror vanity, shower cabin, and plumbing already in place for a washing machine. Solid and well-maintained. Nothing to fix before your first stay. ... click here to read more

Rognstranda 4

Picture this: it's a Saturday morning in late June, the sun hasn't really set since Thursday, and the light coming off Pevatnet Lake turns the pine walls of your living room a deep amber. You can hear absolutely nothing except water. That's what owning this cabin actually feels like. Sitting on a private knoll about 200 meters back from the lake's edge, this traditional Norwegian log chalet near Harstad has been a mountain retreat since 1971 — and it wears its age well. The roof was replaced in 2023. The bones are solid. It's not a project; it's a place you can start using the weekend you collect the keys. The chalet sits at roughly 310 meters above sea level on a plot of 2,700 square meters, giving you a generous sweep of private land — enough for a firepit, a vegetable patch, space for kids to disappear into the trees for hours. Northern Norway doesn't do manicured gardens; the land around Pevatnet has its own rhythm, and this plot is part of it. Birch and pine right up to the edge of your lot. Berry bushes everywhere in August. The kind of quiet that city people drive hours to find. Inside, the 44-square-meter footprint is compact but honest. Three bedrooms sleep five comfortably — two original rooms from the 1971 build and a third added in 1991. The pine floorboards creak in exactly the right way. Timber-paneled walls, a wood-burning fireplace in the living room, a kitchen laid out for real cooking after a day on the trails rather than for showing off. Everything comes furnished, as seen in the photos, which means no sourcing Scandinavian cabin furniture from scratch — it's already here, already right. The fireplace isn't decorative. In October, when the birches go yellow and the first snow dusts the ridge above ... click here to read more

Entrance area

Step outside on a February morning and the only sound is the creak of fresh snow under your boots. The trail from Åsveien 499 pushes straight into the Meråker hills, and by the time the sun clears the ridge to the southeast, it's pouring onto a south-west facing terrace that stays warm well into the afternoon. This is what 581 meters above sea level actually feels like — not a postcard, but a cold nose and hot coffee and nowhere you'd rather be. The chalet sits on Åsveien in one of Trøndelag's most accessible yet genuinely quiet mountain areas. Meråker is the kind of place that Norwegians know well but international buyers are only just discovering — an hour by road from Trondheim Airport (Værnes), with a train station just 17 minutes from the door. You're not trading convenience for wilderness here. You're getting both. The main cabin was built in 1968 and thoroughly rebuilt and extended in 2013. That renovation did something important: it preserved the cabin's honest, timber-framed character while adding the things that make a property actually liveable — proper insulation, modern electrics, running water, and a bathroom with underfloor heating. Too many mountain properties of this era still have one foot in the past. This one made the full crossing. Inside, the open-plan living room and kitchen runs to 39 square meters, which sounds like a number until you're standing under the high ceiling watching late-afternoon light slide across the mountains through windows that take up most of the south-facing wall. The fireplace anchors the living area — a wood-burner, not decorative — and on a November evening it earns its place. The kitchen is fitted with white cabinetry, a solid wood worktop, and integrated appliances. No ... click here to read more

Front view of the property

Step out onto the terrace at Holmavegen 30 on a clear July morning. The fjord is flat and silver, the archipelago spreads out in front of you like a handful of green islands dropped into the water, and the only sound is the rope on the dock tapping against the boathouse wall. Coffee in hand, you realize the boat is right there, ten steps down the rock, and Bergen is forty minutes away by car. This is what Norwegian coastal life actually feels like. Hauglandshella sits on Askøy island, connected to Bergen by the Askøy Bridge — one of the longest suspension bridges in Norway — which makes the commute into the city effortless while the setting feels completely remote. This stretch of the island's eastern shoreline is quiet, unpretentious, and genuinely beautiful in a way that photographs never quite capture. The light in late spring, when the sun barely sets and the rocks stay warm until midnight, is something else entirely. The chalet itself was built in 1981 and sits on a generous 4,792 square meter plot that rolls down to its own private shoreline. Ninety square meters of interior living space sounds modest until you're standing under the 3.5-meter ceiling in the living room, looking through the large windows at an unobstructed stretch of open water. That ceiling height changes everything. The stone fireplace anchors the room — and come October, when the Norwegian autumn arrives in earnest, you'll be glad it's there. The open kitchen sits alongside the dining and living areas, and whoever's cooking has a direct sightline to the sea. That's a design decision you only appreciate once you've done the dishes while watching a boat drift past in the dusk. Two bedrooms on the main floor handle the basics comfortably, each wi ... click here to read more

Welcome to Holmavegen 30 - a rare leisure property with its own shoreline and boathouse.

Picture this: you wake up on a Saturday morning in late June, slide open the terrace door, and the Oslofjord is right there — silver-grey turning gold as the sun climbs over the Østfold islands. The air smells of pine resin and salt. Somewhere down on Torødveien a neighbor is heading to the beach with a kayak on a trailer. This is what mornings look like at Torødveien 78. Torød sits on the western side of the Oslofjord, tucked into the coastal municipality of Færder and Tønsberg — a stretch of shoreline that Norwegians have quietly treasured for generations. It's not a tourist hotspot in the showy sense. It's the kind of place where the same families have been coming every summer since the 1960s, where kids still fish off the rocks, and where the pace of life drops about three gears the moment you turn off the main road. If you've been searching for a genuine Norwegian hytte experience — not a glossy ski resort package, but the real thing — this is where you find it. The cabin itself dates from the late 1960s and wears its age honestly and well. Solid wood floors, panelled walls, exposed ceiling beams — these aren't decorative choices made by a designer, they're original details that have simply lasted because they were built to last. A new kitchen went in during 2012 and it's practical and bright without trying too hard, with enough counter space to actually cook a proper meal rather than just reheat something. The living room is genuinely spacious for a cabin of this scale — room for a sofa, a dining table, and a woodburning fireplace that earns its keep during those crisp October weekends when the light goes low and amber and you don't want to leave. Three bedrooms in total, spread thoughtfully across the main cabi ... click here to read more

Welcome to Torødveien 78

Step outside on a July morning in Luftjok and the air hits differently — cool, clean, faintly carrying the smell of river water and pine resin. The Tana River glints through the treeline a short walk away, and the sun, which barely sets this time of year, has already been up for hours. That's the daily reality of owning a chalet at Austertanaveien 626. Not a fantasy. The actual morning. This three-bedroom chalet sits on a generous 2,329 square metre plot just 7 kilometres from Tana bru in the heart of Finnmark, Norway's vast northernmost county. Built in 2000 and kept in genuinely good condition, the 98-square-metre main cabin is compact enough to heat and manage easily, but spacious enough that a family of five doesn't get on each other's nerves after three rainy days in a row. That's a real consideration up here, and the layout handles it well. The ground floor opens through a practical entrance hall — somewhere to shed muddy boots and waders after a morning on the river — into an open-plan living room and kitchen that forms the social core of the house. Large windows pull in the light, and in Finnmark's endless summer, there's a lot of it. A fireplace anchors the sitting area; come October when the birch forests go gold and the temperatures start to bite, you'll be glad it's there. Two bedrooms and a combined bathroom and laundry room round out the ground level. Upstairs, a loft lounge gives you a quieter retreat — a reading nook, a place to put the kids, a spot to sit with a coffee and watch the light change over the wilderness outside. The third bedroom sits up here too, giving the property a natural separation between sleeping areas. What sets this property apart from a typical cabin offering is the infrastructu ... click here to read more

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