Houses For Sale In Norway (page 3)

Houses for sale in norway - homestra offers the largest amount of european real estate with over 200,000+ properties, find any type of property within your budget from villas to country homes. buy or rent your perfect home in europe. (page 3)

Step outside on a February morning and the cross-country trail is literally 150 meters from the front door. The snow is freshly groomed, the Nystølfjellet ridge is catching the first light, and the smell of birch smoke from last night's fire still clings to your jacket. That's the daily reality at Kambevollan 65—not a postcard, not a promise, just a Tuesday in Gol. Sitting at 915 meters above sea level on the Golsfjellet plateau, this solid log chalet is one of those properties that earns its reputation through geography alone. The southern-facing orientation means the sun tracks across the terrace from mid-morning until evening, which matters enormously this far north. On clear days in July, you can follow the ridgeline south all the way toward Norefjell and Valdres, a view that genuinely stops conversations mid-sentence. Built in 2011 and maintained with obvious care, the cabin carries all the warmth you'd expect from 122 square meters of handcrafted log construction. The walls are thick. The ceiling in the living room is high and ribbed with exposed beams. The fireplace—slate-clad from floor to ceiling—isn't decorative; it's the gravitational center of the room during ski season, the place where wet gloves dry and the après-ski debate about which trail to take tomorrow actually happens. Four bedrooms spread across two floors make this a proper family chalet, not a squeeze. Two rooms on the ground floor, two more upstairs, plus a loft sitting area that kids will immediately claim as their own. The kitchen is functional in the best sense: profiled cabinetry, solid wood countertop, integrated cooktop, oven, dishwasher, fridge-freezer. No theatre, just everything you need to cook a proper Sunday lamb stew or a big post ... click here to read more

EIE Fjellmegleren is pleased to present Kambevollan 65!

Step outside on a February morning at Torbråtan 22 and the cold hits clean and sharp — the kind that makes your coffee taste better and the snow underfoot sound like crushed glass. The groomed ski trail starts literally 100 meters from the front door. You clip in, push off, and within minutes you're gliding through birch forest with nothing but white hills and pale Nordic sky ahead. This is the rhythm of owning a place in Eggedal's Tempelseter area, and once you've lived it, a regular weekend at home never quite measures up. Built in 2020 to a high modern standard, this five-bedroom chalet sits at 718 meters above sea level on a 1,000-square-meter plot along Torbråtan, one of the better-positioned roads in the Tempelseter development. The sun exposure here is genuinely exceptional — the south-facing terrace catches light from mid-morning well into the evening, even in the depths of January. At 117 square meters of interior space across the main floor and a loft level, the cabin is designed to sleep up to twelve people without anyone feeling cramped, which makes it equally suited to a large family, a group of friends splitting costs, or a combination of both. The living room earns its keep. A floor-to-ceiling stone fireplace anchors the space, and the architectural windows on either side aren't just for show — they frame the ridgeline in a way that changes character by the hour. Morning light comes in low and golden; by afternoon the room is bright enough that you won't touch a light switch. The ceilings are high, the proportions generous, and there's a natural flow from the sofa area to the dining table to the kitchen that makes the whole ground floor feel like one connected, social space rather than a series of rooms. ... click here to read more

Welcome to Torbråtan 22! Photo: Viken Fototjenester Eirik Andersen.

Step outside on a January morning at Tveitavegen 104 and the world is white and silent. The Myrkdalen valley stretches out below you, mountain ridges catching the pale Nordic light, and the only sound is the creak of snow underfoot as you clip into your cross-country skis right at the edge of the plot. By 9am you're gliding through groomed trails. By noon you're back inside, wool socks drying on the rack, the wood-burning stove ticking with heat, and a pot of something warm on the gas burners. This is what you bought a Norwegian mountain chalet for. Myrkdalen sits in the Voss municipality of Vestland county, tucked into a high valley about two hours east of Bergen along the E16. It's not the most famous ski destination in Norway — that's exactly the point. Where Geilo and Hemsedal fill up on peak weekends, Myrkdalen keeps a quieter pace. The Myrkdalen Mountain Village and its alpine ski resort are ten minutes by car from the door here, offering 34 slopes and lifts that run from late November through April. Snow reliability in this valley is genuinely good — the elevation and orientation mean conditions hold when lower resorts are struggling. Skiers and boarders who know Norway's mountains seek this place out specifically. The chalet at Tveitavegen 104 was built in 1965, and the log walls show it — in the best way. There's a solidity to the construction, a warmth that modern timber-frame cabins often can't quite replicate. It's been kept in good condition over the decades, with quality updates throughout, and it sits on a 763-square-metre plot that gives it real breathing room from the neighbouring properties. Privacy up here isn't a marketing word. You genuinely don't feel crowded. Inside, 87 square metres is arranged ... click here to read more

Welcome to Tveitavegen 104 - presented by Karl Filip Falch at DNB Eiendom

Wake up on a Saturday morning in February, pull back the curtain, and there it is — Ljoslandvannet frozen solid below you, the ski slopes at Ljosland already buzzing with the distant hiss of lifts, and a turf roof overhead holding a thick white blanket of snow. The fire crackled through the night. Coffee's on. This is what you came for. This compact two-bedroom mountain cabin at Nye Gruvevegen 8 sits at the upper edge of the Ljosland cabin area in Åseral municipality, one of Southern Norway's most established and accessible ski communities. At just €66,460, it's a rare entry point into a genuine Norwegian fjell lifestyle — not a polished resort product, but the real thing. Simple. Honest. And completely yours. The cabin covers 33 square metres of usable interior space, but the way it's designed, nothing feels tight. Two bedrooms sleep seven in total, which means a family of four has room to spare, or you can host friends for a ski weekend without anyone drawing straws for the sofa. The combined kitchen and living area keeps everyone together — meals, card games, planning the next day's route on a trail map spread across the table. A fireplace anchors the room, and once it's going on a cold evening, the whole space transforms. There's a 16-square-metre veranda out front where you can sit with a mug of something warm and watch the light drain out of the mountains. What makes this place genuinely different is the off-grid setup. No mains electricity, no running water. For some buyers, that's a dealbreaker. For others — the ones who'll actually love it here — it's the whole point. Åseral municipality has confirmed there's no obligation to connect to water or sewage systems, which keeps annual costs remarkably low. The tur ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Step outside on a February morning and the groomed cross-country track is literally 50 meters from your front door. No car. No shuttle. Just coffee in hand, skis on feet, and the whole Kvitfjell-Gålå-Skeikampen network opening up ahead of you. That's the daily reality at Jerpehaugen 2 — a four-bedroom mountain chalet sitting at 820 meters above sea level on the World Cup side of one of Norway's most celebrated ski resorts. Built in 2005 and kept in genuinely good condition, this is a cabin that functions as well as it looks. Timber walls, tiled floors, a wood-burning stove crackling against the cold — you feel the warmth before you've even taken your boots off. The waterborne underfloor heating running throughout the main floor is the kind of detail you only fully appreciate at 7am when you pad to the kitchen in socks and the floor meets you like a warm handshake. The living room is big. Properly big. Large enough that you can set up a proper dining table for eight and still have a sofa arrangement that doesn't feel cramped. The windows do most of the work in here — they face out across the alpine resort and the ski slopes, and on clear days the view rolls all the way to the surrounding mountain ridges. In winter, you can watch the World Cup piste from the terrace while the après-ski crowd is still shuffling in from the lifts. In summer, the same terrace gets the afternoon sun until late, and the mountains turn from white to a deep Scandinavian green almost overnight. Speaking of the terrace — it's a serious outdoor room, not an afterthought. There's real space for a table, chairs, a gas grill, and still room to move. On warm July evenings, dinner out here with the valley spread below you is one of those experiences t ... click here to read more

Welcome to Jerpehaugen 2. The plot is beautifully situated in an established cabin area with fantastic views.

Stand on the terrace on a still October morning and you can hear the Glomma moving below — that low, unhurried push of Scandinavia's longest river finding its way south. A pair of elk tracks cut through the frost on the lawn. Smoke curls from the fire pit from the night before. This is Rena, and this is the kind of morning that makes you stop checking your phone. Øgle-Vikenveien 960 sits east of the Glomma, elevated just enough at 247 metres above sea level to give you uninterrupted views across the river and toward the Hovda valley beyond. It's about a ten-minute drive into Rena centre — close enough to grab groceries at Coop or catch a bus at the stop six minutes down the road on foot, but far enough that you genuinely cannot hear a neighbour's television through the wall. The lot runs to 3,001 square metres of garden, grass, and gravel, giving the place a spread that most Norwegians living in town would quietly envy. The house itself has been properly overhauled since 2020 — not cosmetically touched up, but genuinely rebuilt where it counts. The kitchen went in during 2022 and it shows: clean cabinetry, integrated dishwasher, oven, microwave and cooktop, worktop space that actually lets two people cook at the same time. The bathroom was done the same year — fully tiled, underfloor heating throughout, the kind of finish that makes a cold November morning feel less punishing. Both rooms were done to a standard you'd expect from new construction, which means a new owner walks in and starts using the place rather than planning a renovation project. The 85-square-metre main floor layout is straightforward and honest: hallway, kitchen, bathroom, bedroom, dining room, and a living room that opens directly onto the south-f ... click here to read more

Welcome to Øgle-Vikenveien 960! Photo: Bernat Tubau

Wake up on a Saturday morning and the first thing you hear is nothing. Not traffic, not neighbors, not the distant thrum of a city doing its thing. Just wind moving through the birch trees outside the bedroom window, maybe a woodpecker hammering somewhere further up the slope, and the faint creak of the house settling in the cool Oslofjord air. That's the daily reality at Haveråsveien 26 — a two-bedroom chalet on Haveråsen, set at the dead end of a quiet cul-de-sac on a wildly generous 2,760 square-meter plot of forest, rock, and open sky. This is a vacation home in the truest sense. Not a weekend apartment with a view of someone else's balcony, but a proper foothold in the Norwegian countryside, with mature trees for shade, exposed bedrock for the kids to scramble over, and enough space between you and the next house that you can sit on the 35-square-meter terrace with a coffee and genuinely feel like you're somewhere remote — even though Drøbak's harbor is a short 4-kilometer drive away. The chalet itself was originally built in 1972 and expanded in 1984, and it wears that history well. The layout is practical and comfortable rather than fussy. On the main floor you get two bedrooms, a kitchen with plenty of cabinet run and counter space, a bathroom, and a living room that deserves mention on its own terms: large windows pull in the southern light, and a sliding door opens directly onto the terrace, so the boundary between indoors and out basically disappears from June through August. Downstairs, the basement opens into a generous family room that previous owners have used variously as a games room, a cinema nook, and extra sleeping space for visiting friends. It's genuinely flexible — the kind of room that changes i ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom ved Martin Surén har gleden av å presentere Haveråsveien 26! Ta kontakt med megler for å avtale visning.

Step onto the terrace on a July morning and the Langesund Fjord is right there — not a postcard version of it, not a glimpse between rooftops, but the whole wide sweep of it, glittering from Brevik across to Stathelle, close enough that you can hear the water. This is the view you get from the living room too, through a gable wall of floor-to-ceiling glass. And from the master bedroom. It's not a selling point bolted onto the property — it's the entire point of the property. Built in 2014 in a clean functionalist style, this three-bedroom cabin on the western shore of Bjørkøya is one of the rare homes on the island that sits in the absolute front row. No other building stands between you and the fjord. The architecture earns that position honestly: large sliding doors open the living space directly to the terrace, the interiors are kept deliberately light and neutral so the eye moves straight through to the water, and the layout on both floors is oriented toward the view. It works. You feel it the moment you walk in. Inside, the open-plan kitchen, dining, and living area makes up the social heart of the cabin. The kitchen is compact but smartly fitted — stone countertops, metro tile splashback, sleek cabinetry that doesn't crowd the space. It's designed for actually cooking in, not for photographs. Weekend lunches of fresh-caught mackerel, the occasional dinner party that spills out onto the terrace — the layout handles it all without feeling cramped. The living room has a fireplace for the evenings when September starts to bite, and the glass-railing terrace stretches 67 square meters, big enough for a proper outdoor dining setup, sun loungers, and still room to spare. Upstairs, two guest bedrooms both face the water ... click here to read more

Long lines, calm surfaces, and blunt angles. When nature comes alive, the architecture provides elegant counterpoints.

Step outside on a February morning and the world is completely still. The snow-covered ridge above Svartli catches the first pale light, a small mountain lake below the cabin holds a perfect reflection of the sky, and the groomed ski track two hundred meters down the slope is freshly set. You clip into your skis before breakfast. This is Tuesday. This is just a regular day at Soltoppen 7. Sitting at roughly 825 meters above sea level on the northern flank of Vegglifjell, this four-bedroom log chalet is one of those properties that makes you recalibrate what a mountain holiday actually means. Built in 2010 to a standard you rarely find in the Norwegian cabin market, it was put together with solid log construction, not the prefab shortcuts that date quickly. The walls are thick. The materials are honest. Thirteen-plus years on, it still feels new. From the moment you walk through the slate-tiled entrance hall — underfloor heating warming your feet as you shake off your ski boots — the quality of every decision made here becomes obvious. The main living area opens up generously, anchored by a stone-set fireplace that throws real heat on January evenings when temperatures outside drop hard. High ceilings and large windows mean the space never feels heavy despite the substantial log construction. Natural light pours in from multiple angles, which matters enormously at this latitude when you're chasing the winter sun across the sky. The living room furniture is from Kistefos, a Norwegian brand known for producing pieces built to outlast trends — solid, tactile, made to be used hard by families who actually live in their cabins rather than treat them as showpieces. The kitchen is built around the same philosophy. Dark solid ... click here to read more

Welcome to the beautiful log cabin at Soltoppen 7! Photo: Arild Brun Kjeldaas

Picture this: a Saturday morning in mid-July, coffee in hand, sitting on a 59-square-meter wrap-around terrace while the Trondheim Fjord glitters just a hundred meters downhill. The air smells of pine and salt. A boat putters somewhere out of sight. That's not a fantasy — that's a typical morning at Brassetveien 94. This two-bedroom chalet sits in Åfjord, a coastal municipality in Trøndelag that most international buyers haven't discovered yet — which is precisely why it's worth paying attention to. Åfjord isn't trying to be a resort town. It's the real Norway: unhurried, deeply connected to the sea and the forest, and refreshingly free of the tourist infrastructure that irons out the rough, interesting edges of a place. The chalet itself was built in 1982 and has been kept in genuinely good condition. At 61 square meters of interior space, it's compact but well thought out. Nothing feels squeezed. The main living area is anchored by a fireplace — the kind you'll be extremely grateful for when October arrives and the birch trees outside start dropping their leaves in the wind. Large windows pull in natural light and frame the surrounding landscape like a painting you never get tired of. There's room for a proper dining table, which matters when you have family visiting and want meals to feel like events rather than afterthoughts. The kitchen is practical and open to the living space, so whoever's cooking doesn't end up exiled from the conversation. Two bedrooms handle family stays or a combination of sleeping quarters and a small home office for those remote-work weeks. The bathroom covers everything you need. Out back, a 10-square-meter storage room takes care of kayak paddles, fishing gear, skis, and all the other e ... click here to read more

Welcome to Brassetveien 94!

Pull on your ski boots, step outside, and you're already on the trail. That's the daily reality at this four-bedroom mountain chalet on Golsfjellet, where the groomed cross-country tracks of one of Norway's most celebrated highland destinations run directly past the garden fence. No driving to a trailhead. No waiting for a lift. Just cold mountain air, the soft crunch of fresh snow underfoot, and a full day of skiing before you've even had your second cup of coffee. Sitting at around 865 meters above sea level along Valdresvegen in Gol, this well-kept chalet occupies a generous 5,014 square meter plot — roughly the size of a football pitch — with open southern exposure that catches the sun from morning to late afternoon in summer. The panoramic outlook toward Bualie, the local peak that anchors the skyline here, is the kind of view you stop noticing only when it's gone. In winter the hillside turns white and still. In July it's all green slopes, wildflowers, and the distant sound of cowbells drifting up from the valley. The cabin itself is a single-level layout, which sounds modest until you're actually inside. The 2005 extension added two bedrooms and significantly opened up the living room, which now has real breathing space — enough for a full family to spread out after a long day on the trails without anyone feeling crowded. The fireplace anchors one end of the room, and a heat pump installed in 2023 keeps things warm with far less effort on nights when the temperature drops below minus fifteen. Large windows frame the view toward Bualie from the main sitting area, and in the long Nordic winter evenings, the combination of firelight and snow light through the glass is genuinely hard to leave. The kitchen is functi ... click here to read more

Welcome to Valdresvegen 1736 and this charming mountain property!

On a still July morning at Krambuneset 87, the only sounds are the creak of the wooden pier, the soft lap of the Gandsfjord against the hull of a fishing boat, and coffee percolating in the kitchen while the sun climbs over the treeline and floods the dining room with that particular Nordic gold that doesn't arrive anywhere else quite like this. That's the daily rhythm here. Unhurried, grounded, real. Hommersåk sits on the eastern shore of the Gandsfjord, roughly 15 kilometers southeast of Stavanger, and it carries a kind of quiet confidence that resort towns can't manufacture. This is a working coastal community that also happens to be extraordinarily beautiful — rocky outcroppings, pine-edged inlets, wooden jetties stretching into clear water — and this three-bedroom chalet has a front-row position at Sjølvik, one of the area's most coveted shoreline pockets. The chalet itself was first built in 1943, expanded in 1985, and today sits across 88 square meters of well-organized interior space on a generous 1,753-square-meter freehold plot. The bones are solid. The condition is good, move-in ready, and honest — no developer gloss, just a well-kept Norwegian cabin that's been genuinely lived in and genuinely loved. Pull back the curtains in the living room and you get sea views. Open the kitchen window and you smell pine and salt. Step onto the 91-square-meter tiered terrace — spread across several levels of decking — and you understand immediately why people fight for properties in this specific stretch of the fjord. That terrace deserves particular attention. It was clearly designed by someone who understood how Norwegian light moves throughout the day, because different sections catch the sun at different hours, meani ... click here to read more

Welcome to Krambuneset 87! - Presented by Thomas Walde, Aktiv Sandnes

Step outside on a clear September morning and the light does something you won't see further south. It comes in low and golden across the Bjørnfjell plateau, catches the frost on the heather, and turns the whole valley into something you'd struggle to describe to someone who hasn't seen it. That's the view from the terraces at Søsterbekk 34. Not a postcard version of Norway — the real thing, right outside the door. This two-bedroom holiday chalet sits in one of northern Norway's most accessible yet genuinely wild corners. Bjørnfjell straddles the Norwegian-Swedish border at roughly 500 metres above sea level, and the mountain terrain up here is serious. We're talking the kind of landscape where you can spend a full August day hiking to a ridge above Rombaksfjorden and come back having seen nobody. Or ski out directly from the cabin in January when a metre of powder has settled overnight and Narvik's ski centre — one of the most underrated freeride destinations in all of Scandinavia — is a short drive down the E6. The cabin itself was originally built in 1962, which gives it that particular solidity you get with older Norwegian mountain construction. A full renovation and extension carried out in 2016 brought it firmly into the present: new kitchen fitted that year, updated interiors, and an annex added to give the property real flexibility. Total indoor living space runs to 69 square metres, with an extra 15 square metres of external usable area and a plot of around 1,000 square metres — generous by any mountain standard. The land is leased rather than owned outright, which keeps acquisition costs and annual fees low. Annual ground rent comes in at just 2,035 NOK, and municipal fees are an additional 2,340 NOK per year ... click here to read more

Easter-ready holiday home with beautiful location at Søsterbekk! Great views and sun exposure.

Step out the front door on a January morning and the only sound you'll hear is your own breath in the cold mountain air. The ski tracks at Golsfjellet are 350 meters away — close enough to reach in your boots — and the peaks around Tisleidalen are catching the first pale light of a Norwegian winter sunrise. This is what owning a cabin at roughly 900 meters above sea level actually feels like. Not a weekend fantasy. A real, year-round retreat you can get to, use, and genuinely love. Sitting at the end of a quiet gravel lane off Ellinghaugvegen, the property occupies a fenced 1,312-square-meter plot right on the boundary between Valdres and Hallingdal — two of inland Norway's most celebrated mountain regions. It's a subtle but meaningful position. You get the hiking breadth of Valdresflye to the north and the ski infrastructure of Golsfjellet immediately on your doorstep. The cabin itself was built in 1978 and has been kept in good, honest condition: timber walls darkened by decades of woodsmoke, checkered windows that frame the marshland views, and a traditional sod roof that looks exactly right against the surrounding heathland. Some things you don't update, and the owners here have understood which things those are. Inside, the living room is compact but genuinely comfortable — seating for six or seven, a fireplace with glass doors that throws heat across the space on cold evenings, and a heat pump installed in 2025 that can be adjusted remotely via app before you even leave the city. That's a practical detail worth underscoring: you can have the cabin warm and ready by the time your car reaches Fagernes. The kitchen runs along one wall with proper cabinet storage, room for a full-size refrigerator, and a dining area ... click here to read more

Winter atmosphere from the driveway to the property

Step out onto the 74-square-metre terrace at seven in the morning, coffee in hand, and watch the Karpelva river catch the Arctic light as it moves through the valley below. The water is clear enough to see the shadows of sea trout holding against the current. This is not a description of a weekend fantasy — this is Tuesday in Jarfjord. Sitting on Jarfjordveien 752, this fully renovated two-bedroom chalet is one of those rare finds that makes you wonder why you waited so long. At 115,000 euros for a move-in-ready holiday property with almost 900 square metres of land, direct river access, and a terrace bigger than most city apartments, the maths are hard to argue with. But the numbers are almost beside the point. What you're really buying here is a front-row seat to one of the quietest, most unspoiled corners of northern Norway — and a base camp for a lifestyle that most people only read about. Jarfjord sits in Sør-Varanger municipality in Finnmark, the northernmost county in Norway and in all of mainland Europe. This is proper far north — the kind of place where the midnight sun runs from late May through late July, flooding every room with golden light well past midnight, and where the northern lights appear overhead from late August onwards with a regularity that still stops you cold every single time. The light here does things to a landscape that lower latitudes simply can't replicate. The chalet itself was built in 1955 but you'd never know it. A complete top-to-bottom renovation has left the interior sharp, functional, and genuinely comfortable. The open-plan living and kitchen area is the social heart of the cabin — generous panoramic windows pull the river and the treeline into the room, making the outside fee ... click here to read more

Advokatfirmaet Herstad AS presents Jarfjordveien 752 - a fully renovated holiday home a stone's throw from Karpelva!

Step outside at dawn and the only sound you'll hear is wind moving through the heather. No traffic, no notifications, no noise — just open Norwegian mountain land stretching out in every direction, and the faint smell of birch smoke still clinging to the air from last night's fire. That's morning at Borsævegen 882, a traditional timber cabin sitting at 713 meters above sea level in the Skafsåheii highlands of Tokke municipality. It's the kind of place that slows your pulse within an hour of arriving. This is a proper Norwegian hytte — built in 1970, honest in its simplicity, and set up precisely the way a mountain cabin should be. Fifty-three square metres of indoor space, three bedrooms, an open living room and kitchen with a wood-burning fireplace, and a covered entrance terrace where you can pull your boots off and watch clouds roll over the valley below. Nothing superfluous. Everything you actually need. The cabin comes fully furnished, so there's no waiting period, no shipping of furniture from a city apartment — you drive up, unlock the door, and the place is already yours in every practical sense. The off-grid setup is one of the most compelling things about this property, and increasingly rare to find done this well. A solar panel system installed in 2023 handles the basics — lighting, a television, mobile charging — without requiring any connection to the national grid. Water comes from a nearby stream. There's a composting toilet and a simple washroom. For buyers who've been thinking seriously about reducing their ecological footprint, or who simply want a retreat that operates on its own terms rather than tied to utility infrastructure, this cabin makes that lifestyle genuinely accessible. It's not roughing ... click here to read more

Welcome to Borsævegen 882! Photo: Boligfotograf1

Early on a July morning, the lake is absolutely still. You carry your coffee out onto the deck, the wood warm under bare feet, and the only sound is a loon calling somewhere across Steinsvatnet. The treeline on the far shore reflects so cleanly in the water it's hard to tell where the forest ends and the lake begins. This is what you drove four hours for. This is what you'll come back for every single year. Steinsvatnvegen 225 sits right at the water's edge in Finnskogen — that vast, quietly extraordinary forest region that straddles the Norwegian-Swedish border in Innlandet county. The property is a proper Norwegian hytte in the truest sense: built for living close to nature, not for impressing guests at a dinner party. Fifty-five square metres of single-level cabin on a freehold plot of 1,303 square metres, with direct frontage onto the lake and car access all the way to the door. It's compact, considered, and it works. Step inside and the first thing you notice is how the wood-panelled walls and lacquered floors pull the light from those big lake-facing windows and throw it around the room. The living area is centred on a classic brick fireplace paired with a wood-burning stove — come October, when the birches turn amber and the temperature drops sharply, you'll light both and not move for hours. The dining table sits in front of a picture window that frames the water like a painting that changes every hour of the day. Dinner here, watching the light go golden on the surface of Steinsvatnet, is genuinely hard to beat. The kitchen keeps things straightforward: wooden and laminate countertops, a freestanding gas stove that lets you cook completely off-grid, and smart storage that punches above its weight for the spac ... click here to read more

Welcome to Steinsvatnvegen 225! Photo: EFKT. Photographer: Bjørn Sørheim

The wood stove is already crackling when you push open the heavy cabin door, and the smell of pine sap and woodsmoke hits you before you've even pulled off your boots. Outside, the first proper snow of December has settled across the fenced plot, and through the frost-edged windows of the winter garden, you can just make out the start of the groomed ski track that runs through the treeline. This is Mesnali. And this cabin—hand-built in 1928 from squared logs that have had nearly a century to settle into themselves—is exactly what that word means to Norwegians who grew up dreaming about it. Nordmessenvegen 111 sits on a privately owned, fully fenced plot in one of the Inland Norway's most quietly sought-after hytte communities, about 20 kilometres northeast of Lillehammer. Mesnali isn't famous in the way that Hafjell or Sjusjøen are, and that's rather the point. The Joker grocery store down the road is open on Sundays. The neighbors wave. The marked hiking trails start practically at the garden gate—no car required to reach them—and in winter, those same trails become groomed cross-country tracks that link into the vast Sjusjøen network, one of the largest and best-maintained langrenn systems in Norway. On a clear February morning, you ski out before breakfast and come back an hour later with cold cheeks and an appetite that no Oslo café could ever manufacture. The cabin itself is 80 square metres across one practical, unhurried level. Living room, kitchen, dining room, entrance hall, bathroom, storage-turned-bedroom—everything you need, nothing you don't. The log walls in the living room are original, wide and warm-toned, and the round ceiling beams overhead are exactly as the builder left them. The cast-iron wood stov ... click here to read more

Welcome to Nordmessenvegen 111! Photo: Lars Marius Bækkevold

The first thing you notice, stepping onto that 35-square-metre terrace, is the quiet. Not the muffled quiet of triple-glazed windows or noise-cancelling headphones — proper Norwegian coastal quiet, broken only by the lap of seawater against the rocks below and the occasional cry of a guillemot riding the thermals. That's the daily reality of owning this waterfront cabin at Nedre Valdersneset 93 in Sletta, a compact stretch of coastline on Radøy island in Vestland county, where the fjord meets the open sea and the rest of the world feels very, very far away. Sletta sits at the outer edge of Nordhordland, a region that most international visitors drive through on the way to somewhere else. Their loss. The coastline here is raw and honest — exposed skerries, deep-green water, and the kind of light in July that doesn't fully disappear until past midnight. This particular cabin, renovated and upgraded in 2020, occupies a plot of 489 square metres right at the water's edge, roughly 100 metres from the shoreline. It comes with its own boathouse. In Norway, that combination — cabin plus naust — is the classic dream, and it's increasingly hard to find at this price point. Getting here is part of the ritual. You park the car and walk five or six minutes along a path through the heathland, arriving at the cabin already half-decompressed. That short walk is what keeps the spot genuinely private. No road noise. No neighbours materialising unexpectedly. Just you, the cabin, and the view. Inside, the layout is tight but well-considered. The open living room and kitchen takes up 29.5 square metres — the full heart of the cabin — with space for a sofa group facing the sea side and a dining table that seats the whole crew after a day o ... click here to read more

Aktiv Eiendomsmegling v/ Jørn Tage Hereide presents Nedre Valdersneset 93.

There's a particular kind of silence at the top of Grosetlie on a January morning — the kind you feel in your chest before the day starts. Snow is still falling softly on the terrace, the wood-burning fireplace from the night before has left an amber warmth in the air, and through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the whole of Grøndalen opens up below you like it belongs to no one else. This is what you bought. Not just a cabin. This moment. Built in 2024, this five-bedroom mountain chalet sits at the highest point of Grosetlie 167, in one of Hemsedal's most established and genuinely sought-after cabin areas. At 176 square metres, it holds its own — spacious enough for a full extended-family gathering, designed well enough that nobody's tripping over each other by day three. Wide oak floors run through the main living spaces, picking up light from the oversized windows and giving the interior that particular warmth that no amount of design software can quite replicate until you're standing in it. The heart of the cabin is the open-plan kitchen and living room, where ceilings climb high and a built-in fireplace anchors the social space. The kitchen is an Expo Nova fit-out — properly equipped, with integrated appliances and enough counter and storage space to actually cook a real dinner for eight people, not just survive on pasta. Saturday night fondue, a slow-cooked lamb stew on a stormy Sunday afternoon — this kitchen was made for both. Underfloor heating runs throughout, which matters more than most buyers realise until their first February stay, when getting up at 6am to watch the light change on the mountains is no longer something you dread. Five bedrooms means real flexibility. The master suite has an en-suite bathro ... click here to read more

Welcome to Grosetlie 167 – Cabin with fantastic location high above Grøndalen with amazing views and excellent sun exposure

Step out onto the 93-square-metre terrace on a clear September morning and you can see the entire valley spread below you — the dark water of Tresfjorden catching the early light, the ridgelines of the Romsdal Alps stacked behind it, and absolutely nothing between you and all of it. That's the view from Løviksetra, day one, and it doesn't get old. This three-bedroom mountain chalet sits at roughly 492 metres above sea level on Løviksetervegen, in Vestnes municipality — a part of coastal Norway that most international visitors drive past on their way to Ålesund without realising what they're missing. That's changing, slowly, which is exactly why right now is the time to pay attention. Built in 2007, the cabin is in good condition throughout. Seventy square metres of actual living space, smartly laid out, with a living room that does the heavy lifting: wide windows frame the mountain and fjord panorama like a painting that changes every hour, and a wood-burning stove in the corner means you're comfortable well into November when the first real frosts arrive. On stormy evenings, with the fire going and rain hammering the terrace, there's a particular kind of satisfaction to this place that no amount of square footage in a city apartment can replicate. The kitchen runs on gas — practical, reliable, and honestly freeing once you adjust to the rhythm of off-grid living. No mains electricity, no municipal water supply. The bathroom uses a combustion toilet. For some buyers this is a dealbreaker; for others, it's precisely the point. You're not managing a utility account, you're not dependent on infrastructure, and you're engaging with the mountain environment on its own terms. The cabin's modern construction means insulation ... click here to read more

Welcome to Løviksetra!

Picture this: it's a Tuesday morning in February and you're lacing up your ski boots at the front door. No shuttle bus. No car park queue. No waiting. The groomed cross-country track runs directly past the cabin at Løyningsåne hyttegrend, and within thirty seconds of stepping outside you're gliding through a snow-white corridor of birch trees with nothing but the sound of your own poles hitting the track and a raven calling somewhere up the ridge. That's the kind of morning this place deals in. Sitting at roughly 740 metres above sea level in Bykle municipality — deep in the Setesdalen valley of southern Norway — this 92-square-metre timber chalet has been doing its job well since it was first built in 1976. An extension in 2005 pushed the footprint outward and brought in three bedrooms with flexible sleeping for up to thirteen people, which is exactly the kind of number you need when the whole family descends for a Norwegian easter skiing holiday. The kitchen was gutted and rebuilt in 2020 with clean white cabinetry and modern appliances, so meal prep for a crowd is no longer a puzzle. The rest of the cabin is in good, honest condition — not flashly, but solid and ready to use from the day you take the keys. The single-level layout is worth mentioning specifically. No staircase to negotiate after a long day on the trails, no split floor plan that splits families into separate zones. The hallway opens into the living room, which is genuinely spacious and bright — large windows face the mountain slope and pull in serious winter light even on grey January days. On a clear afternoon in March, the sun is low enough to paint the whole room gold for an hour before it drops behind the ridge. You notice it. It matters. Step o ... click here to read more

Aerial view of the cabin and surrounding mountains

Picture yourself standing on your private 46-square-meter terrace, coffee in hand, as morning mist rises from Furusjøen lake just steps away. The crisp mountain air fills your lungs while you plan the day ahead—perhaps casting a line into the pristine waters where your fishing rights grant you exclusive access, or strapping on cross-country skis to glide through snow-laden forests right from your doorstep. This is the reality awaiting you at this mountain retreat in Rennebu, where modern Norwegian comfort meets authentic wilderness living at 605 meters above sea level. This 50-square-meter cabin represents a thoughtfully upgraded vacation home that eliminates the typical compromises of remote mountain properties. Recent investments in essential infrastructure mean you arrive to electricity powering your modern kitchen and heating systems, while a private well provides independent water supply. The transformation from rustic shelter to comfortable second home has been completed with care, preserving the soul of Norwegian cabin culture while adding conveniences that make extended stays genuinely comfortable for international owners seeking their Scandinavian escape. The heart of this property beats in its newly installed 2022 kitchen, where Miele and Siemens appliances meet an extra-wide induction cooktop perfect for preparing post-adventure meals. The open-plan living area flows seamlessly across 29 square meters, anchored by a 2023 Wiking wood stove that transforms winter evenings into cozy gatherings. Floor-to-ceiling windows frame ever-changing mountain vistas, bringing the outside in while maintaining year-round thermal comfort through thoughtful design and quality materials. Two compact bedrooms sleep five guests ... click here to read more

Welcome to Furusjøen 96 - A beautiful cabin with electricity and potential for water supply.

Picture yourself stepping onto the wooden deck of your mountain retreat as the first morning light touches the peaks surrounding Totenåsen. The air carries that distinctive Norwegian crispness—pine-scented and pure at 640 meters elevation. Inside your cabin, coffee brews on the gas stove while family members begin stirring in bedrooms and loft spaces. This is the rhythm of life at Hutjern 4, where fourteen people can gather under one roof without feeling crowded, where 200 kilometers of groomed cross-country ski trails begin literally at your doorstep, and where the Norwegian concept of friluftsliv—open-air living—becomes your daily reality rather than a weekend aspiration. This 2013-built family cabin in Skreia represents something increasingly rare in modern Scandinavia: accessible mountain living just ninety minutes from Oslo, combining genuine wilderness immersion with practical year-round accessibility. For international buyers seeking a Norwegian vacation home that balances remote tranquility with convenience, this property offers an authentic gateway into Nordic mountain culture without the isolation that typically accompanies such settings. The cabin sits in Totenåsen, a nature reserve that Norwegians have cherished for generations as prime territory for hiking, skiing, berry picking, and the kind of unhurried family time that defines Scandinavian quality of life. Your leased 442-square-meter plot provides privacy while connecting you to an extensive network of outdoor enthusiasts who respect the Norwegian tradition of allemannsretten—the right to roam responsibly through nature. The building itself reflects Norwegian cabin architecture's practical evolution: 75 square meters of ground-floor living space flows in ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Imagine waking to golden morning light dancing across the water, the gentle sound of waves drifting through open windows, and the promise of another perfect day on Norway's sheltered southern coast. This 4-bedroom chalet perched above the Skagerrak coastline in Stathelle offers that rare combination every vacation home buyer seeks: authentic Norwegian coastal living with modern accessibility, positioned between two of the region's most vibrant seaside towns, Kragerø and Langesund. The moment you arrive along Grunnsundveien, following the easy path from your dedicated parking space, you understand why this stretch of the Bamble coast has captured hearts for generations. The 1967 chalet sits on 1,942 square meters of natural terrain in the peaceful Trolldalen-Grunnsund area, its black-painted exterior blending seamlessly with the landscape while floor-to-ceiling windows capture an uninterrupted seascape that stretches to the horizon. This is where urban professionals from Oslo, Copenhagen, and beyond come to reconnect with nature and family, trading hectic weekdays for weekends filled with salt air and freedom. Step inside and the view commands immediate attention. The open-plan living area channels the essence of Norwegian cabin culture—unfussy, functional, and completely oriented toward the outdoors. Large windows frame the sea like living artwork that changes with every passing hour: morning mists lifting to reveal distant islands, afternoon sunshine transforming the water into liquid silver, evening light painting the sky in shades of amber and rose. A wood-burning stove anchors the space, providing cozy warmth during spring and autumn visits when coastal breezes turn crisp and you need nothing more than a good fire, ... click here to read more

Sky and sea

Picture this: you wake to the gentle rush of a mountain river, slip on your skis at your doorstep, and within minutes glide directly onto the slopes of Furedalen Alpinsenter. By afternoon, you're soaking up January sunshine on your expansive terrace, watching your children build snow forts across 3,640 square meters of your own pristine Norwegian wilderness. This is daily life at this 3-bedroom chalet in Kvamskogen, where the adventure begins the moment you step outside. Just 60 minutes from Bergen's international airport, this fully renovated mountain retreat offers the rare combination of accessibility and authentic Norwegian mountain living. Whether you envision exhilarating winter ski holidays, summer hiking expeditions through wildflower meadows, or simply unplugging from urban life beside your private riverside sanctuary, this property delivers a vacation experience most European second-home buyers only dream about. The transformation from city stress to mountain serenity takes just one hour's drive, making weekend escapes and extended holidays effortlessly achievable year-round. This chalet represents Norwegian mountain architecture at its finest, thoughtfully reimagined for modern vacation living. The comprehensive 2017 renovation preserved the property's 1957 heritage while introducing contemporary comfort and energy efficiency. Low-maintenance Møre Royal cladding wraps the exterior, eliminating the endless upkeep that plagues many mountain properties and giving international owners peace of mind during months away. Inside, 91 square meters of intelligently designed living space feels remarkably generous, with an additional loft and separate annexe expanding total usable area to 128 square meters. The open-plan ... click here to read more

Aktiv Eiendomsmegling v/ Lars Waage presents Mødalsvegen 143! Photo: Weststaff Media.

Picture yourself stepping onto an expansive wooden veranda at 785 meters elevation, morning coffee in hand, as the crisp Norwegian mountain air fills your lungs and endless hiking trails unfold before you. This is the daily reality at this 3-bedroom mountain chalet in Lauvlia, where the silence is broken only by birdsong and the distant swish of skis on groomed trails that start practically at your doorstep. This 72-square-meter retreat near Ljøsheim represents something increasingly rare: an affordable gateway to the Norwegian mountain lifestyle that international families can actually attain. The Norwegian mountain cabin tradition runs deep, and this property embodies everything that makes Scandinavian outdoor culture so compelling for vacation home buyers. Located in the Mesnali region of Innlandet County, this area offers the authentic Norwegian fjell experience without the premium price tags of more tourist-heavy destinations. Here, families gather for generations, building traditions around seasonal rhythms that connect them to nature in ways impossible in urban environments. Inside, the cabin's 72 square meters are thoughtfully arranged to maximize both social connection and practical functionality. The heart of the home is the open-plan living area where floor-to-ceiling windows frame mountain vistas that change dramatically with the seasons. A centrally positioned wood-burning stove becomes the gathering point on winter evenings, its radiant warmth reaching every corner while electric heating provides modern convenience. The partially open kitchen design means whoever is preparing meals remains part of the conversation, with solid wood cabinetry providing ample storage for extended stays. The high ceilings cre ... click here to read more

Presented by Bente Holen Bergseng at Eiendomsmegler 1 - Lauvlia 366

Picture yourself standing on a sunlit terrace at 930 meters above sea level, morning coffee in hand, watching the first golden rays illuminate the Hardangervidda plateau stretching endlessly before you. The mountain air is crisp and clean, carrying the scent of pine and wild heather. This is your morning routine at Venåsen 12, a 121-square-meter Norwegian mountain chalet where every day begins with nature's most spectacular theater. This three-bedroom retreat in Seterdalen represents the quintessential Norwegian mountain lifestyle that international buyers dream about. Positioned on a sun-drenched hilltop, the property captures light from dawn until dusk, creating that rare combination of privacy and radiance that defines premium mountain living. The elevation isn't just a number—it's your gateway to four distinct seasons of European outdoor adventure, each offering its own compelling reasons to escape here. The Norwegian Mountain Experience You've Been Seeking Rødberg and the surrounding Numedal valley region offer something increasingly rare in modern Europe: authentic wilderness accessibility combined with modern infrastructure. This isn't a remote fantasy requiring expedition-level preparation. Your chalet sits just 300 meters from professionally groomed cross-country ski trails that connect to a 40-kilometer network threading through pristine forests and open mountain terrain. In winter months, you can literally ski from your door, making this a true ski-in, ski-out vacation home without the premium price tags of Alpine resorts. Spring transforms the landscape into a botanist's paradise. As snow retreats, the hillsides explode with wildflowers, and the cloudberry marshes surrounding the property become active fo ... click here to read more

Welcome to Venåsen 12 - fantastic location at 930 meters above sea level.

Picture yourself sipping morning coffee on your private terrace as the first golden rays illuminate Reineskarvet and Hallingskarvet peaks, the crisp mountain air filling your lungs while cross-country ski trails stretch just 200 meters from your door. This is the daily rhythm awaiting at this 73-square-meter mountain chalet in Holsåsen, where Norwegian alpine living meets year-round accessibility between two of Scandinavia's most celebrated mountain ranges. This property represents something increasingly rare in Norway's mountain regions: a thoughtfully designed new-build chalet on a generous 900-square-meter freehold plot at approximately 1,000 meters elevation, positioned to capture maximum sunlight while offering panoramic views across Hallingdal's iconic landscape. The location places you at the crossroads of winter sports, hiking trails, and authentic Norwegian mountain culture, with Geilo's alpine facilities just minutes away and the vast cross-country network of Hallingdal literally at your doorstep. The chalet accommodates 5-6 guests across 2-3 bedrooms plus a functional loft space, making it ideal for families or groups seeking a Norwegian mountain retreat. The open-plan kitchen and living area creates a social hub where après-ski gatherings flow naturally, with large windows strategically positioned to frame mountain vistas and flood interior spaces with natural light. The bathroom and storage room complete the practical layout, while the covered terrace extends your living space into the outdoors, essential for maximizing enjoyment of Norway's brief but glorious summer months and the crisp winter season. What distinguishes this offering is the turnkey approach combined with customization flexibility. The ba ... click here to read more

Similar cabin as the one projected

Picture yourself waking to the scent of pine forest drifting through open windows, the morning sun filtering through towering Norwegian spruce trees that surround your private 3,075-square-meter retreat. This is life at Kollerøysveien 64 in Nordre Follo, where a rare opportunity awaits to build your custom vacation home exactly as you've imagined it, on freehold land in one of Norway's most sought-after recreational areas just minutes from Oslo. Imagine sipping coffee on a deck you've designed yourself, watching red squirrels dart between ancient trees while your children explore three-quarters of an acre of possibilities at their doorstep. This is where your Norwegian escape story begins, on a blank canvas surrounded by established cabin culture and untouched nature. The property currently holds a 31-square-meter structure ready for demolition, plus a detached garage and outbuilding, giving you complete freedom to design and construct a modern holiday home that reflects your vision for Nordic living. Whether you envision a contemporary minimalist cabin with floor-to-ceiling windows capturing forest views, a traditional Norwegian hytte with red-painted timber and grass roof, or a multi-level family retreat with separate guest quarters, this expansive plot accommodates your architectural dreams without compromise. The freehold ownership provides security and flexibility for your investment, allowing you to take your time planning the perfect design, phasing construction to match your budget, or even subdividing should regulations permit. What makes this location genuinely special for vacation home ownership is the established recreational community surrounding you. You're not pioneering wilderness here; you're joining a t ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kollerøysveien 64, presented by Kjersti Sollied at Eie Follo. Photo: Mats Holst

Imagine waking to the gentle sound of waves lapping against smooth coastal rocks, the scent of pine needles warmed by morning sun drifting through open windows, and the promise of a day spent exploring Norway's island-dotted coastline from your own boat mooring. This is the daily reality at Kjønnøyaveien 15, where Norwegian coastal living reveals itself in its most authentic form, just 60 meters from the Skagerrak waters that have shaped this region's character for centuries. This 51-square-meter cabin occupies a secluded position at the end of a tree-lined gravel track in Trosby, where the density of foliage creates a natural screen between you and the outside world. The 1,904-square-meter plot provides genuine privacy rarely found in coastal properties this close to the water, with enough space for children to build forest hideouts, for vegetable gardens to thrive in the maritime climate, and for outdoor gatherings that stretch from afternoon coffee to evening bonfires. The property's positioning offers something increasingly precious in modern life: the ability to hear silence broken only by birdsong and distant boat engines. The architectural approach here speaks to practical Scandinavian design principles. Built in 2002, the cabin employs traditional wood paneling throughout, creating thermal efficiency while maintaining the aesthetic connection to Norway's cabin heritage. The open-plan living area centers around a working fireplace, essential during the cooler months when coastal winds sweep across the archipelago. Large windows frame views of surrounding woodland and glimpses of the sea beyond, pulling natural light deep into the interior even during winter's shorter days. The kitchen provides serious functional ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kjønnøyaveien 15!

Picture yourself standing on your 43-square-meter terrace, coffee in hand, watching the morning sun paint golden streaks across Trosbyfjorden. Below, your boat gently rocks at its private mooring just 100 meters away, ready for an impromptu island-hopping adventure. This is the daily rhythm awaiting you at this Norwegian coastal retreat on Kjønnøya, where the simple pleasures of seaside living blend seamlessly with modern comfort. This 71-square-meter cabin represents the authentic Norwegian cabin culture that international buyers increasingly seek. Built with heart over decades—the original 1960s living room expanded thoughtfully in 2000—the property tells a story of evolving comfort while maintaining its connection to Norway's coastal heritage. The elevated position on your 911-square-meter freehold plot provides privacy while keeping the fjord constantly in view, a visual reminder of the recreational paradise at your doorstep. The Norwegian concept of "hytte" extends beyond mere vacation ownership. It embodies a lifestyle philosophy centered on nature connection, family togetherness, and seasonal traditions. Your cabin becomes the stage for creating these cherished memories: summer evenings grilling fresh-caught fish on the sea-facing terrace, autumn mornings watching migratory birds traverse the fjord, winter weekends warming by the fire after invigorating coastal walks, spring days witnessing nature's reawakening along the shoreline. Stathelle and the broader Bamble municipality offer the quintessential Norwegian coastal experience without the crowds of more tourist-heavy regions. The area remains authentically Norwegian, where local traditions thrive and the pace of life follows natural rhythms rather than comme ... click here to read more

The cabin is nicely situated in the cabin area, slightly elevated from the sea with a short walking distance down to the water.

Picture yourself stepping onto your private terrace at 626 meters above sea level, morning coffee in hand, as the Norwegian sun illuminates the peaks surrounding Mjølfjell. The crisp mountain air fills your lungs while skis lean ready against the cabin wall—groomed cross-country trails await just steps from your door. This is the rhythm of life at Kleivavegen 46, where every season delivers a different adventure and your three-bedroom mountain retreat serves as the perfect base for exploring one of Norway's most accessible alpine regions. Nestled in the scenic mountain area of Mjølfjell, this 68-square-meter year-round chalet represents the essence of Norwegian cabin culture while offering thoroughly modern comfort. The property sits on a generous 984-square-meter freehold plot where morning sun arrives early and lingers until 8 or 9 PM during summer months, bathing the landscape in that distinctive golden Nordic light that photographers and nature lovers treasure. This is where families gather around the outdoor grill shelter—a traditional Norwegian gapahuk—sharing stories and meals while weather patterns dance across distant peaks. The 2022 renovation transformed this property into a turnkey mountain residence without sacrificing its authentic character. Complete electrical and plumbing system upgrades mean you can focus entirely on mountain pursuits rather than maintenance concerns. The moment you enter, high ceilings and strategically placed windows frame panoramic views that change with the seasons—snow-blanketed forests in winter, wildflower meadows in summer, and the spectacular color transitions of Nordic autumn. A crackling fireplace provides atmospheric warmth while the modern heat pump ensures consistent com ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kleivavegen 46 presented by Thomas Bull Wingaard at EiendomsMegler 1 - Photo by Arvid Berg

Picture this: you wake to crisp mountain air at 693 meters above sea level, sunlight streaming through expansive windows as snow-dusted peaks frame your morning coffee on a 50-square-meter terrace. This is your reality at Skoleveien 16 in Rugldalen, where Norwegian mountain living meets practical accessibility just 19 kilometers from the historic copper mining town of Røros—a UNESCO World Heritage site that transforms every season into an adventure. This 54-square-meter chalet built in 1997 represents the quintessential Norwegian mountain retreat: compact efficiency wrapped in panoramic valley views, where electric heating meets the crackling warmth of a wood-burning stove. The open-plan living area flows seamlessly into a fully-equipped kitchen, creating the social heart where après-ski hot chocolate sessions and summer evening dinners blend into one continuous celebration of mountain life. High ceilings amplify the sense of space, while oversized windows frame ever-changing landscapes—autumn birch forests ablaze in gold, winter wonderlands stretching endlessly white, spring thaws revealing rushing streams, and summer meadows bursting with wildflowers. Two well-proportioned bedrooms (8 and 6 square meters) provide restful sanctuaries after days spent carving fresh powder or hiking forest trails. A clever loft space accessed by retractable ladder adds sleeping capacity for visiting friends or grandchildren, while the 2002-built annex with separate living area and composting toilet expands your hosting possibilities without compromising the main cabin's intimacy. An external 9-square-meter storage room keeps skis, mountain bikes, fishing rods, and firewood organized and accessible. Rugldalen represents Norwegian cabin ... click here to read more

Welcome to Skoleveien 16, presented by Stian Konstad at EiendomsMegler 1! (Photo: Interiørfoto, Haukdal)

Picture yourself stepping onto a sun-warmed terrace at midnight in June, the Arctic sun casting golden light across the fjord waters that lap gently at your private dock just steps away. This is life at Storsandnes in Talvik, where your 144-square-meter waterfront retreat sits on over half a hectare of pristine Norwegian coastline, offering an extraordinary escape into one of Europe's most dramatic and unspoiled landscapes. This three-bedroom house with traditional sauna and glass-enclosed winter garden provides the perfect base for experiencing Arctic Norway's extraordinary natural phenomena – from endless summer days to the dancing Northern Lights that illuminate winter skies directly above your terrace. Talvik, located in Norway's Finnmark region just outside Alta, represents a rare opportunity for international buyers seeking authentic Scandinavian living combined with remarkable natural access. Your property sits mere meters from the Altafjord, Norway's fourth-longest fjord system, where deep waters meet dramatic mountain landscapes that have remained virtually unchanged for millennia. The 1950-built house has evolved thoughtfully over seven decades, maintaining its character while incorporating modern comforts that make year-round enjoyment entirely feasible. The property's 5,579-square-meter plot provides both privacy and endless outdoor possibilities, from morning swims in crystalline fjord waters to evening gatherings around your dedicated grill house fire pit. The heart of this home is its relationship with light and landscape. Floor-to-ceiling windows throughout the main living areas frame ever-changing views of mountains that shift from snow-capped white in winter to midnight-sun purple in summer. The winte ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom welcomes you to Talvik and the property at Langfjordveien 280!

Picture yourself stepping onto a sun-drenched veranda 822 meters above sea level, morning coffee in hand, as the golden light illuminates the snow-capped peaks surrounding Dalen Valley. The crisp mountain air fills your lungs while you plan the day ahead—perhaps first tracks on the alpine slopes just 300 meters away, or a tranquil cross-country ski along groomed trails that wind through ancient pine forests. This is the daily reality awaiting owners of this well-appointed mountain chalet in one of Norway's most reliable snow destinations. Nestled between the historic villages of Dalen and Valle in Telemark County, this 66-square-meter retreat occupies an enviable position in an established cabin community where Norwegian families have gathered for generations. The location strikes that perfect balance outdoor enthusiasts dream about: genuinely remote mountain character with practical year-round road access and modern conveniences. Your 1,104-square-meter natural plot provides unobstructed views across the high country while maintaining comfortable distances from neighboring properties, ensuring privacy without isolation. The Dalen Valley region represents authentic Norwegian mountain culture, far removed from overcrowded alpine resorts. Winter here means guaranteed snow conditions from November through April, with the nearest alpine facility literally a three-minute walk from your door. Cross-country skiers find themselves spoiled with kilometers of meticulously groomed trails suitable for both classic and skate techniques. The area's elevation and inland position create dry, powdery snow that locals treasure—none of the heavy, wet coastal conditions that plague lower elevations. Spring transforms the landscape as wil ... click here to read more

The plot is about 1.1 decares and consists of a natural lot with open space around the building and views of the surrounding terrain.

Picture yourself waking to crisp mountain air at 600 meters above sea level, sunlight filtering through pine forests, the scent of wood smoke from your soapstone stove mingling with fresh Norwegian morning. Just 161 meters from your door, groomed cross-country ski trails beckon, while Trysil Alpine Resort awaits minutes away. This is Fjellverden Øst 81, a 2-bedroom log cabin with separate annex where authentic Norwegian mountain living becomes your daily reality. Nestled in the heart of Trysil's renowned outdoor playground, this 72-square-meter timber cabin embodies everything international buyers seek in a Norwegian vacation home. The main cabin and accompanying annex create a flexible mountain sanctuary where families gather after days on the slopes, where summer hikers return to crackling fires, where the rhythms of Scandinavian seasons replace the stress of urban life. The natural 1,018-square-meter plot surrounds you with indigenous vegetation, offering privacy and that essential connection to Nordic wilderness that draws so many to Norway's mountains. The traditional log construction immediately transports you to classic Norwegian cabin culture. Step through the newly heated entrance—underfloor warming installed in 2025 ensures comfort from your first moment inside—into an open-plan living area where the soapstone wood-burning stove becomes the heart of winter evenings. This isn't just heating; it's theatre, ritual, the mesmerizing dance of flames that defines cabin life. The stove's thermal mass radiates warmth long after the fire settles, creating that cocoon of comfort essential after days exploring Trysil's winter wonderland. The open kitchen and living configuration encourages the social gatherings that mak ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjellverden Øst 81! Photo: Johan Anderson for Efkt

Picture yourself on a weathered wooden terrace, morning coffee steaming in your hands as the first rays of sunlight catch the still waters of Årvågsfjorden just 100 meters below. The scent of pine and salt air mingles with woodsmoke curling from your cabin's chimney, while seabirds call across the fjord's glassy surface. This is your Norwegian escape, a 1902 farmhouse where century-old timber walls hold stories of coastal life and every window frames a masterpiece of Nordic nature. This authentic Norwegian cabin at Brekkvegen 1969 in Aure represents everything international buyers seek in a Scandinavian vacation home: genuine heritage architecture, dramatic fjordside positioning, and immediate access to Norway's legendary outdoor lifestyle. Set on 717 square meters of natural terrain at the innermost reaches of Årvågsfjorden, this three-bedroom retreat offers a rare combination of historical character and practical functionality for families seeking their Norwegian adventure basecamp. The main farmhouse, built over 120 years ago, embodies traditional Norwegian construction with its robust timber frame and simple, purposeful design that has weathered generations of coastal seasons. Unlike modern replicas, this is the genuine article, a piece of Norwegian maritime heritage where fishing families once gathered after days on the fjord. The 69 square meters of living space has been thoughtfully updated while preserving original character, creating a warm, inviting atmosphere that feels authentically Norwegian rather than artificially rustic. Your mornings here follow the rhythm of coastal Norway. Wake in one of three bedrooms as light filters through curtains, the fjord visible through wavy antique glass. Descend to the groun ... click here to read more

EiendomsMegler 1 v/ Anbjørn Ulseth presents Brekkvegen 1969. Photo: EFKT (Vilde Dahl)

Picture yourself stepping onto a sprawling 68-square-meter veranda as the morning sun filters through towering Norwegian pines, the crisp mountain air at 624 meters elevation filling your lungs while steam rises from your coffee cup. This is the daily reality awaiting you at this spacious family chalet in Fjellverden Øst, where cross-country ski trails begin at your doorstep and Skistar Trysil—Norway's largest alpine resort—sits just minutes away. This is more than a vacation home; it's your gateway to authentic Norwegian mountain living, where every season brings new adventures and treasured family memories. Nestled on 1,272 square meters of heather-covered forest land, this 123-square-meter chalet represents the perfect marriage of traditional Norwegian cabin culture and contemporary convenience. The property has been thoughtfully modernized while preserving the warm, wood-paneled authenticity that defines Norwegian hytte living. With accommodation for up to 13 guests across four bedrooms plus a private guest annex, this property transforms family gatherings and friend reunions into unforgettable mountain experiences. The Trysil region offers vacation home owners an exceptional year-round lifestyle that few European destinations can match. Winter transforms the landscape into a Nordic wonderland, with Skistar Trysil's 71 slopes and 31 lifts providing world-class alpine skiing from late November through early May. The resort caters to all skill levels, from gentle beginner slopes to challenging black runs, making it ideal for families with varying abilities. Cross-country skiing enthusiasts will find themselves in paradise, with meticulously groomed trails winding through pristine forests and across frozen lakes, acce ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjellverden Øst 49!

Picture yourself stepping off the train at Mjølfjell station, crisp mountain air filling your lungs as you walk the six minutes to your own Norwegian mountain retreat. Snow crunches underfoot in winter, wildflowers line the path in summer, and the silence is broken only by the occasional call of a ptarmigan. This is the reality of owning a vacation home at 754 meters above sea level in Voss, where Western Norway's legendary outdoor lifestyle becomes your daily experience. This well-maintained 78-square-meter chalet sits on over 1,000 square meters of freehold land in Ljosandalen, offering something increasingly rare: a mountain escape accessible by public transport yet surrounded by wilderness. Cross-country ski trails begin just 50 meters from your door. The Bergen-Oslo railway stops at your doorstep. Fishing lakes, hiking routes, and cloudberry marshes spread in every direction. This property represents the Norwegian concept of friluftsliv—the philosophy of open-air living—made accessible to international buyers seeking authentic Scandinavian mountain experiences without sacrificing modern comfort. The Voss region has built its reputation on outdoor adventure, hosting world-class skiing, kayaking, and extreme sports events that draw international attention. Yet beyond the adrenaline sports, this area offers something more profound: the opportunity to live according to Norwegian rhythms, where weekends mean ski touring in winter, berry picking in autumn, and midnight sun hikes in summer. This chalet serves as your base camp for all of it. The location in Ljosandalen positions you within the greater Voss municipality, an area experiencing growing international interest as remote work enables longer stays at vacation prop ... click here to read more

Picture 1