2-Bed Norwegian Chalet 200m from the Sea | South Terrace & Annex | Oksvoll Holiday Home



Risvikstien 6, 7165 Oksvoll, Norway, Oksvoll (Norway)
2 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 44m² Floor area
€97,400
Chalet
No parking
2 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
44m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Stand on the south-facing terrace at Risvikstien 6 on a July evening and you'll understand immediately why people come to this stretch of the Trøndelag coast and never quite manage to leave. The light at that hour is extraordinary — low, golden, pulling long shadows across the water — and from up here, with the Fosen peninsula spread out below you, the noise of the world feels very far away. That terrace, built in 2020 and generously proportioned at 66 square meters, is honestly the heart of this property. You'll eat breakfast out there. You'll lose track of time out there. That's the point.
This is a two-bedroom holiday chalet at Risvikstien 6 in Oksvoll, a quiet coastal settlement in the municipality of Ørland, Trøndelag. The main cabin covers 44 square meters — compact, yes, but thoughtfully laid out with a living room, kitchen, bathroom, and two bedrooms that sleep up to six comfortably. An 11-square-meter annex sits separately on the 715-square-meter plot, which gives the whole place a flexibility that a single structure never could. Guests get their own space. Kids get their hideaway. You get the cabin to yourselves.
The sea is 200 meters away. Not a figure of speech. Two hundred meters down the lane and you're at the water's edge.
Oksvoll sits on the southern tip of Fosen, a broad peninsula that juts into the Trondheim Fjord between the open sea and sheltered inner waters. This geography matters enormously for how you'll actually use the place. The coastline here is a mix of smooth rock shelves worn flat by millennia of tide and small sandy inlets that warm up quickly in June. Local families have been swimming off these rocks since before anyone can remember. You'll find yourself doing the same within about forty-eight hours of arriving. The fishing is serious too — sea trout, cod, and mackerel within easy reach by small boat, and the local habit of pulling up crab pots in the morning and eating them the same evening is one you'll adopt without much persuasion.
Ørland, the nearest town of any size, is about twenty-two minutes by car and has a proper shopping center, pharmacies, and the kind of grocery selection that makes a full week's stay genuinely easy. Day to day, though, a supermarket just eight minutes away handles everything you need. The ferry terminal at Brekstad, five minutes from the property, connects Fosen to Trondheim in roughly fifty minutes — making this cabin far more accessible than its seclusion might suggest. Trondheim itself, Norway's third city, is worth the crossing. The medieval Nidaros Cathedral on Bispegata, the Solsiden waterfront with its Friday fish market, the old Nedre Elvehavn wharf district full of good restaurants — these are weekend excursions you'll actually do, not just plan to do.
Trøndelag has a food culture that has been getting serious international attention. The region's chefs have built their reputations on hyper-local sourcing — Røros butter, fjord shrimp, lamb from coastal meadows, wild mushrooms from the pine forests inland. In Brekstad you'll find a local bakery where the Wednesday-morning kanelboller are worth setting an alarm for. It sounds like a small thing. It becomes a ritual.
Summer here runs from late May through August, with long light-filled days that stretch past ten o'clock at night. July regularly sees temperatures in the high teens and occasional low twenties, and the south-facing orientation of the cabin and terrace means you capture every hour of it. Autumn brings its own rewards: clear skies, the hillsides shifting through orange and copper, fewer people on the trails. The hiking around Fosen is genuine and varied — the coastal path toward Austrått offers a rewarding half-day loop with views back across Ørlandsfjorden, and the Austrått Fort, a Second World War naval installation with a preserved 28cm gun turret, sits right on the headland and is one of the more unexpectedly fascinating historical sites in central Norway. Winter visits are quieter and colder, obviously, but the cabin is connected to the mains — electricity, running water, and sewage were all properly installed in 2014 — so staying warm is not a project.
The structure itself is in good condition. The roof was replaced in 1995, the terrace is five years old, and the utility connections are modern and reliable. There's an attached 4-square-meter outdoor storage room for boots, fishing gear, and wet weather kit, plus a separate 8-square-meter outbuilding for larger equipment. The property sits on a freehold plot — privately owned land, which matters practically and psychologically when you're thinking about this as a long-term investment.
For international buyers, Norway's vacation property market on the Trøndelag coast represents genuine value at this price point. Properties with sea proximity, private land, and full utility connections in this region have seen consistent demand, driven partly by domestic buyers from Trondheim seeking accessible second homes and partly by international buyers drawn to the uncrowded coastline and clean-air lifestyle that is increasingly hard to find in Western Europe. The legal framework for foreign nationals purchasing Norwegian property is straightforward, and the country's stable political and economic environment makes it a low-risk addition to any cross-border property portfolio. Rental demand in the summer months is strong, with Fosen attracting kayakers, cyclists, and families specifically looking for coastal cabin experiences.
Key features of this Oksvoll holiday home:
- 44 sqm main chalet with 2 bedrooms, living room, kitchen, and bathroom
- 66 sqm south-facing terrace built in 2020, with open sea views
- 11 sqm separate annex for guests or additional use
- 8 sqm outbuilding plus 4 sqm attached outdoor storage room
- 715 sqm privately owned freehold plot
- Electricity, mains water, and sewage connected since 2014
- 200 meters to the sea and coastal swimming rocks
- Ferry terminal to Trondheim (50 min crossing) just 5 minutes away
- Grocery store 8 minutes by car; shopping center 22 minutes
- Austrått Fort and coastal hiking trails within easy reach
- Trondheim city accessible for day and weekend excursions
- Solid condition with roof replaced in 1995 and recent terrace upgrade
- Strong summer rental demand from Trondheim-area and Scandinavian visitors
- Freehold land ownership — clean, straightforward title
At 97,400 euros, this is a rare chance to own a piece of the Norwegian coast without the price tag that typically comes with fjordside properties further south. The combination of sea access, private land, modern utilities, and genuine seclusion within reach of a major city is not something that comes up often at this level.
Get in touch through Homestra today to request the full property details, arrange a viewing, or ask about the practicalities of purchasing as an international buyer. Properties like this one move quietly and quickly in the Norwegian second-home market — it's worth making the call sooner rather than later.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 2
- Size
- 44m²
- Price per m²
- €2,214
- Garden size
- 715m²
- Has Garden
- Yes
- Has Parking
- No
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 1
- Has swimming pool
- No
- Property type
- Chalet
- Energy label
Unknown
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