2-Bed Waterfront Chalet with Boathouse & Private Shoreline — Inderøy Fjord Holiday Home



Seiskjærvegen 14, 7670 Inderøy, Inderøy (Norway)
2 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 55m² Floor area
€420,000
Chalet
No parking
2 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
55m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Stand on the terrace at Seiskjærvegen 14 on a mid-July morning and the only sounds are water lapping against the boathouse hull, the distant cry of a tern, and the faint creak of a neighbor's rowing boat somewhere out on the Borgenfjorden. The fjord stretches wide and silver in front of you. Coffee in hand, you are not on a weekend trip. This is yours.
Inderøy sits in the Trøndelag region of central Norway, roughly 100 kilometers northeast of Trondheim, and it is the kind of place that serious Norway enthusiasts know about but rarely manage to secure a foothold in. The Stornes peninsula, where this chalet sits on its own small promontory, is especially tight-knit—a scatter of traditional Norwegian coastal properties, low hedgerows, and direct water access. Properties here change hands infrequently and, when they do, tend to go to people who already know the area. This is a real chance to get in.
The cabin itself was built in 1982 and has been kept in genuinely good condition over the decades—not just patched up, but properly maintained and incrementally improved. At 55 square meters of internal living space, it is compact but not cramped. The living room pulls the weight here. Large windows face the fjord, meaning the room is bright through most of the day, and in the long Nordic summer the afternoon light has a particular gold quality that turns the interior almost amber. A fireplace anchors one wall, and a modern heat pump handles the cooler shoulder months without fuss. You can run this place from late spring through early autumn comfortably, and with the heat pump doing its job, even October weekends become viable.
The kitchen runs white profiled cabinet fronts with under-cabinet lighting—clean, practical, and easier to keep clean after a day of fish prep than anything fussy would be. There is a dining area directly adjacent, which is the natural place for a group of four to debrief after a day out on the water before moving to the terrace with a bottle of something cold.
Two bedrooms cover the basics well. The master takes a double bed and has room for a small wardrobe and side tables, while the second bedroom suits two singles—exactly the configuration families with kids or adults bringing a friend tend to need. The bathroom has underfloor heating, a wall-mounted toilet, and plumbing already in for a washing machine, which sounds mundane until you are three days into a week-long stay and suddenly it matters enormously.
Now for what makes this property genuinely unusual. The total usable area across the plot is 88 square meters when you account for the grill cabin at 10 square meters and the naust—the boathouse—at 20 square meters. Then add 39 square meters of terrace. That is a lot of living spread across a 1,337-square-meter owned plot that runs directly to the water's edge. The naust is the centerpiece of the outdoor setup: solid, practical, with an outdoor kitchen inside for processing whatever you haul in from the fjord. There is also a smokehouse on the plot—a detail that tells you something about how previous owners have used this place, and the kind of evenings you can have here smoking mackerel or trout with cold beers and people you actually like.
The grill cabin acts as the social hub when the weather turns unpredictable, which in Trøndelag it eventually will. Timber-built, separate from the main cabin, it gives you a covered communal space for long evenings that would otherwise be cut short by rain. The terraces wrapping the main façade add another 39 square meters of outdoor space—enough for sun loungers, a proper outdoor dining table, and still leaving room to move around without bumping into each other.
Skjelvågen guest harbor is 800 meters away, which is a 10-minute walk or a short rowing trip, and it opens up the entire archipelago of the inner Trondheimsfjord to exploration. The fishing in this stretch of water is serious—cod, coalfish, mackerel in season—and you do not need to go far from the private shoreline to find them. For hiking, the Inderøy municipality maintains marked trails through the surrounding farmland and along the fjord edge; the Hylla ridge path offers elevated views back over the Borgenfjorden that reward the climb.
The town of Straumen, Inderøy's modest commercial hub, is three minutes by car and has a well-stocked grocery store, a local café, and the Inderøy distillery—worth knowing about because their aquavit and gin have developed a genuine following, and the distillery itself does tastings and tours. The Inderøy cultural trail, known locally as Den Gyldne Omvei, connects over 20 art galleries, farm shops, and artisan producers around the municipality. On a slow Sunday in August you can eat fresh waffles at a farm café, pick up hand-thrown ceramics, and be back at the terrace before the afternoon sun shifts. This is the texture of life here, and it is distinctly different from anything you get at the more famous Norwegian tourist destinations further north.
Trondheim, with its medieval Nidaros Cathedral, the Bakklandet district's coffee shops and restaurants, and a proper international airport served by SAS and Norwegian among others, is about 90 minutes by car or accessible by regional bus from the stop five minutes from the property. For European buyers, Trondheim Airport Værnes connects to Oslo Gardermoen with multiple daily flights, and from there the network opens to most major European hubs. It is not a front-door commute, but it is manageable—the kind of journey that becomes a ritual rather than a chore.
Practically speaking, this property is move-in ready. Public water and sewage are connected. Electricity is installed. There is private parking on the driveway. For international buyers unfamiliar with Norwegian leisure property (fritidsbolig) ownership, the legal framework is straightforward—foreigners can purchase recreational property in Norway without restriction, and there is no mandatory residency tied to the ownership. Norwegian property taxes on leisure homes are low relative to most European markets, and rental income from short-term holiday letting—platforms like Finn.no and Airbnb both operate here—can offset running costs substantially. Properties with direct water access and a boathouse in Trøndelag hold their value well; the supply of waterfront plots with this kind of infrastructure simply does not grow.
Key features at a glance:
- 2-bedroom waterfront chalet with direct private shoreline access on the Borgenfjorden
- Traditional Norwegian boathouse (naust) with outdoor kitchen, ideal for fishing, kayaking, and boat storage
- Separate grill cabin (grillhytte) for year-round outdoor entertaining regardless of weather
- Smokehouse on plot — a rare addition for authentic coastal living
- 39 sqm of terraces wrapping the main façade with open fjord views
- Modern heat pump plus fireplace for comfort across multiple seasons
- Bathroom with underfloor heating and washing machine plumbing
- 1,337 sqm of owned freehold land on a sheltered promontory
- Public water, sewage, and electricity fully connected
- 800m from Skjelvågen guest harbor with mooring options
- 3-minute drive to Straumen grocery, 13 minutes to full shopping center
- 90 minutes from Trondheim and Trondheim Airport Værnes
- No restrictions on foreign ownership of Norwegian leisure property
- Strong short-term rental potential in a low-supply waterfront market
- Located on Den Gyldne Omvei cultural trail with farm shops, galleries, and the Inderøy distillery nearby
There are not many vacation homes in Norway where you get owned waterfront land, a working boathouse, a smokehouse, and a separate social cabin at this price point. The fjord market in Trøndelag has been attracting more attention from Scandinavian and international second-home buyers over the last several years, and places like this—practical, private, and genuinely on the water—are becoming harder to find at any price.
To arrange a viewing or get more information about purchasing this Inderøy fjord holiday home through Homestra, get in touch today. Properties on the Stornes promontory rarely come available twice.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 2
- Size
- 55m²
- Price per m²
- €7,636
- Garden size
- 1337m²
- 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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