3-Bed Fjordside Chalet on Løvtangen Peninsula – Holiday Home with Direct Water Access



Løvtangenvegen 44, 7632 Åsenfjord, Åsenfjord (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 83m² Floor area
€221,239
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
2 Bathrooms
83m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Stand on the rear terrace at seven in the morning, coffee in hand, and the Åsenfjord is already doing something extraordinary. The light comes low and sharp off the water, cutting between the forested hills on the opposite shore, and the only sound is the occasional creak of a boat rope from the shared dock below. That's 46 meters from your front door to the water's edge. Not a short walk to the beach. Forty-six meters.
Løvtangenvegen 44 sits on the Løvtangen peninsula in Åsenfjord, a finger of land that juts into one of Trøndelag's most quietly spectacular stretches of water, roughly 35 kilometers northeast of Trondheim. This is a genuine Norwegian leisure property — the kind families hold onto for generations — and it's landed on the market in solid condition, priced for someone who knows what they're looking at.
The chalet itself was first built in 1965, then extended and modernised over the years, arriving at its current form with 83 square meters of interior space split across a main building and a self-contained annex. The exterior is a mix of vertical timber cladding and horizontal paneling, unpretentious and completely at home against the green hillside backdrop. First impressions matter, and the landscaped entrance path, sheltered by mature trees, sets a tone that the rest of the property delivers on.
Outside, the layout is clever. Multiple terraces are positioned around the building so that at almost any hour, regardless of where the sun is sitting, there's somewhere to be. The covered entrance terrace has an outdoor fireplace — and anyone who's sat around an open fire on a cool Norwegian September evening watching the last of the light leave the fjord will understand immediately why this matters. The rear terrace faces the garden and the open water, which makes it the obvious spot for long dinners that start at eight and somehow end at midnight.
Inside, the living room and kitchen share an open-plan space anchored by a centrally placed fireplace and a wood-burning stove. In mid-January, when the temperature outside is hovering around minus ten and the snow has settled thick on the peninsula, this room is exactly where you want to be. Large windows frame the fjord on two sides, so even on short winter days the interior stays connected to the landscape outside. A heat pump has been added for efficient background warmth, which any international buyer should note as a practical plus for a property you may not be heating continuously throughout the year.
The kitchen has profiled cabinetry, a laminate countertop, and integrated appliances including a fridge, with provision already in place for a dishwasher. It works. It's not a showroom kitchen, but it's functional and well-considered, and the separate dining area means there's genuine space for a table that seats the whole family.
Three bedrooms offer flexibility for different configurations. One fits a bunk bed and looks out over the garden — obvious children's room, zero arguments about who gets it. Another is spacious enough for a double and dedicated storage. The master wakes you up with fjord views, which is a significantly better alarm clock than anything battery-powered. The annex, added in 1995 and finished with tiled floors and walls, functions as a self-contained unit with its own bedroom, shower room, and entrance. For guests who want a bit of distance, for older teenagers, or for generating rental income when you're not using the property yourself, it's a genuinely useful addition.
A freestanding storage shed handles all the gear that fjord living accumulates — kayaks, fishing equipment, waders, hiking poles. And there's a dedicated boat space, because of course there is. You don't buy a property 46 meters from the Åsenfjord and not have somewhere to keep a boat.
Now, the area. Åsenfjord and the Frosta peninsula sit within the broader Stjørdal and Levanger region of Trøndelag, a part of Norway that international buyers haven't yet discovered the way they have Hardangerfjord or the Lofoten Islands — which is partly what makes it interesting from an investment standpoint. Trondheim Airport at Værnes is about 40 kilometers away, with direct connections to Oslo, Bergen, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, and London Heathrow. That's a two-hour door-to-door from central London to standing on this terrace. It's doable as a long weekend.
The fjord itself is swimmable from June through August, with water temperatures that regularly reach 18 to 20 degrees Celsius in peak summer. Kayaking the coastline of the Løvtangen peninsula is an afternoon well spent — the shoreline is broken and interesting, with small coves and rocky outcrops that the kayak gets into and the motorboat doesn't. Fishing for sea trout and mackerel is genuinely productive here, not just a romantic notion. Come September, the hillsides behind Frosta turn amber and the hiking trails through Frosta's agricultural landscape — one of the most fertile areas in Trøndelag, famous for its garlic and early potatoes — are at their best. The Frosta Garlic Festival in August draws visitors from across the region and gives you a real sense of how seriously this community takes its food culture.
In winter, cross-country skiing trails open up around the broader Levanger and Stjørdal municipalities, and the indoor saltwater swimming pool at Levanger is a ten-minute drive for days when the weather closes in. Trondheim itself — with Nidaros Cathedral, Bakklandet's coffee shops and riverside restaurants, the Rockheim music museum, and the Saturday market at Nedre Elvehavn — is a 40-minute drive and always worth it.
For international buyers, Norway operates a relatively transparent property purchase process, with title transfers handled through the Norwegian Land Registry. Non-residents can purchase leisure property in Norway without restriction. It's worth consulting a Norwegian property lawyer on tax residency implications and the rules around short-term rental, though properties like this one have historically been used as personal holiday homes rather than managed rental assets.
What this property represents, practically, is a ready-to-use Norwegian holiday home in good condition, in a location that is genuinely hard to fault for anyone who wants direct water access, fjord scenery, and the kind of quiet that cities simply cannot replicate.
Key features at a glance:
- 83 sqm chalet on the Løvtangen peninsula, Åsenfjord, Norway
- 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms across main building and self-contained annex
- 46 meters from the water's edge with dedicated boat space
- Multiple terraces including covered entrance terrace with outdoor fireplace
- Open-plan living room and kitchen with fjord-facing windows
- Wood-burning stove, central fireplace, and heat pump installed
- Self-contained annex with private shower room — ideal for guests or rental
- Freestanding storage shed for outdoor equipment
- Original 1965 build with extensions and modernisation in good condition
- Frosta Golf Club a short drive away
- 35km from Trondheim city centre; 40km from Trondheim Airport Værnes
- Kayaking, fishing, swimming, and hiking directly accessible
- Strong year-round seasonal appeal: summer fjord life and winter Nordic landscape
- No restrictions on non-resident purchase of Norwegian leisure property
Properties on the Løvtangen peninsula with direct water access and an annex at this price point don't sit on the market. If you want to understand what life here actually looks like across a full year — the June evenings when it barely gets dark, the September light on the water, the silence of a February morning after fresh snow — get in touch with the team at Homestra and book a viewing. Come and stand on that rear terrace. The fjord will do the rest of the talking.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 83m²
- Price per m²
- €2,666
- Garden size
- 0m²
- Has Garden
- Yes
- Has Parking
- No
- Has Basement
- No
- Condition
- good
- Amount of Bathrooms
- 2
- Has swimming pool
- No
- Property type
- Chalet
- Energy label
Unknown
Images






Sign up to access location details


































