3-Bed Mountain Chalet in Trysil with Sauna, Fireplace & 65m² Terrace | Ski Slopes 300m Away



Trysilfjell hytteområde 537, 2420 Trysil, Norway, Trysil (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 90m² Floor area
€480,000
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
90m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Picture this: it's 7am on a February morning, the kind where the cold outside is almost theatrical. You pull on your ski boots at the front door, step onto the snow-packed path, and within four minutes you're on a groomed cross-country trail that cuts through pine forest so quiet the only sound is the hiss of your skis and your own breathing. That's not a fantasy. That's a Tuesday at Trysilfjell Hytteområde 537.
Trysil is Norway's largest ski resort, and this chalet sits inside the Trysilfjellet cabin area at roughly 643 meters above sea level — high enough that the snow arrives early in November and sticks around well into April. The alpine slopes of Trysil Alpinsenter are just 300 meters from the front door. The ski bus stops directly outside, which means you can send the kids off to ski school independently, or pile onto it yourself after a long morning on the mountain without ever worrying about parking. Cross-country trails? Less than 100 meters away, freshly groomed most mornings throughout the winter season.
After a full day outdoors — whether that's carving runs on Heistoppen, taking the long Nordic loop through Søndre Trysil, or simply building a snow fort with children — you come home to a fireplace insert that throws serious heat into the open-plan living and kitchen space. The layout here is genuinely social. No awkward wall separating whoever's cooking from the rest of the group. The kitchen has wooden-front cabinetry, laminated worktops, and a proper extraction hood over the stove — functional without being clinical. Someone fries reindeer sausages while others peel off their base layers and argue about who had the better fall on the black run. This is exactly the kind of room that holds those memories.
Then there's the sauna. Fitted with an electric Jukka oven and underfloor heating, it sits just off the bathroom on the ground floor. In Norway, the post-sauna routine is practically a religion — heat up, then step outside into the cold air or a patch of clean snow. At this elevation, in this landscape, that ritual takes on a different weight. It stops being a luxury and starts feeling like something you genuinely need after a day at altitude.
The chalet spans 90 square meters of interior space across two levels, with three bedrooms on the ground floor and a 29-square-meter loft — what Norwegians call a hems — above. One ground-floor room has a double bed with solid storage; the other two have bunk beds, which are exactly the right call for a mountain cabin where you want to sleep as many people as comfortably as possible. The loft currently works as a TV lounge and has two separate rooms for additional sleeping, with an open section that looks down over the living room below. That physical connection between levels keeps the cabin from ever feeling broken up into isolated spaces.
The bathroom is modern and practical — tiled floors, electric underfloor heating, a glass-door shower, and good mechanical ventilation. The technical room houses a hot water heater replaced in 2020, a stopcock, and the fuse box. A 7-square-meter external storage room off the covered entrance handles the ski and bike equipment that accumulates over a season.
That terrace deserves its own moment. Sixty-five square meters, partially covered, facing south and east. In late June, Trysil gets over 18 hours of daylight, and this terrace catches the morning sun from around 6am. Summer here is a different world entirely — the Trysil Bike Arena is one of the best trail systems in Scandinavia, with over 100 kilometers of marked mountain biking routes graded for every level. The Trysilelva river runs through the valley below, offering kayaking, fishing for brown trout, and long riverside walks. The Trysil Golf Club operates one of Norway's highest-altitude courses, about a 15-minute drive away. From this terrace, through binoculars on a clear July evening, you can watch the shadow of Trysilfjellet mountain roll slowly east as the sun dips and barely sets.
The property sits on a 903-square-meter freehold plot — not leasehold, which matters considerably for international buyers. Norway has straightforward property ownership laws for EU and EEA citizens, and for buyers from further afield, the process is still manageable with proper legal guidance; a Norwegian property lawyer typically handles the conveyancing cleanly and efficiently. The Trysil cabin market has shown consistent demand, with winter rental weeks commanding strong rates, particularly over the Norwegian school holidays in February (vinterferie) and Easter. A well-managed cabin at this location can generate meaningful rental income during the 14-week high season alone, making this a practical second home investment as much as a personal retreat.
A grocery store is an 8-minute drive; the larger shopping center at Trysil Senter takes 11 minutes. The nearest city is Elverum, about an hour south, and Oslo is roughly three hours by car via the E6 and Route 25 — manageable for a Friday evening departure. Scandinavian Airlines and Norwegian Air both serve Oslo Gardermoen from major European hubs, making this accessible for buyers coming from the UK, Germany, the Netherlands, or elsewhere in Europe.
The cabin is in good condition and move-in ready. Nothing needs doing before your first winter season.
Key features at a glance:
- 3 bedrooms on ground floor plus a 29m² loft with 2 additional sleeping areas
- Alpine ski slopes 300 meters away; cross-country trails under 100 meters from the door
- Ski bus stop directly outside the property
- Private sauna with electric Jukka oven and underfloor heating
- Fireplace insert in open-plan living and kitchen space
- 65m² partially covered south/east-facing terrace
- Freehold plot of 903m²
- Modern bathroom with tiled floors and electric underfloor heating
- Hot water heater replaced in 2020
- 7m² external equipment storage room
- Situated at approximately 643 meters above sea level
- Summer access to Trysil Bike Arena, river fishing, hiking, and golf
- Grocery store 8 minutes by car; Oslo Gardermoen airport approximately 3 hours
If you've been looking for a vacation home in Norway that earns its keep both in winter and summer, this chalet in Trysil is one worth taking seriously. Reach out through Homestra today to arrange a viewing or request a full information pack — properties at this location and price point move quickly, especially heading into the autumn before ski season kicks off.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 90m²
- Price per m²
- €5,333
- Garden size
- 903m²
- 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
Images






Sign up to access location details



































