3-Bed Norwegian Chalet with Sea Views & Boat Launch Rights – Holiday Home in Bangsund



Selnesvegen 336, 7822 Bangsund, Bangsund (Norway)
3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 111m² Floor area
€149,000
Chalet
No parking
3 Bedrooms
1 Bathrooms
111m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
Picture this: it's midsummer in Trøndelag, and you're sitting on a 103-square-metre terrace with a coffee going cold in your hand because the view over Selnesvika keeps pulling your eyes north. The light here doesn't really set in June — it just softens into this amber haze that sits over the water for hours. That's the kind of evening this chalet was built for.
Set along Selnesvegen in Bangsund, roughly 15 kilometres from the centre of Namsos, this 111-square-metre traditional Norwegian cabin has been standing since 2004 and sits on a 1,174-square-metre private plot accessed by its own driveway. No hiking gear required to reach the front door — the car goes all the way up, winter included. That detail matters more than you'd think when you're arriving in late October with a week's worth of bags and the temperature dropping.
The chalet covers two floors. Downstairs, a generous living room runs the social heart of the place, with traditional cabin finishes, a sleeping alcove tucked into the wall — the kind that kids claim immediately and adults secretly want — and large windows that let the surrounding woodland push its way inside without actually letting in the cold. The kitchen carries the same honest aesthetic: lacquered pine fronts, solid worktops, enough counter space to actually cook a proper meal rather than just heat one up. The bathroom doubles as a laundry room and handles everything a full-time rotating group of guests needs.
Upstairs in the loft, three bedrooms and a separate loft sitting room spread across the top floor. The sitting room is genuinely useful — it becomes a film room, a rainy-day board game corner, a teenager's escape hatch, depending on who you bring. Each bedroom is quiet and practical. Nobody's uncomfortable here.
Heating comes from three sources: a heat pump, electric panels, and a wood-burning stove. That last one changes the atmosphere entirely on a November evening. The stove isn't decorative — it's the reason you can extend your season well past what most people expect from a Norwegian cabin at this latitude. Connected to the public water supply and serviced by a private septic system with municipal emptying, the property handles modern needs without fuss. A practical outbuilding added around 2013–2014 takes care of storage, equipment, or whatever project you bring with you.
Then there's the registered boat launch right. That's not a minor detail up here. Selnesvika opens onto the broader Namsfjorden system, and having legal access to put a boat in the water from your own property means you're into the fjord on your own schedule. The fishing in these waters — cod, sea trout, the occasional halibut further out — draws people from across Norway every summer. You won't need to queue at a public ramp or coordinate with a marina.
Namsos itself is a proper mid-sized Norwegian town. The Tuesday and Saturday markets at the town centre run through summer; the shops along Øvre Elvegate cover everything from fresh bakeries to outdoor kit. The Namdal Museum is worth an afternoon if Nordic cultural history does anything for you, and the Rock City museum — Namsos has an unexpectedly serious claim to Norwegian rock music history — makes for a genuinely surprising evening out. For food, Vertshuset Namsos serves solid local fare with excellent grilled fish and regional lamb dishes.
The landscape around Bangsund shifts dramatically with the seasons. In July, the trails above Selnes carry you through birch forest with the fjord flickering through the trees below. Come October, the whole hillside turns — rust and orange against pewter water. Snowshoe walking in January on the quieter trails near Klinga is the kind of activity that sounds modest until you're out there and realise you haven't looked at your phone in four hours. The Namsenelva river, one of Norway's most celebrated salmon rivers, is less than 30 minutes away; a season permit opens up some of the best Atlantic salmon fishing in Europe.
Practical matters for international buyers: Norway operates outside the EU but EEA membership means ownership rights for European citizens are broadly straightforward. Property taxes are modest by European standards. The chalet is move-in ready — no renovation budget required, no project to manage from a distance. Short-term rental of Norwegian holiday cabins is a well-established market, and properties with car access, boat rights, and sea views in the Namsos area consistently attract bookings from Norwegian families and fishing tourists from across Scandinavia from May through September. The €149,000 price point is realistic for this region and this specification.
Trondheim Airport Værnes, the main regional hub, sits roughly 150 kilometres south — around 90 minutes by road. Namsos Airport handles domestic connections to Oslo Gardermoen with multiple flights daily, making this reachable on a Friday evening from most European capitals via a same-day connection.
Key features at a glance:
- 3-bedroom Norwegian cabin with loft sitting room, built 2004
- 111 sqm indoor living area across two floors, 126 sqm total usable area
- 1,174 sqm private plot with full car access to the cabin
- 103 sqm terrace and balcony space with northern sea views over Selnesvika
- Registered rights for boat launch access to the fjord
- Triple heating: heat pump, electric panels, and wood-burning stove
- Connected to municipal water supply; private septic with municipal emptying
- Practical outbuilding (built c. 2013–2014) for storage and equipment
- 15 km from Namsos town centre and all urban amenities
- Near Namsenelva, one of Norway's premier Atlantic salmon rivers
- Within easy reach of fjord fishing, coastal hiking, and snowshoe trails
- Move-in ready condition — no renovation required
- Strong short-term rental appeal for the Norwegian and Scandinavian market
- Accessible via Namsos Airport with daily Oslo connections
- Asking price €149,000
If you've been thinking about a second home in Scandinavia — somewhere that actually delivers on the outdoor lifestyle promise rather than just hinting at it — this chalet at Selnesvegen 336 is worth a serious look. Reach out through Homestra to arrange a viewing or request the full property documentation. The summer booking season fills quickly, and this one won't sit around.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 3
- Size
- 111m²
- Price per m²
- €1,342
- Garden size
- 1174m²
- 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


































