4-Bed Ski Chalet in Trysilfjell, 500m from Norway's Largest Alpine Resort



Trysilfjell hytteområde 479, 2420 Trysil, Trysil (Norway)
4 Bedrooms · 2 Bathrooms · 137m² Floor area
€66,370
Chalet
No parking
4 Bedrooms
2 Bathrooms
137m²
Garden
No pool
Not furnished
Description
The alarm doesn't go off on mornings like this. You wake up to silence—the deep, specific silence of a Norwegian mountain valley after fresh snowfall—and the first thing you do is step onto the south-facing terrace in your socks, coffee in hand, to check the conditions on the slopes you can see from where you're standing. That's life at Trysilfjell hytteområde 479. The cross-country trail is literally 26 meters from the front of the cabin. You're not driving to the snow. You walk into it.
This is a four-bedroom chalet sitting on a 975 square meter freehold plot in one of Norway's most established and genuinely beloved mountain communities. At 137 square meters of living space, it has the kind of footprint that actually works for a large family or a group of eight friends splitting a ski week—not cramped, not cavernous. The layout breathes. Four proper bedrooms on the ground floor, a furnished loft with its own sleeping space and lounge corner above, and 96 square meters of terrace wrapping the south and west elevations. In January, that terrace catches every last minute of the low Nordic sun. In July, it's where dinner happens every single night.
Trysil itself deserves more credit than it typically gets in international ski property conversations. Skistar Trysil is Norway's largest alpine resort—47 runs, 31 lifts, 65 kilometers of alpine terrain—and the cabin sits 500 meters from the lift system. Not 500 meters from the car park, 500 meters from the slopes. On a powder morning, that difference is everything. The resort has invested heavily in snowmaking and infrastructure over the past decade, making it a reliable destination from late November through mid-April. When the season is good, which in Trysil it often is at altitude, you're looking at five months of skiing from your front garden.
Summer is where people are sometimes surprised. The same trail network that carries 251 kilometers of groomed cross-country skiing in winter becomes one of the most extensive mountain biking and hiking systems in Scandinavia. The Trysil Bike Arena has built a serious reputation among European mountain bikers, with trails graded from family-friendly forest paths to technical descents that attract riders from across the continent. Fishing on the Trysilelva river runs from May through September—brown trout and grayling, mostly, and the stretches near the valley floor are genuinely productive. There's an 18-hole golf course at Trysil Golf Club, about ten minutes down the valley road, and the summer green fees are reasonable compared to anything comparable in Scandinavia.
Back inside the cabin, the kitchen renovation in 2021 made a real difference to how the space functions. Induction cooktop, integrated oven, dishwasher, and a bar counter that runs along the partition between the kitchen and living area—so the cook isn't isolated from whoever's pouring wine or watching the kids by the fireplace. The fireplace itself has a stone surround and anchors the main living space in the way that only a proper wood-burning hearth can. After a January day on the slopes, you want that, not an electric heater pretending to be atmospheric.
Both bathrooms have tiled underfloor heating and walk-in showers with glass enclosures—the kind of finish that makes returning from outdoor activity actually pleasant rather than just functional. The entrance hallway also has underfloor heating, which matters more than people realize until they've spent a week pulling on wet ski boots in a cold corridor. There's a wardrobe and drying room adjacent to the entrance, plus a dedicated sauna room that earns its keep on every single winter visit. An external storage room handles skis, bikes, and all the kit that accumulates when you actually use a property for what it's designed for.
The plot slopes gently and faces east across a natural, largely uncleared site, giving the cabin genuine privacy from neighboring properties. The terrace—partially covered so it's usable even in variable weather—wraps the south and west faces and has room for a proper outdoor dining setup, sun loungers, and still space to let kids run. Year-round road access means this isn't a seasonal property you can only reach in good conditions. Private parking at the cabin. Public water and sewage connected. The practical considerations are handled.
For international buyers considering Norwegian mountain property, a few things worth knowing. Freehold land ownership (eiendomsrett) is available to foreign nationals in Norway without restriction. The Trysil area sits roughly three hours by road from Oslo Gardermoen Airport—a drive that's manageable and, frankly, part of the experience as you watch the landscape shift from lowland farms to forested valleys to mountain terrain. Scandinavian Airlines and Norwegian both serve Gardermoen from most major European hubs, meaning a Friday evening flight from London, Amsterdam, or Berlin gets you on the slopes Saturday morning.
Rental potential in Trysil is genuine and well-documented. Peak ski weeks—particularly Norwegian school holidays in February and Easter—command strong nightly rates, and the cabin's size, terrace, sauna, and proximity to both the alpine resort and cross-country network put it in the top tier of the local rental inventory. A well-managed property of this type can cover its annual running costs from a handful of peak-season bookings, with the rest of the year effectively free for personal use.
The condition is good throughout. This isn't a renovation project or a compromise. It's a properly equipped, well-maintained mountain chalet that's ready to use from the moment you take ownership.
Key features at a glance:
- 4 bedrooms plus furnished loft with additional sleeping space and lounge
- 2 bathrooms with tiled underfloor heating and walk-in showers
- 137 sqm interior on a 975 sqm freehold plot
- 96 sqm south and west-facing terrace, partially covered
- 26 meters to the nearest cross-country ski trail (251 km of groomed network)
- 500 meters to Skistar Trysil alpine resort, Norway's largest ski area
- Kitchen fully renovated in 2021 with integrated appliances and bar counter
- Wood-burning fireplace with stone surround in main living area
- Sauna room and wardrobe/drying room
- Underfloor heating in entrance hall and bathrooms
- External ski and equipment storage room
- Year-round road access and private parking
- Public water and sewage connected
- Strong rental income potential during Norwegian ski season
- Freehold ownership, accessible to international buyers without restriction
If you've been considering a Norwegian mountain property and keep telling yourself you'll look into it properly next season, this is the one that makes next season this season. Reach out through Homestra to arrange a viewing or request the full prospectus—properties at this location and price point in Trysilfjell don't wait long.
Details
- Amount of bedrooms
- 4
- Size
- 137m²
- Price per m²
- €484
- Garden size
- 975m²
- 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
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