Coastal Chalet with Marina Berth & Expansive Outdoor Space in Byrknesøy

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-fbd56d7f-df7a-446d-bed8-e899e1ee1154-1745515875.jpg

Olsvågen 54, 5970 Byrknesøy, Norway, Byrknesøy (Norway)

2 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 91Floor area

€211,500

Chalet

No parking

2 Bedrooms

1 Bathrooms

91m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled in the picturesque coastal enclave of Byrknesøy, Norway, this charming chalet at Olsvågen 54 offers a unique blend of tranquility and adventure. With its prime location, this property is a haven for those seeking a serene retreat by the sea, yet it remains within easy reach of vibrant local culture and activities.

Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp Norwegian air filling your lungs as you step out onto your sun-drenched terrace. This chalet, built in 2005, is perfectly positioned to capture sunlight from dawn till dusk, making it an ideal spot for morning coffees or evening gatherings under the stars.

A Home Designed for Comfort and Flexibility

The chalet's interior is thoughtfully designed to accommodate up to 12 guests, making it perfect for large families or groups of friends. The main floor features a spacious living room and kitchen area, two cozy bedrooms, an entrance hall, and a well-appointed bathroom. A practical storage/laundry room on the ground floor ensures you have ample space for all your needs, whether it's storing beach gear or handling laundry after a day of adventure.

Upstairs, the loft is cleverly utilized as a lounge area with an alcove and an additional bedroom, offering flexible sleeping arrangements and a cozy space for children or guests. An external storage room is also available, ideal for keeping outdoor gear, bicycles, or fishing equipment safe and organized.

Outdoor Living at Its Best

The property sits on a generous 1,227 square meter freehold plot, providing plenty of outdoor space for children to play, gardening, or simply enjoying the peaceful natural surroundings. The garden and outdoor areas are well-maintained, and the property includes a private parking area, ensuring convenient access for residents and visitors alike.

One of the standout features of this property is the included marina berth, allowing you to keep your boat close at hand and ready for spontaneous trips on the fjord. The area is renowned for its excellent fishing and swimming opportunities, as well as marked hiking trails that invite you to explore the beautiful coastal landscape.

A Lifestyle Rich in Culture and Nature

Living in Byrknesøy offers a unique lifestyle that combines the best of both worlds. The charming village of Skjerjehamn is nearby, offering dining options, a guest harbor, and hosting the annual UTKANT festival, a popular cultural event in the region. The local Joker convenience store in Byrknes is just a 5-minute drive away, ensuring that daily necessities are always within easy reach.

For more extensive shopping or services, Sløvåg is a 25-minute drive from the property. The location is also conveniently less than two hours by car from Bergen, making it accessible for weekend getaways or longer stays.

Public transportation is available, with a bus stop approximately 10 minutes away, and the property is only about 100 meters from the sea, providing easy access to the water for swimming, boating, or fishing. The surrounding area is characterized by its natural beauty, with opportunities for hiking, wildlife observation, and enjoying the serene coastal environment.

Key Features and Amenities:

- 91 square meters of living space
- 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom
- Spacious living room and kitchen area
- Loft with lounge area and additional bedroom
- Practical storage/laundry room
- External storage room for outdoor gear
- 1,227 square meter freehold plot
- Private parking area
- Marina berth included
- Sun-drenched terrace
- Fireplace/wood stove for cozy evenings
- Broadband internet connection
- Mains water and sewage
- Child-friendly and peaceful setting

In summary, this chalet offers a rare combination of space, comfort, and location. With its large capacity, modern amenities, private marina berth, and proximity to both nature and local attractions, it is an ideal choice for anyone looking to invest in a high-quality holiday home on the Norwegian coast. Whether you are seeking a family retreat, a base for outdoor adventures, or a peaceful haven by the sea, Olsvågen 54 provides everything you need for memorable holidays and relaxation year-round.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
2
Size
91
Price per m²
€2,324
Garden size
1227
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

Sign up to access location details

Similar properties

At half past ten on a midsummer evening, the sun is still high above the Lofoten skyline, burning copper across the water. You're sitting on the west-facing terrace at Kjerringøyveien 542 with a cup of coffee and nowhere to be. The fjord is right there — close enough that you can hear the faint slap of waves and, if the wind is right, the cry of Arctic terns returning to the shoreline across the road. This is Kjerringøy. Not a resort, not a holiday park — a real peninsula on the Nordland coast, where the light in summer defies logic and the silence in winter feels almost sacred. Built in 2008 and kept in genuinely good condition, this three-bedroom chalet sits on a 1,011-square-metre plot that the owners have owned outright — no leasehold complications, no shared title headaches. For international buyers used to navigating fractional ownership or ground rent clauses, that's worth pausing on. The land is yours. All 1,011 square metres of it, with multiple beach access points literally across the road. The cabin itself runs to 70 square metres of well-organised interior. Step through the front door and a sliding-wardrobe entrance hall takes the chaos of outdoor living — hiking boots, waterproof trousers, fishing gear — and makes it disappear before you reach the main living space. The open-plan kitchen and living room is where the 2008 build quality really shows. Large windows face west and pull in the last light of the evening, framing the fjord and the mountain ridgeline beyond like a painting that changes every hour. There's a wood-burning stove in the corner, the kind that becomes the gravitational centre of the room on November evenings when the temperature drops and the Aurora Borealis starts making appearances abo ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kjerringøyveien 542. Photo: Leel v/Benjamin

Wake up to the sound of water lapping against the shore and nothing else. No traffic. No alarms. Just the low call of a great northern diver drifting across Tyrifjorden at 6am while the morning light turns the fjord surface into hammered copper. That's a Tuesday at Tangenveien 50. This 1959 timber chalet sits directly on the water's edge at Kroksund, one of the narrowest and most dramatic pinch-points along Tyrifjorden — a lake so large it creates its own weather, so clear in summer you can see three meters down from a rowboat. The plot stretches across 1,199 square meters of leased land, giving the property a generous natural buffer from the rest of the world. The terrace — 20 square meters of sun-drenched outdoor living — faces the fjord dead-on. Sit there long enough with a coffee and you'll start rethinking your entire relationship with city life. At 43 square meters, the main cabin is compact the way a well-designed sailboat is compact: every centimeter works. The living room runs on natural light thanks to large windows aligned directly with the water view — in the late afternoon, the sun drops over the Krokskogen ridge behind you and the light on the fjord turns amber, then pink, then gone. The kitchen keeps things simple and functional: smooth-fronted cabinetry, a solid wood worktop, a stainless steel sink, and an externally vented hood — the kind of practical detail that matters when you're cooking fresh perch you pulled out of the fjord two hours earlier. A wood stove anchors the living space, and on September evenings when the air sharpens and the birch trees along the shore start turning yellow, you'll be very glad it's there. Three bedrooms across the main cabin, an annex, and a playhouse. That last sente ... click here to read more

Front view of the property

The boat engine cuts off. Suddenly it's just the sound of water lapping against the hull, a pair of oystercatchers calling from somewhere along the shoreline, and the faint creak of the old wooden pier as you step ashore. That's your pier. That's your lake. And that's the moment most owners say they knew this was the one. Sitting directly on the water's edge of Regnarvatnet at 327 metres above sea level, this 62-square-metre chalet is the kind of place that genuinely does not come up often. Forty-six metres of private shoreline. Solar power. Water drawn directly from the lake wall. No road noise, no neighbours in sight, just the Norwegian wilderness doing what it does — putting on a quiet, relentless show from sunrise to well past nine in the evening during July. The cabin itself dates to the 1950s, expanded in the 1990s and renovated steadily since. It shows. Whitewashed timber surfaces, large windows replaced in 2016 that frame wide views across the water, and an open-plan kitchen and living area that feels genuinely social rather than cramped. On summer mornings, the light comes through those windows at an angle that turns the wooden floors amber. You'll stop noticing the kitchen is running on gas after about day two — it works, it's efficient, and it suits the rhythm of a place like this perfectly. Two ground-floor bedrooms cover the basics: a proper master room and a second bedroom with a family bunk setup, ideal for kids or extra guests. The loft above adds two further rooms with built-in beds — low ceilings, yes, but the kind of cosy that children absolutely love and adults secretly do too. In total, this chalet sleeps a full family group without anyone feeling squeezed. The bathroom setup is honest: a storage ... click here to read more

Welcome to Regnarvatnet 42 - Photo by Robin Malm.

Step outside on a February morning and the only sound is the scrape of your own skis clipping into their bindings. The groomed cross-country trail is literally 150 meters from the front door—you can see it from the terrace—and the air at 900 meters above sea level has that particular sharpness that makes coffee taste better and lungs feel cleaner. This is Åsgrende 52 in Nes Østmark, a solar-powered three-bedroom chalet sitting on a sunny hilltop above the lakes of Langevatn and Buvatn, and it is one of those rare Norwegian mountain properties that actually works as well in July as it does in January. Built in 1970 and kept in good condition over the decades, the cabin has 55 square metres of indoor space that feel surprisingly generous thanks to a vaulted living room ceiling that opens everything up. Pine paneling runs along the walls—the real thing, worn smooth and honey-colored from years of wood stove heat—and the cast iron stove itself sits at the heart of the room like a small monument to every cold evening well spent. Large windows pull the landscape inside: open hillside, distant ridgeline, and on clear days a slice of the lake catching the afternoon sun. This orientation isn't an accident. The plot faces south and the cabin collects light for long hours, which matters enormously in the Norwegian highlands where a sunny hilltop position can extend your usable outdoor season by weeks on either end. The kitchen is functional in that straightforward cabin way—solid wood cabinetry, a gas stove, enough counter space to actually cook a proper meal rather than just boil water for instant noodles. The dining area fits the family comfortably. Three bedrooms sleep seven in total, so there's room for kids, grandparents, or ... click here to read more

Charming cabin in scenic surroundings.

Step outside on a February morning and the world is white and silent except for the crunch of your boots and the distant hiss of skis on groomed snow. The cross-country trails are literally 100 metres from your front door. You can smell coffee still brewing in the kitchen. This is what owning a mountain chalet in Eggedal actually feels like — and once you've had a taste of it, a standard hotel weekend never quite cuts it again. Sitting at 861 metres above sea level in the Haglebu recreational area of Numedal, this three-bedroom timber chalet at Nedre Åsseterlia 14 is the kind of property that gets passed down through families. The 80-square-metre layout is honest and unfussy — wooden-panelled walls, exposed ceiling beams, a cast-iron fireplace that does serious work on cold evenings. Nothing is trying too hard. It just works. The living room catches the mountain light in the afternoon, and the large windows frame views that shift with every season — deep pine green in July, flame-orange birch in September, and that particular blue-white silence of a Norwegian winter. The open-plan kitchen connects directly to the living space with a bar-counter setup, which means whoever's making the reindeer stew or the Saturday waffles doesn't miss the conversation. Pine cabinetry, solid wood countertops, a dishwasher — practical without being clinical. Three proper bedrooms give the place real versatility. The master fits a double bed comfortably, and the two additional rooms are set up with bunk beds — genuinely useful when you've got kids or a group of friends along for a ski weekend. Above the entrance hall, a loft accessed by a fixed ladder provides extra sleeping capacity, bringing the total to around eight people. The bathroo ... click here to read more

Welcome to Nedre Åsseterlia 14!

Step off the veranda at Skirød 9 and you're three paces from the water. Not a view of it from across a road, not a glimpse between neighboring plots — the actual shoreline of Vansjø, one of Norway's largest and cleanest inland lakes, right there at your feet. On a calm July morning, the surface is glassy enough to reflect the treeline on the far bank, and the only sounds are a woodpecker working at a birch somewhere behind the cabin and the soft knock of your rowboat against the mooring post. That boat mooring is one of those details that changes how a property actually feels to live in. On a whim, you can paddle out at dusk. You can fish for pike and perch without loading a car. Guests arriving at the annex can grab kayaks and be on open water before breakfast is even ready back at the main cabin. The cabin itself was built in 1974 and has that honest, no-fuss Nordic character that newer builds spend a lot of money trying to fake. The living room and kitchen share an open space anchored by a slate-clad wood-burning stove — the kind that radiates enough heat to make October evenings genuinely cozy rather than just tolerable. Large windows frame the lake rather than just acknowledging its existence, and in the long light of a Norwegian summer evening, the interior glows in a way that's hard to describe without sounding like a postcard. A new corrugated steel roof was fitted in 2022, so the big-ticket maintenance is already done. The 55-square-meter veranda wraps around the front of the cabin, partly covered so rain doesn't cancel outdoor dinners. This is where life at Skirød 9 really happens — coffee at the uncovered end in the morning sun, a long lunch in the shade, and then back out again as the evening light shifts ... click here to read more

Welcome to Skirød 9 - A cabin gem in scenic surroundings close to idyllic Vansjø!

On a clear July morning, you open the double balcony doors and the smell hits you first—salt air mixed with pine, drifting up from the Hjeltefjorden. The water below is mirror-flat. Somewhere down at Træet, a kid cannon-balls off the diving board into the natural seawater pool. You put the kettle on. This is not a fantasy. This is a Tuesday. Træsbrekkene 29 is a well-kept two-bedroom chalet in Follese, sitting on a genuinely flat, genuinely sunny 2,499-square-metre plot with direct sightlines across the fjord toward the archipelago between Askøy and Sotra. Two separate annexes, a wood-fired hot tub, 98 square metres of patios, and a carport round out a property that doesn't need reinventing—it just needs someone who wants to use it. The main cabin dates from 1964, built in that era of Norwegian leisure architecture when cabins were designed for real life rather than magazine shoots. At 40 square metres of internal living space it's compact, yes, but the ceiling height in the living room stops it from ever feeling cramped. A fireplace with a new insert and steel pipe—installed in 2020—anchors the room. Light walls, room for a proper sofa group and a dining table that seats the whole family. The double balcony doors swing out onto the main patio, so the boundary between inside and outside basically dissolves on warm evenings. The kitchen does what a cabin kitchen should: it works. Integrated appliances, real storage, no wasted corners. Cooking here on a Saturday night while guests spill out onto the terrace with glasses of aquavit is the kind of simple pleasure that gets harder to find the more money you spend on property. The two bedrooms are sensibly fitted out—the master has a custom-built bed and shelves, the second ... click here to read more

Welcome to beautiful Træsbrekkene 29. A lovely leisure property right by the sea.

Step out onto the 80-square-metre terrace on a January morning and the world is white and perfectly silent, except for the low creak of frost-laden pine branches and the distant hiss of cross-country ski tracks being groomed just beyond the tree line. That's the kind of moment this chalet in Risdal delivers, not occasionally, but every single time you arrive. Sitting at Vervassheia hytte 3 in the peaceful Froland municipality of Aust-Agder, this four-bedroom year-round cabin is the real thing — a genuine Norwegian retreat built in the classic Buen-Aarak tradition, with solid bones, a warm interior, and enough outdoor space to actually live in rather than just admire from inside. At 100 square metres of interior space plus generous covered and open terracing, it punches well above its price point of NOK 158,000. The cabin was extensively upgraded in 2010, including a new roof and a well-considered rear extension that added meaningful living space without compromising the character of the original structure. The heat pump installed roughly two and a half years ago — a 7.2 kW unit still under manufacturer's warranty — keeps every room comfortable whether it's a sharp February night or a humid August afternoon. Backup warmth comes from a traditional fireplace and a wood-burning stove. On those evenings when you light both and settle in with a glass of something, the parquet floors and warm laminate surfaces absorb the light in a way that no forced-air system ever quite matches. Four proper bedrooms mean this is not a squeeze-in-the-sleeping-bags situation. Up to ten guests can sleep comfortably, making it genuinely viable for extended family visits, a group ski week, or simply having the cousins over every summer without ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Early on a July morning at Furukollen 26, the only sounds are pine needles shifting in a light breeze and the faint lap of water from the Oslofjord, maybe three minutes down the coastal path. The coffee is on the wood stove. The south-facing plot is already catching sun. This is what a Norwegian summer cabin is supposed to feel like. Hvitsten is one of those places that Norwegians have kept quietly to themselves for generations. Tucked along the western shore of the Oslofjord in Østfold, it's a village of red and white clapboard houses, sailboats moored at small docks, and locals who've been returning to the same stretch of shoreline since childhood. Artists discovered it over a century ago — the painter Christian Krogh was drawn here, and that tradition of people seeking something genuine and unhurried in Hvitsten hasn't really changed. The village sits roughly 55 kilometres south of Oslo, about an hour's drive down the E6 and then east through Vestby, or accessible by bus from Son with a stop just four minutes' walk from this property. It's close enough to the capital to feel connected, far enough to feel completely removed. The cabin at Furukollen 26 sits on a privately owned plot of approximately 1,877 square metres — a generous spread by any measure, and extraordinary for a waterside community where land this size rarely comes to market. The terrain is natural and rugged in the best sense: granite outcroppings push up through the soil, pine trees crowd the perimeter, and the whole site slopes and rises in ways that create natural pockets of shade and sun throughout the day. A plot like this doesn't just give you space. It gives you privacy in a way that cleared, fenced garden lots never quite manage. The main cab ... click here to read more

Front view of the cabin and annex

Picture a Friday afternoon in late June. You've just turned off the E6 and onto the quiet country road toward Vikhammer, windows down, and the air already smells different — pine resin, cut grass, and something earthy and green that doesn't exist in apartment stairwells. Twenty minutes from Trondheim's Solsiden waterfront, and yet you feel properly away. That shift is exactly what these funkis-style cabins at På Landet Kolonihage are built around. Functionalism — the architectural movement Norwegians shortened to "funkis" — is having a serious moment in Scandinavian leisure property. Clean horizontal lines, flat roofs turned into usable terraces, large windows that pull the outside in. These 24 new-build cabins wear that aesthetic with conviction, not nostalgia. At 59 square metres across two floors, every square centimetre is accounted for. The open-plan kitchen and living area on the ground floor stretches to 21.3 square metres — enough for a proper dining table, a deep sofa, and still room to breathe. Oak-look countertops, integrated appliances, and a decent extractor fan: the kitchen is set up for actual cooking, not just reheating takeaway. The main bedroom runs to 10.2 square metres, with wardrobe storage built in so suitcases don't colonise the floor on arrival weekend. The second bedroom at 6.1 square metres works for children, for a guest who wants their own door to close, or for a desk and bookshelf if you've decided this is where you do your best thinking. The tiled bathroom sits on the ground floor; a separate WC upstairs keeps morning queues from forming. Small detail, real difference. Then there's the roof terrace. Eighteen square metres up top, and on a Norwegian summer evening — when the sky barely dar ... click here to read more

Welcome to Funkisfritid – a fantastic opportunity to own a top modern cabin in funkis style. Illustration.

Step outside on a July morning and the air carries salt, pine resin, and something faintly smoky from a neighbor's fire pit two plots over. The water at Rubbestadneset sits barely a hundred meters from your front terrace — flat, grey-green, and almost completely still at that hour. This is the kind of quiet that city people drive three hours to find. You won't have to drive far at all. Rubbestadneset is a small coastal community on Bømlo island, tucked into the western fjord landscape of Hordaland county between Bergen and Stavanger. Not a tourist trap. Not a postcard village selling itself to outsiders. Just a genuine Norwegian coastal settlement where families have kept holiday cabins for generations, where the neighbors actually wave, and where the sea is accessible not as a backdrop but as a daily fact of life. The E39 connects you to Bergen in roughly two and a half hours, and Stavanger is a similar drive southward — making this a legitimately usable second home for people based in either city, or for international buyers flying into Bergen Airport Flesland who want somewhere real rather than somewhere staged. The chalet at Bråtanesvegen 30 sits on its own freehold plot of 1,647 square meters. That number matters here because space at the water in western Norway is finite and rarely comes with car access all the way to the door. This one does. The driveway runs directly to the cabin, which means unloading the car after a long week in the city doesn't involve dragging bags down a gravel path in the rain. A small thing until you've done it twenty times. The main structure dates from 1978 but tells you nothing about what it was in 1978 — it's been extended in 1980, 2007, 2013, and 2017, and the result is a cabin tha ... click here to read more

Front view of the holiday home

At six in the morning, before the rest of southern Norway has stirred, you can step off the terrace at Øytangveien 338 and walk fifty meters to the edge of the Skagerrak. The water is glassy, the sky is already light—this is July in the Aust-Agder archipelago—and your boat is tied at the private jetty below, rocking gently. That moment is yours every single morning if you own this place. Set at the outermost tip of Tverrdalsøya, this three-bedroom timber chalet is the kind of coastal property that rarely surfaces in the Norwegian market. Not because it's large or lavish—65 square meters of honest, well-kept cabin living—but because it has the combination that serious buyers know is almost impossible to find together: a south-facing sunny plot, a private jetty, a registered boat space in the shared marina established in 2018, and genuine seclusion. Properties with all four of those things on the Arendal coastline don't sit on the market long. The cabin dates from 1972 and has been maintained with real care. You can see it in the details: the fireplace in the living room that still draws cleanly on autumn evenings, the large windows that frame the rocky outcrops and open sea beyond, the terrace that wraps around much of the building and catches sun from late morning until the long Scandinavian dusk. The interior living area of 51 square meters is tight by city standards, but that's never the point at a place like this. You're outside most of the time. The kitchen is functional and open to the living space, which means whoever is cooking a pan of fresh-caught mackerel doesn't miss the conversation happening on the terrace two steps away. Three bedrooms means you can bring the whole family or fill the place with friends w ... click here to read more

Seaside cabin with fantastic views

Step outside on a February morning and the only sound is the scrape of your ski boots snapping into bindings. The groomed trail starts practically at the edge of the terrace. The air is sharp, pine-scented, and cold enough to make the first thermos of coffee feel like a small miracle. This is what owning a cabin at Skrim actually feels like—and it's the kind of thing that's very hard to put a price on. Bjørklundveien 83 sits in one of Eastern Norway's most beloved outdoor recreation areas, a place where the word "hytte" carries real cultural weight. Norwegians have been coming to Skrim for generations—not for Instagram moments, but for the genuine reset that only deep forest and open sky can deliver. Buying here puts you inside that tradition. It's a vacation home in Norway that earns its keep in every season. The cabin itself is 71 square meters of considered simplicity. The living room ceiling climbs all the way to the roof ridge, giving the space a surprising airiness for its footprint. Large windows face the tree line, and in the afternoon the light slants in at a low Norwegian angle that turns the pine walls a warm amber. The fireplace is the room's undeniable focal point—once you've lit it after a long ski tour and peeled off your base layers, you'll understand immediately why Norwegians rate "kos" (coziness, roughly translated) as something close to a life philosophy. The open kitchen and dining area keep everything sociable. There's no wall separating whoever's cooking from whoever's losing at cards. The kitchen is functional and honest—no pretension, no complications. You come here to live well in a simple way, and the layout supports exactly that. One bedroom holds a double bed, the other has bunk beds that ... click here to read more

Welcome to Bjørklundveien 83, presented by Kaia Hostvedt Dahle. Photographer: Paul Thürmer.

The first thing you notice on a clear July morning at Lauvåsvågen 113 is the light. It arrives early this far north, slanting gold across the Gandsfjord and bouncing off the water straight through the cabin's front windows before you've even put the kettle on. By the time you carry your coffee out to the front terrace — twenty-one meters from the shoreline, close enough to hear the soft lap of the fjord against the rocks — you start to understand why people who buy cabins in Hommersåk tend to keep them for generations. This is a proper Norwegian fritidsbolig. Built in 1956, the cabin sits on a 781-square-meter plot that feels far larger than its numbers suggest, partly because of the way the land opens toward the water, and partly because of the small wooden bridge over the creek at the entrance — a detail that gives the whole place a storybook quality without trying too hard. The plot is south-facing, sheltered from the coastal winds by mature vegetation, and developers of the surrounding area haven't crept in to crowd it. That's increasingly rare this close to Stavanger. Inside, the 39-square-meter interior is compact but considered. The open-plan kitchen and living room is the social heart of the cabin, and the large windows do the heavy lifting on the design side — when the view outside is the Gandsfjord stretching toward Stavanger, you don't need much else on the walls. A wood-burning stove anchors one corner of the living room, and on the grey autumn weekends that Rogaland is famous for, it earns its place immediately. The kitchen is practical, with a window above the sink that frames the garden and lets in the salt-tinged breeze when you crack it open. A bar-style dining area keeps meals casual and convivial, th ... click here to read more

Welcome to the viewing at Lauvåsvågen 113 – Presented by Joveig Junge Aktiv Eiendom. Photo: Hanne Karlsen

Step outside on a February morning and the only sound is the creak of snow-laden pine branches and the distant swish of skis on a groomed trail — 250 meters from your front door. That is the daily reality at Fjellvegen 885, a compact, well-built mountain chalet sitting at 245 meters above sea level in the Beitstad highlands of central Norway. Built in 2016 and kept in genuinely good condition, this is not a dusty inherited cabin with rattling single-pane windows and a temperamental woodstove. Everything here was designed from the start to work. The chalet runs entirely off-grid with a 230-volt system fed by solar panels and a generator, both managed through an inverter that you can switch on remotely from the living room sofa. Pull up on a Friday evening in January, start the system from your phone before you even unlock the door, and walk into a lit, warming space rather than a cold, dark box. It is a small detail that changes everything about how you actually use the place. Inside, the open-plan living and kitchen area clocks in at around 26 square meters — not enormous, but smartly arranged. Large windows along the main wall pull in low Nordic light and frame a direct view over Jenshusvatnet, the lake that defines this stretch of the Nordfjellet plateau. In winter the lake freezes to a glassy white. In late June, with the sun barely setting, it catches orange and pink for hours. The wood-burning stove anchors one corner of the room; the kitchen sits opposite with an integrated gas hob, oven, and a gas refrigerator included in the sale. There is nothing superfluous here. Every fixture earns its place. Two bedrooms — each around 6 square meters — give sleeping space for four comfortably, more if you use the loft reac ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjellvegen 885, presented by EiendomsMegler1 v/ Magnus Aasland.

Step outside on a July morning and the water of Lomtjønn is so still it mirrors the spruce treeline perfectly. You're standing on the upper terrace with a coffee, the only sounds a woodpecker working somewhere up the hillside and the faint creak of the hot tub cover lifting in the breeze. That's the rhythm this place sets. Not a frantic ski-resort pace, not a tourist-packed coastal summer — something slower, quieter, and frankly harder to find anywhere in Europe at this price point. Svimbilvegen 38 sits in the Heia district of Hovin i Telemark, roughly 10 kilometers from Austbygde and about 20 minutes' drive from the village center of Sandvatn. The address might not mean much if you've never spent time in Telemark, but locals know this corner of Norway as a genuinely uncrowded patch of mountain and lake country. No queues. No overpriced harbor-front restaurants. Just forest trails, cold clear water, and a landscape that stays interesting across all four seasons. The chalet itself — a main cabin plus a separate annex — sits on a 1,128 square meter plot with full sun from sunrise to sunset. That matters more than it sounds. Norwegian summer evenings stretch impossibly long, and having sun on your terraces until 9 or 10pm transforms how you use the outdoor space. There are multiple terrace levels here, adding up to 115 square meters of external deck and balcony combined, so whether you want morning light over breakfast or a shaded corner in the afternoon, you can have both without moving far. Inside the main cabin, the living room has the kind of atmosphere that takes years to develop — stained wooden wall panels, high ceilings that keep the space from feeling boxed in, and a wood-burning stove with a glass door that tur ... click here to read more

EiendomsMegler1 v/Ann Helén Jamtveit presents Svimbilvegen 38! Photo: Inbovi

You wake up to the sound of water. Not the distant kind—the close kind, the kind that tells you the lake is right there, just past the pines, eighty meters from your front door. By the time the coffee is ready, someone has already grabbed a towel and headed down to the dock. That's the rhythm Følingen Hyttefelt 15 puts you in. And once you've had it for a weekend, you'll find it very hard to go back. Aremark sits in the far southeast of Norway, tucked into Østfold county right up against the Swedish border—a part of the country that doesn't get the postcard attention of the fjords, but rewards the people who find it with something arguably better: genuine quiet, real forest, and lakes that haven't been overrun. Aremarksjøen is the main body of water here, and it's the kind of lake where you can actually hear the surface when it's calm. Paddleboats, kayaks, small motorboats—all of it works. The fishing is serious too. Perch and pike are common pulls, and on an early July morning with mist still sitting on the water, it's the sort of scene that makes you wonder why you ever needed a flight to get somewhere meaningful. The cabin itself is 67 square metres of solid Norwegian timber construction, and it's in good condition—maintained rather than neglected, which matters more than most buyers initially realize. Walk in and the first thing you notice is the smell of wood, the kind that comes from panelled walls and solid timber flooring that have absorbed years of evening fires. The living room is genuinely liveable, not a tight squeeze: there's room for a proper sofa group and a dining table without anyone bumping elbows, which makes the difference on a rainy August afternoon when five people are inside playing cards. Both ... click here to read more

Welcome to Følingen hyttefelt 15!

You step off the boat and the engine dies. Suddenly it's just wind through pine needles, the soft lap of water against the dock, and the distant call of a great northern diver somewhere across Lake Toke. That's the moment you understand why people fall hard for Fjordøy and never quite let go. This three-bedroom timber chalet sits on its own 1,233 square metre island plot in the middle of Lake Toke, in Telemark's Drangedal municipality — one of the quieter corners of inland Norway that Norwegians have been quietly hoarding as a summer secret for decades. The cabin was built in 1964, and while it's been well maintained, it hasn't been sanitised into something generic. The low ceilings, the knotted pine walls, the south-facing terrace worn smooth by summers of bare feet — it feels like a place that has actually been lived in and loved. At 42 square metres internally, it's compact but genuinely functional. The living and dining room catches southern light for most of the day, and the direct door onto the covered terrace means meals blur between inside and outside from June right through to early September. The kitchen is simple and honest. Three bedrooms sleep a family or a group of friends without anyone having to argue over sleeping arrangements. A separate utility area of 13 square metres — attached but external — holds a storage room and a toilet, which is the kind of practical Norwegian cabin thinking that makes a property actually usable rather than just photogenic. The private shoreline and wooden boat dock are the heart of the place. Lake Toke is a serious lake — around 15 kilometres long, clear enough to swim in with confidence, deep enough to hold good-sized perch and pike. On a calm morning, you can fish from t ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjordøy!

Properties nearby

On a quiet evening in July, the smell of woodsmoke drifts from the pizza oven by the west-facing terrace as the sun dips low over the fjord landscape—still bright at 9pm in that particular way only western Norway can manage. That's the moment you understand what this place is actually for. Not just a house. A rhythm. A reason to exhale. Radøyvegen 2525 sits in Kvalheim, a pocket of rural Hordaland that most Bergen residents think of as a best-kept secret. The nearest bus stop is 450 meters down the road, Kvalheimsvatnet lake is practically in the backyard, and the open sea is a four-minute walk away. Yet despite all that quiet, you're never truly cut off. Bergen—one of Scandinavia's most livable cities—is about an hour's drive south along the E39, and the regional center of Knarvik with its full-service shopping is thirty minutes by car. Bøvågen itself has a Bunnpris supermarket just minutes away, and the town of Manger handles most everyday errands in ten to twelve minutes. The house itself was built in 1978 and sits on a 1,067-square-meter plot. Ninety-four square meters of internal living space spread across two floors—compact enough to maintain easily, large enough to feel genuinely comfortable with family or friends in tow. The layout is honest and practical: a bright main living room of around 22 square meters with oversized windows pulling in light from multiple directions, a wood-burning stove in the corner that earns its keep from October through April, and direct access to the main terrace. That terrace is worth dwelling on. At roughly 41 square meters, it's not some token slab of concrete—it's an outdoor room. There's an electrically operated awning for the midday summer sun, space for a proper dining setup ... click here to read more

Front view of the property

The first thing you notice, stepping onto that 35-square-metre terrace, is the quiet. Not the muffled quiet of triple-glazed windows or noise-cancelling headphones — proper Norwegian coastal quiet, broken only by the lap of seawater against the rocks below and the occasional cry of a guillemot riding the thermals. That's the daily reality of owning this waterfront cabin at Nedre Valdersneset 93 in Sletta, a compact stretch of coastline on Radøy island in Vestland county, where the fjord meets the open sea and the rest of the world feels very, very far away. Sletta sits at the outer edge of Nordhordland, a region that most international visitors drive through on the way to somewhere else. Their loss. The coastline here is raw and honest — exposed skerries, deep-green water, and the kind of light in July that doesn't fully disappear until past midnight. This particular cabin, renovated and upgraded in 2020, occupies a plot of 489 square metres right at the water's edge, roughly 100 metres from the shoreline. It comes with its own boathouse. In Norway, that combination — cabin plus naust — is the classic dream, and it's increasingly hard to find at this price point. Getting here is part of the ritual. You park the car and walk five or six minutes along a path through the heathland, arriving at the cabin already half-decompressed. That short walk is what keeps the spot genuinely private. No road noise. No neighbours materialising unexpectedly. Just you, the cabin, and the view. Inside, the layout is tight but well-considered. The open living room and kitchen takes up 29.5 square metres — the full heart of the cabin — with space for a sofa group facing the sea side and a dining table that seats the whole crew after a day o ... click here to read more

Aktiv Eiendomsmegling v/ Jørn Tage Hereide presents Nedre Valdersneset 93.

Nestled on the serene slopes of Radøy, Sletta, this delightful cabin awaits those yearning for a tranquil slice of Norway's natural wonders. Whilst it may not boast the modern luxuries found in urban settings, it compensates with something far more precious: peace, nature, and an enduring appeal that transcends time. Located at Nedre Valdersneset 15, the cabin comes with awe-inspiring views over Lurefjorden—a vision that enthralls all who lay eyes on it. This cozy two-bedroom retreat is an honest representation of everything that makes the Nordic landscape so special. Locals and visitors alike are spellbound by the fjord views that greet you from every window. With sun exposure from early dawn until the late sunset, you’ll be able to soak in daylight for almost the entire span of the day—perfect for creating lasting memories with loved ones. Here’s a taste of cabin life: - Spectacular fjord views - Sun from morning to evening - Diverse landscape on well-maintained plot - Right to use boathouse plot - Quiet, peaceful environment - Nearby swimming and hiking opportunities Built in 1958, this cabin has been gently used and lovingly maintained across decades. At 87 square meters, it offers a comforting space without the overwhelming upkeep. The design lends itself to open, functional living spaces, engaging you with nature at every opportunity. The allure of the property continues outdoors, where a landscaped plot with sections of paved areas and terraces beckon you to embrace the sun-drenched afternoons and breezy evenings amidst the local flora. For storage and recreational needs, the cabin’s external features are worth noting. The property comes with a furnished annex and a handy storage shed. Notably, the boathouse p ... click here to read more

DJI_0114-HDR.jpg

Nestled in the serene embrace of Dalsøyra, Norway, this charming chalet at Fensfjordvegen 1570 offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of tranquility. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant call of birds, with the majestic Norwegian landscape as your backdrop. This property is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle filled with peace, adventure, and cherished memories. A Haven of Peace and Privacy Set on a generous 1,000 square meter plot, this chalet is a sanctuary for those seeking solitude and a break from the hustle and bustle of city life. The surrounding meadows and woodlands create a picturesque setting, perfect for families or individuals yearning for a quiet escape. The private road leading to the property ensures a sense of seclusion, while the lush garden, complete with a cherry tree and swing set, invites you to relax and enjoy the natural beauty. Chalet Features and Layout Built in 1971, the chalet spans 60 square meters and is designed with practicality and comfort in mind. The open-plan living room and kitchen form the heart of the home, offering a bright and welcoming space for gatherings. The living area extends onto a spacious 20 square meter terrace, ideal for al fresco dining or simply soaking in the serene surroundings. - Three cozy bedrooms provide ample space for family and guests. - Open-plan living and kitchen area fosters a sociable atmosphere. - Large terrace for outdoor dining and relaxation. - Fireplace/wood stove adds warmth and a rustic charm. - Connected to public water supply for reliable fresh water access. - Electricity and septic tank ensure modern conveniences. - Outbuilding for tool and wood storage enhances practicality. A Canvas for P ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fensfjordvegen 1570 in Dalsøyra – a cozy cabin in rural surroundings.

Welcome to Skjenet 5, a delightful chalet nestled in the serene coastal town of Manger, Norway. This property offers a unique opportunity to own a second home that perfectly balances tranquility with accessibility, making it an ideal retreat for overseas buyers and expats seeking a slice of Norwegian paradise. Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp sea breeze filling your lungs as you step out onto your sunny terrace. This is the everyday reality at Skjenet 5, where the stunning views of the archipelago provide a breathtaking backdrop to your morning coffee. Property Highlights: - Location: Situated in the picturesque town of Manger, just a short drive from Bergen, this chalet offers the perfect blend of seclusion and convenience. - Size: A cozy 72 square meters, with a practical layout that maximizes space and comfort. - Bedrooms: Three spacious bedrooms, each designed to offer a peaceful retreat after a day of exploration. - Bathroom: A well-appointed bathroom with modern amenities, ensuring comfort and convenience. - Outdoor Space: A generous 572 square meter plot featuring a lush garden with vibrant rhododendrons and a sunny terrace perfect for al fresco dining. - Proximity to Nature: Just a stone's throw from a marina and swimming area, ideal for boating enthusiasts and nature lovers. - Accessibility: Easy access to Manger center, offering essential services and public transport links. - Utilities: Equipped with water, electricity, cable TV, and internet, ensuring you stay connected while enjoying the tranquility of nature. - Parking: Private parking space for easy year-round access. - Ownership: Sold as a freehold property, giving you full control over your holiday hom ... click here to read more

Welcome to Skjenet 5!

Nestled in the heart of Norway's breathtaking coastal landscape, this charming chalet at Eivindvikvegen 769 offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of paradise. Located in Eivindvik, a quaint village known for its serene beauty and rich history, this property is the perfect retreat for those seeking a second home or vacation getaway. Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp Norwegian air filling your lungs as you step out onto your expansive terrace. With panoramic views of the Gulafjord, this chalet is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle of tranquility and adventure. A Cozy Haven with Modern Comforts This well-maintained chalet spans 43 square meters, offering a cozy yet functional living space. The heart of the home is the inviting living room, where large windows frame the stunning fjord views, allowing natural light to flood the space. A wood-burning stove adds warmth and ambiance, making it the perfect spot to unwind after a day of exploring. The adjacent kitchen is simple yet efficient, equipped with all the essentials for preparing delicious meals. Imagine cooking with fresh, local ingredients while gazing out at the fjord—a true culinary delight. Comfortable Accommodations for Family and Friends With three bedrooms, this chalet is designed to accommodate family and friends comfortably. Each room is furnished with bunk beds, maximizing sleeping capacity and ensuring everyone has a cozy place to rest. The bathroom features an incineration toilet and washbasin, providing practical solutions for waste management and hygiene. Outdoor Living at Its Finest The 36-square-meter terrace is a standout feature, offering ample space for outdoor dining, sun ... click here to read more

Welcome to Eivindvikvegen 769, presented by Torgeir Glomnes for Eiendomsmegler Norge!

Welcome to Tjeldstø, an idyllic coastal village packed with the beauty of Norway's west coast. Today, we offer you a special opportunity—a rare lot located in the enchanting area of Nordvikklubben. For those who've been dreaming of owning a piece of waterfront paradise, this could just be your dream canvas. But remember, I'm a busy real estate agent, so contact me soon if this speaks to you! This spacious plot spans 1425.9 square meters, granting a generous palette for your architectural ambitions. Located right by the sea, this lot provides an unfettered vista of the magnificent Norwegian waters, a view that promises tranquility and an ever-changing tableau of seasons and tides. Imagine building something where mornings start with the gentle sound of waves and evenings settle with breathtaking sunsets. Features of this Lot: - Seaside location with waterfront access - Plot area: 1425.9 m² - Almost flat at the entrance, sloping towards the sea - Natural landscape of heather and rock outcrops - Private road access - Shoreline of approximately 17 meters - Proximity to transport: nearest bus stop just 100 meters away - Unregulated: freedom of development - Ideal for residential or scattered development Living in Tjeldstø, you're in a spot blessed by nature, where the quality of life is as refreshing as the surrounding landscape. The area offers a small-town feel, ensuring friendly community vibes while also providing access to essential amenities. Within about 5 kilometers, you'll find a grocery store, gas station, and elementary school, with more comprehensive services available around 15 kilometers away in Rong. Outdoor enthusiasts will fall in love with daily life here. With numerous trails and scenic routes, the area ... click here to read more

Aktiv Eiendomsmegling v/ Jørn Tage Hereide har gleden av å presentere tomt i Nordvikklubben!

Nestled in the heart of Dalsøyra, this delightful cabin at Gulafjordvegen 1188 offers a unique opportunity to embrace the serene beauty of Norway's fjord landscape. With its prime location near Eidsfjorden, this property is a haven for those seeking a tranquil escape or an adventurous lifestyle amidst nature's grandeur. Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp air filling your lungs as you step out onto your private terrace. The panoramic views of the fjord and surrounding hills are nothing short of breathtaking, providing a daily reminder of the natural beauty that defines this region. A Cozy Retreat with Modern Comforts Built in 1975, this cabin has been lovingly maintained and thoughtfully updated over the years. Its 42 square meters of living space are efficiently designed to offer comfort and functionality. The interior exudes a warm, inviting atmosphere, perfect for unwinding after a day of exploring the great outdoors. - Two Comfortable Bedrooms: Accommodates up to six guests, ideal for family getaways or hosting friends. - Bright Living Room: Features a cozy sitting area and dining space, with direct access to a 19-square-meter terrace. - Functional Kitchen: Well-equipped for preparing meals, ensuring you can enjoy home-cooked dinners with a view. - Convenient Bathroom: Practical layout with essential amenities. - Spacious Basement: Offers ample storage for outdoor gear, tools, or seasonal items. Embrace the Outdoor Lifestyle Living in Dalsøyra means embracing a lifestyle rich in outdoor activities. The cabin's proximity to Eidsfjorden makes it a prime spot for water enthusiasts. Whether you're into boating, fishing, or simply enjoying a swim, the fjord is your pla ... click here to read more

Welcome to Gulafjordvegen 1188, presented by Torgeir Glomnes for Eiendomsmegler Vest!

Nestled in the picturesque village of Tjeldstø, this charming cabin at Sturevegen 2 presents an inviting opportunity for overseas buyers looking to own a slice of tranquility just a stone's throw away from the sea. The cabin's allure isn't just in its structure but also in its location—roughly an hour's picturesque drive from the bustling city of Bergen, making it an ideal getaway for those weekends when the city becomes a bit too much. Let's take a closer look at what this cabin, standing amidst the serene beauty of the Norwegian landscape, has to offer. Let's start with the basics—this holiday cabin offers three cozy bedrooms. Officially, it's listed with two traditional bedrooms; however, there's an additional room currently utilized as storage, which is legally approved as a bedroom. This slight distinction offers potential buyers the flexibility to expand living or sleeping space tailored to their needs. The cabin itself is well cared for, boasting a 64 square meter area that feels spacious yet intimate. It's the kind of place where cozy evenings by the fireplace don't have to be imagined—they are just another part of the day-to-day life this cabin offers. The kitchen and living room span over 30 square meters and provide a cozy and functional space for relaxing and dining. With integrated appliances like the refrigerator, oven, and hob, the kitchen is ready to cater to culinary adventures or simple family meals. The recently installed window above the stove breathes light into the space, making it both practical and inviting. To enhance your comfort, the bathroom features new tiles and a recently fitted cabinet from 2024, providing a modern touch while maintaining the cabin's warm, welcoming feel. What truly set ... click here to read more

EiendomsMegler 1 v/ Merete Seim presents Sturevegen 2

A Tranquil Norwegian Retreat: Embrace the Coastal Lifestyle in Rossland Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp Norwegian air filling your lungs as you step out onto your expansive terrace. This is the daily reality at your new chalet in Rossland, a serene escape just 50 minutes from the vibrant city of Bergen. Nestled in a sun-drenched, private location, this property offers a unique blend of comfort, nature, and adventure. A Day in the Life: Coastal Living at Its Finest Start your day with a leisurely breakfast on the 70 m² terrace, where the morning sun casts a warm glow over the beautifully landscaped 1,808 m² plot. The scent of fresh coffee mingles with the salty sea breeze, setting the tone for a day of relaxation or exploration. Whether you're a nature enthusiast or a culinary adventurer, Rossland offers a wealth of experiences. Seasonal Splendor and Outdoor Adventures In the summer, the nearby sea beckons with opportunities for boating, fishing, and swimming. With your private boat mooring just a stone's throw away, spontaneous maritime adventures are always within reach. As autumn paints the landscape in vibrant hues, the surrounding mountains, including Eldsfjellet and Storafjellet, offer hiking trails that promise breathtaking views and invigorating exercise. Winter transforms the chalet into a cozy haven, where the wood-burning fireplace in the open-plan living room becomes the heart of the home. Gather with family and friends, sharing stories and laughter as the snow gently falls outside. Spring brings a burst of life to the garden, inviting you to cultivate your green thumb or simply enjoy the blossoming beauty. Culinary Delights and Cultural Riches Rossla ... click here to read more

Welcome to Skjelangervegen 677! Presented by Eiendomsmegler Norge v/ Harald Høyland Løndal.

Nestled in the serene embrace of Hundvin, Norway, this charming chalet at Kvalvågnesvegen 472 offers a unique opportunity for those seeking a second home that combines tranquility, natural beauty, and modern comfort. With its direct access to the sea and breathtaking views of the surrounding landscape, this property is a haven for nature lovers and those yearning for a peaceful retreat. A Slice of Norwegian Paradise Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp air invigorating your senses as you step out onto your private terrace. This chalet, with its spacious 93 square meters of living space, is designed to offer a seamless blend of indoor and outdoor living, making it the perfect holiday home or investment property. A Home with Character and Comfort Built in 1973, the chalet has been meticulously maintained, offering a warm and inviting atmosphere. The main living area is bright and airy, with large windows that frame the stunning views and allow natural light to flood the space. A wood-burning stove adds a touch of coziness, perfect for those chilly Norwegian evenings. Key Features: - Four Bedrooms: Ample space for family and guests, ensuring everyone has their own private retreat. - Modern Bathroom: Renovated in 2011, featuring contemporary fixtures and tiled surfaces. - Functional Kitchen: Equipped with essential appliances, ready for you to whip up delicious meals. - Annex: Additional 10 square meters of space, ideal for storage or a workshop. - Outdoor Living: Multiple terraces and seating areas, perfect for soaking up the sun or dining al fresco. - Direct Sea Access: A private seaside plot included, ideal for boating, fishing, or simply relaxing by the water. - Child-Fri ... click here to read more

Welcome to Kvalvågnesvegen 472, presented by Torgeir Glomnes for Eiendomsmegler Norge!

Nestled in the serene landscapes of Rong, Norway, this delightful cabin at Blomøyvegen 265 offers a unique opportunity to own a piece of paradise. Perfectly suited for those seeking a second home or a vacation retreat, this property combines the tranquility of nature with the comforts of modern living. Imagine waking up to the gentle sounds of nature, with the sea just a short stroll away, and spending your days exploring the breathtaking Norwegian coast. A Haven of Comfort and Style This well-maintained cabin spans 69 square meters and is thoughtfully designed to maximize both comfort and functionality. With three cozy bedrooms, it comfortably accommodates family and friends, making it an ideal spot for gatherings and holidays. The bright and airy living room, adorned with large windows, invites natural light to flood the space, creating a warm and inviting atmosphere. The semi-open kitchen is both practical and stylish, allowing you to prepare meals while staying connected with your guests. Key Features: - Three Bedrooms: Versatile sleeping arrangements for up to six people. - Spacious Living Room: Large windows offering stunning views of the surrounding landscape. - Functional Kitchen: Semi-open layout perfect for social cooking. - Modern Amenities: Includes a heat pump, fireplace/wood stove, and updated windows for improved insulation. - Large Basement: Approximately 14 square meters of storage space for outdoor gear and seasonal items. - Two Parking Spaces: Ensures convenient access for you and your guests. - Expansive Garden: Ideal for outdoor activities, gardening, or simply relaxing in the sun. - Spacious Terrace and Veranda: Perfect for al fresco dining and enjoying long summer evenings. - Child-Friendly Env ... click here to read more

Welcome to idyllic and rural surroundings. Enjoy lazy summer days with plenty of space. Large garden, excellent sunlight, and a private plot.

Welcome to Ulvatn 44, a hidden gem nestled in the serene landscapes of Radøy, just a stone's throw from the charming town of Manger in Vestland County, Norway. This off-grid cabin offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of paradise, where the tranquility of nature meets the comforts of modern living. Whether you're seeking a holiday home, a second home, or a sound investment, this property promises a lifestyle of peace, adventure, and sustainability. Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the distant call of birds, as the morning sun filters through the trees, casting a warm glow over your private oasis. This cabin, set on a generous 1,000 square meter lot, is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle that embraces the beauty and simplicity of nature. ### A Haven of Comfort and Sustainability The cabin's design seamlessly blends rustic charm with modern amenities, ensuring a comfortable stay throughout the year. The main living area is a bright, inviting space, where large windows frame picturesque views of the surrounding landscape. A wood-burning stove adds a cozy touch, making it the perfect spot to unwind after a day of exploring. The open-plan kitchen is both compact and functional, equipped with gas and solar-powered appliances. Whether you're preparing a hearty breakfast or a gourmet dinner, you'll find everything you need at your fingertips. The kitchen's thoughtful design includes a window above the sink, offering a delightful view as you go about your culinary adventures. ### Restful Retreats The cabin features a main bedroom with a custom-built 170cm bed, strategically positioned to catch the first rays of the sun. For additional guests, a loft alcove with a 120cm bed provides ... click here to read more

Welcome to Ulvatn 44 – your own oasis on Radøy

Nestled in the serene embrace of Havrevågen, Rossland, this exquisite country home offers a unique opportunity to own a slice of Norwegian coastal paradise. With its breathtaking views, private shoreline, and meticulously maintained amenities, this property is a dream come true for those seeking a second home that combines tranquility with adventure. Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves lapping against the shore, the crisp sea breeze filling your lungs as you step out onto your expansive terrace. This is the daily reality at Havrevågen 4, where the natural beauty of Norway's coastline is your constant companion. A Coastal Haven for the Discerning Buyer This property is more than just a home; it's a lifestyle. The main cabin, with its three cozy bedrooms, offers ample space for family and friends. The large, tiled bathroom and well-equipped kitchen ensure modern comfort, while the living room's wood-burning stove provides a cozy retreat on cooler evenings. Large windows frame the stunning views, bringing the outside in and creating a seamless connection with nature. Key Features: - Private Shoreline: Enjoy exclusive access to your own stretch of coastline, perfect for swimming, fishing, or simply soaking in the sun. - Boathouse & Dock: A spacious boathouse and floating dock make this property a haven for boating enthusiasts. - Sunlit Terrace: The large terrace and balcony areas offer ample space for outdoor dining and relaxation. - Meticulously Maintained: The property is in excellent condition, reflecting the care and attention of its current owners. - Fully Furnished: Move in and start enjoying your new retreat immediately, with all inventory and equipment included. - Included Boat: A boat with a motor is ... click here to read more

Welcome to Havrevågen. A fantastic leisure property with large boathouse, deep-water pier, and shoreline

Nestled in the heart of Rossland, Vikebø 46 offers an inviting retreat for those looking to connect with nature while enjoying the conveniences of nearby urban amenities. This delightful chalet stands ready to serve as a home base for adventures and a cozy hideaway alike, positioned amidst the stunning Norwegian landscape. The chalet itself is a welcoming abode, exuding a warmth that promises comfort without pretension. With three bedrooms and a single bathroom, this property is perfectly sized for a small family or anyone yearning for a cozy getaway. Picture yourself waking up to the breathtaking views that unfold outside every window. The living space, designed as an open-plan lounge and kitchen, is perfect for shared family meals and fun, or for those tranquil mornings with a cup of coffee warming your hands as the sun streams through. The generous 48-square-meter terrace additionally promises endless opportunities for both solitude under the sky and lively outdoor dinners. Living at Vikebø 46 positions you amongst stunning natural landscapes, where sunlight graces the property with its presence. The amenities of this property are modest yet thoughtful enough to enhance daily living, including its convenient road access, making life a little bit easier. The cherished fireplace creates an ambient glow and warmth, ideal for cold winter nights. - Three bedrooms - Road access - 48 square meter terrace - Fireplace - Excellent sunlight exposure - Proximity to hiking trails - Nearby alpaca park - Canoeing/kayaking nearby - Fishing spots - Swimming areas close by Rossland and its surrounding areas offer an abundance of activities and places to explore. For those who love the great outdoors, the options are vast. Magical h ... click here to read more

EiendomsMegler 1 ved Marcus Landmark har den store gleden av å presentere Vikebø 46

Nestled in the heart of Norway's breathtaking landscape, this charming chalet in Hosteland offers a unique opportunity for those seeking a second home that combines tranquility, natural beauty, and sustainable living. Located at Yndesdalsvegen 532, this property is a haven for nature lovers and outdoor enthusiasts, providing a perfect escape from the hustle and bustle of city life. Imagine waking up to the serene views of Kvamsdalsvatnet, with the gentle sounds of nature as your morning soundtrack. This chalet, with its eco-friendly features and rustic charm, is more than just a holiday home; it's a lifestyle choice that promises peace, privacy, and a deep connection with the natural world. ### A Lifestyle of Tranquility and Adventure Hosteland, a picturesque village in Masfjorden, is renowned for its stunning landscapes, where fjords meet mountains, and lush forests stretch as far as the eye can see. This region is a paradise for those who love the great outdoors, offering a plethora of activities such as hiking, fishing, and boating. - Hiking Trails: Explore the numerous trails that lead to breathtaking mountain peaks, offering panoramic views that are sure to leave you in awe. - Fishing: The nearby Frøysetelva river is famous for its salmon and sea trout, providing ample opportunities for fishing enthusiasts. - Water Activities: With the sea just 2.7 km away, you can indulge in kayaking, sailing, or simply enjoy a peaceful day by the water. ### Eco-Friendly and Self-Sufficient Living This chalet is designed for those who value sustainability and self-sufficiency. Powered by solar panels and a generator, it offers an off-grid experience that is both eco-friendly and cost-effective. The wood-burning stove in the l ... click here to read more

Front view of the cabin

Nestled in the serene landscapes of Seim, Norway, this charming chalet at Titlandsvegen 428 offers a unique opportunity for those seeking a second home that combines tranquility with adventure. With its west-facing orientation, this property promises sun-drenched days and breathtaking views over the Radsundet strait, making it an idyllic retreat for nature lovers and outdoor enthusiasts alike. Imagine waking up to the gentle sound of waves and the sight of the sun rising over the horizon. This chalet, with its cozy 65 square meters of living space, is perfect for those who value simplicity and the beauty of nature. The property is in good condition, ready to welcome you as your new holiday haven. ### Experience the Seim Lifestyle Seim is a hidden gem in the Vestland region, offering a peaceful escape from the hustle and bustle of city life. Despite its secluded feel, it's conveniently located just a 55-minute drive from Bergen, making it easily accessible for weekend getaways or extended stays. - Climate: Enjoy a temperate climate with mild summers and snowy winters, perfect for year-round outdoor activities. - Activities: From hiking and fishing to boating and swimming, Seim offers a plethora of activities to keep you engaged. - Accessibility: With a bus stop just 11 minutes away on foot, and Bergen's airport within reach, travel is a breeze. - Local Culture: Immerse yourself in the rich Norwegian culture, with local festivals and community events. ### A Second Home with Investment Potential Owning a second home in Seim is not just about leisure; it's a smart investment. The area's growing popularity among expats and tourists ensures a steady rental demand, offering potential rental yields for those looking to capit ... click here to read more

Beautiful view and good sunlight.

Nestled in the serene coastal enclave of Kjerrgarden, Norway, lies an opportunity that beckons the keen eye for potential. The boathouse located at Ådlandsvik-Naust, 5314 Kjerrgarden, invites investors and dreamers alike to envision what could be. With an extensive need for rehabilitation, this property presents itself as a true fixer-upper for those ready to take on the challenge and unveil its lush setting's hidden assets. Stepping onto this lot, you're greeted by views that sing of tranquility and promise. The boathouse, albeit in its weathered glory, whispers of times bygone and the delightful prospect of revival. Set with a captivating panorama over Herdlefjorden, Nordhordaland, the vista alone is reason enough to set roots here. Imagine waking up each morning to the gentle lull of water and basking in the sunlight that warms this corner of the world. The structure itself, aged and yearning for a breath of fresh air, is nonetheless ripe with potential. Divided into five rooms with partial furnishings, it includes rudimentary kitchen and bathroom facilities - the canvas for a visionary ready to bring modern comforts to these rustic remnants. The loft, crafted with three distinct rooms, awaits the transformation from forgotten space to perhaps a cozy studio or workshop. • Boathouse with rich history • Parking space available • Partial furnishings included • Basic kitchen and bathroom facilities • Loft with three rooms • Wooden pier facilities in need restoration • Electrical panel with three circuits • Scenic views over Herdlefjorden • Located by the sea for boating and fishing • Boat slip included in Ådlandsvik Small Boat Harbor The maritime lifestyle this location promises is unparalleled. Enjoy access to a boat ... click here to read more

Boathouse with a great location but in need of extensive rehabilitation. It also includes a boat slip in the marina and a parking space.