Cozy 3-Bedroom Chalet in Norway's Veggli | Freehold Plot | Perfect for Outdoor Enthusiasts and Year-Round Enjoyment

Listed on
https://storage.googleapis.com/homestra-images/property-image-11b442fc-fb94-4cee-bd97-19229a6051aa-1740421141.jpg

Diplemyr 37, 3628 Veggli, Veggli (Norway)

3 Bedrooms · 1 Bathrooms · 104Floor area

€295,299

Chalet

No parking

3 Bedrooms

1 Bathrooms

104m²

Garden

No pool

Not furnished

Description

Nestled amidst the enchanting landscapes of Norway, in the quaint little town of Veggli, lies a delightful chalet awaiting new owners who love the great outdoors. I know buying a property internationally can come with some uncertainties, especially if you are unfamiliar with the area, but let me paint you a picture of what life in Veggli, with its spectacular natural beauty, feels like, and why this chalet might just be the opportunity you’ve been looking for.

The chalet you're considering is situated at Diplemyr 37, 3628 Veggli. It’s a snug fit on a freehold plot, meaning you have the ultimate say over your land. With 104 m² of space thoughtfully distributed over one level, it provides a spacious yet cozy retreat. Built in 2005, the property is well-maintained and configured with the modern family in mind. There are three bedrooms accommodating your family and guests quite comfortably. There’s also a loft area, adding an extra 23 m² for either a playroom for the kids or maybe an occasional bedroom for visiting friends.

Here's how the layout works: As you walk in, you're greeted by an entrance that flows into an open-concept living room and kitchen. This base of the home is designed for socializing and savoring everyday moments, whether it’s a family dinner or a last-minute gathering with friends. Off to the sides, you'll find three bedrooms, which can easily make waking up to serene views an everyday blessing. The single bathroom along with a practical laundry room that has an additional toilet simplifies daily routines remarkably.

The chalet offers:
- 3 inviting bedrooms
- 1 bathroom and an extra toilet
- Laundry room
- Beautiful open-plan living and kitchen area
- 23 m² loft for added space
- Partially covered veranda
- External storage room (17 m²)
- 104 m² total size
- Built in 2005
- Located on a freehold plot

Now, about the charm of Veggli—it’s quite a community gem. Living in Veggli means immersing yourself in nature's embrace, year-round. The town is small but possesses this incredible ambiance of tranquility. Whether you're from bustling cities or quieter towns, Veggli is a refreshing change of pace. The ski resort nearby is a local hub come winter, providing slopes that beckon families and individuals of all skill levels. In the summer, trails meander through the lush landscape. Hiking, cycling, or simply wandering the paths is ideal for the adventurer at heart.

What’s also intriguing is the climate here. Veggli experiences distinct seasons. Winter blankets the town in snow, making the local ski resort a delightful destination. Summers are mild and the perfect time for hiking or simply enjoying breakfast on your chalet veranda, soaking in the views.

Space for relaxation and activities aplenty goes hand in hand here. Notably, this property includes a partially covered veranda area. It’s your personal slice of outdoor heaven where you can kick back with a coffee or host an outdoor meal under the open sky.

Furthermore, as an expat or overseas buyer, you'll find the community warm and welcoming. It’s a place where you can truly get to know your neighbors. Although not large, Veggli covers essentials—with some local shops, charming eateries, and periodic cultural events that foster community spirit. Venturing beyond this serene settlement is quite easy if you’re craving something urban, with Norways vibrant cities just a drive away.

For a life that combines serenity, community, and adventure, settling into this chalet will make life in Veggli feel like the perfect escape from hustle and bustle. Feel welcome to discuss further details or schedule a viewing. I am here to offer insight and guidance as you explore this prospect of making Veggli your new, lovely abode.

Details

Amount of bedrooms
3
Size
104
Price per m²
€2,839
Garden size
1048
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 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.

The first thing you notice on a summer morning at Karlsøyveien 145 is the smell — pine resin warming in the sun, salt air drifting up from the water just eighty-one meters away, coffee brewing on a solid wood countertop while light cuts through the trees and lands on the parquet floor. This is coastal Norway at its most honest. Not curated, not performed. Just the sea, the rocks, the forest, and a cabin that has had sixty-five years to figure out exactly what it wants to be. Skjeberg sits in the Østfold region of southeastern Norway, tucked between the cities of Sarpsborg and Fredrikstad, and it is the kind of place that locals quietly love and rarely talk about too loudly. The coastline here is classic Oslofjord — granite outcrops polished smooth by ten thousand winters, shallow bays that warm up faster than you'd expect by July, and a horizon broken only by the occasional sailboat heading south toward Kosterfjord. The property on Karlsøyveien sits right in the middle of all of it, on a 1,660-square-meter natural plot where the garden doesn't try too hard: cultivated lawn near the cabin, then pine trees, then bare rock, then water. The chalet itself was originally built in 1959 — the year Norway first broadcast national television — and there's something in the bones of it that reflects that era's straightforward confidence in timber and craftsmanship. The 2004 extension added breathing room without disturbing the original character, and the result is 71 square meters of thoughtfully arranged interior living space that feels larger than the numbers suggest. Partially open-plan between the living room and kitchen, the layout draws people together naturally. The wood-burning stove sits at the centre of the living room l ... click here to read more

Welcome to Karlsøyveien 145! A charming holiday home resting on solid bedrock, with a great combination of natural plot and developed outdoor spaces.

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

Early on a Saturday morning in July, the surface of Lake Mjøsa is so still it looks painted. You step out onto the west-facing terrace at Støavegen 20 with a cup of coffee, the air carrying that particular mix of pine and fresh water that only Norway gets right, and somewhere behind you the smell of last night's wood fire still lingers in the cabin. The nearest sound is birdsong. That's it. That's the whole soundtrack. This is Minnesund — a small lakeside community in Innlandet county, about an hour north of Oslo, sitting on the banks of Norway's largest lake. It's not a tourist honeypot, and that's precisely its appeal. The people who have holiday homes here come back year after year because they've found something increasingly rare: real quiet, real nature, and a place that genuinely feels like it belongs to them. The chalet at Støavegen 20 has been kept in good condition and carries the honest character of a classic Norwegian fritidshytte — red-painted horizontal wood cladding, a gabled roof with concrete tile and asphalt shingles, and an interior where wooden floors and panelled walls do the decorating. Everything sits on a single level, which makes it easy to live in and easy to maintain. At 57 square metres inside, it's sized for comfort rather than complexity. Two bedrooms — one with a bunk configuration for kids or extra guests, one with a double bed — share a bathroom renovated in 1995 with tiled floors, tiled walls, and a walk-in shower. A separate outdoor toilet adds practical flexibility when the terrace is full of people. The living room anchors the cabin around a fireplace that earns its keep across all four seasons. October evenings by Mjøsa can turn sharp, and there's something right about lighting the ... click here to read more

Welcome to Støavegen 20! Photo: Ann-Hélen Nannestad

Step outside on a February morning at Gamle Fjellstølvegen 15 and the silence hits you first. Not the absence of sound, but a different kind of sound entirely — the soft compression of fresh snow underfoot, the creak of timber in the cold, and somewhere down the valley, the faint whistle of wind threading through the birch trees. At 887 meters above sea level, the world feels unhurried up here. The view from the terrace stretches across the Søndre Fjellstølen plateau, all rolling white in winter and deep green in summer, and it's the kind of view that makes you want to stay for another week. Then another. Reinli sits in the heart of Sør-Aurdal municipality in Valdres — a region that serious outdoor people have been quietly keeping to themselves for decades. It hasn't been overrun. The trails aren't crowded. The groomed cross-country ski network that runs from roughly 900 to 1,160 meters elevation is genuinely world-class, and on a clear January morning you can ski for hours without passing more than a handful of people. In summer, those same tracks become trails for mountain biking and hiking, ranging from gentle woodland paths to proper ridge walks with summit rewards. The area around Reinli and Begnadalen is one of those rare places where the landscape changes enough between seasons that it almost feels like owning two different properties. The chalet itself was built in 2013 and has been kept in genuinely good condition — not estate-agent good, actually good. Walk through the front door and the ground floor opens into a living room with large windows that frame the fjell like paintings you never get tired of. There's a fireplace that does real work in October when the temperature drops fast, and the kitchen beside i ... click here to read more

Real estate agent Ida Follinglo presents this beautiful property at Søndre Fjellstølen. Photo: Christine Stokkebryn

On a clear July morning at Postmyrstien 6, you pour your first coffee and step onto the terrace before anyone else in the house is awake. The Drammensfjord stretches out ahead of you, its surface catching the early light in long silver streaks, and somewhere below on the coastal path a jogger passes without noticing you up here in your elevated perch above the treeline. That quiet. That view. That feeling of having found something most people drive right past. Holmsbu is one of those Norwegian coastal villages that hasn't quite been discovered by the Instagram crowd yet — and the people who own here quietly hope it stays that way. Tucked into the western shore of Hurumlandet peninsula in Viken county, about 70 kilometres southwest of Oslo, it draws a loyal summer crowd who return year after year for the same reasons: the white wooden boathouses lining the harbour, the smell of sunscreen and saltwater, evenings that don't get properly dark until almost midnight. The coastal trail that runs directly below this property connects you to the village centre in 15 to 20 minutes on foot — past wildflowers, rocky outcrops, and occasional glimpses of sailboats tacking across the fjord. This chalet was built in 1958, and it carries that era's particular craftsmanship — solid, unhurried, built to last rather than to impress on paper. Across 87 square metres of interior space, plus a separate annex, the layout is organised around the view and the outdoors, as all good Norwegian cabins should be. The living room faces the fjord directly, its large windows framing the water like a painting that changes with every weather system that rolls through. A wood-burning stove anchors one wall — come September, when the evenings start to bite ... click here to read more

Charming holiday home presented by Meglerhuset & Partners in Holmsbu

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 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

Step outside on a February morning and the groomed ski trail is already there, right at the edge of the plot, cutting through the snow-heavy pines of Vikerfjell. You clip into your skis before the coffee has even finished brewing. That's the particular kind of morning this cabin at Skåpmyrveien 8 makes possible — and once you've had it, it's hard to imagine spending winter any other way. Set in the Tosseviksetra area of Vikerfjell, roughly 800 metres above the valley floor and about an hour's drive from Oslo, this three-bedroom chalet with an approved separate annex is the kind of Norwegian mountain property that rarely comes onto the market at this price point. At 221,000 EUR with 86 square metres in the main cabin plus the annex, and with electricity already installed, it sits in a genuinely accessible bracket for international buyers looking for a second home in Scandinavia. The plot is leased rather than freehold, which is completely standard practice in Norwegian recreational property areas and is precisely what keeps the entry price realistic. The cabin itself is in good condition. Walk through the door and you get the open-plan living room and kitchen that Norwegians have been perfecting for generations — practical, warm, nothing wasted. The fireplace sits at the heart of it, and on a cold evening with the snow piling up outside, that cast iron heat source does things no underfloor heating system ever quite replicates. The kitchen is straightforward and honest: a traditional hytte standard that's built for actual cooking after long days outdoors, not for Instagram. Two of the three bedrooms have bunk beds, one has a double, and the whole setup handles up to 13 people across the main cabin and the annex. Big fami ... click here to read more

Front view of the cabin

Picture this: it's six in the morning, the fjord outside is the color of hammered pewter, and you're standing on the floating dock with a thermos of coffee while a sea eagle traces lazy circles above Vinnesøy. No traffic noise. No neighbors pressing in. Just the low creak of the dock lines and the occasional slap of water against the hull of your boat. This is what mornings look like at Vinnes 109. Set along the western coast of Austevoll—one of Norway's most dramatic island municipalities, threaded through with skerries, fishing villages, and open ocean channels—this four-bedroom chalet has been in active use as a family retreat for decades. The main cabin dates from 1928, and you can feel that history in the weight of the timber walls and the way the floorboards sound underfoot. But this isn't a fixer-upper project. The past decade has brought real, practical investment: a new shingle roof section, double-glazed wooden-frame windows throughout most of the house, an updated electrical panel with modern circuit breakers, and a heat pump installed in the living room that means you're not dependent on the wood stove alone when October rolls around—though you'll likely want to light it anyway, because the stove here is the heart of the room. The total living area runs to 108 square meters across two floors, plus a crawl space. Four bedrooms sleep up to 13 people, which tells you something about how this place has been used—large families, friends arriving by boat for a long weekend, kids claiming bunk space, adults staying up late around the kitchen table. The kitchen and dining area are built for exactly that kind of communal living: functional, spacious, genuinely useful rather than decorative. Windows face the sea. Th ... click here to read more

Picture 1

Properties nearby

Nestled amid the rustic, untouched beauty of Veggli, Norway, awaits a cabin retreat yearning to become your next home away from home. At Persbuhaugen 6, 3628 Veggli, this inviting cabin embodies an escape into the serene embrace of nature while still keeping the comforts of modern living close at hand. Veggli, a peaceful village in Norway’s Buskerud county, is a slice of Nordic heaven where the beauty of the seasons comes alive. This area is renowned for its charming landscapes that transform with each season. In winter, a wonderland unfolds as snow blankets the rolling hills, making it an irresistible hub for skiing enthusiasts from around the globe. Once the snow thaws, the area evolves into a vibrant green canvas begging to be explored by hikers, cyclists, and nature lovers alike. Let's drift into the narrative of the cabin at Persbuhaugen—a property that's not just a house but a prospective haven for your adventures and memories. With 128 square meters of well-utilized space, this cabin is both accommodating and functional, a rarity in vacation properties that often compromise on practicality for aesthetics. Upon stepping inside, you’ll find the ground floor where an entrance hall warmly greets you, guiding you towards a seamless living room and kitchen design that’s perfect for family gatherings or friendly get-togethers. The open-concept design ensures that whether you're cooking up local delights in the kitchen or lounging in the living area, you're never far from the action—or the aroma of freshly prepared food. The dining area beckons you to host sprawling dinners, warmed by hearty food and heartier laughter. Venturing further, you're introduced to the private quarters of the cabin. Three bedrooms on this l ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom har gleden av å presentere Persbuhaugen 6!

Step outside on a February morning and the silence hits you first. Then the cold — clean, sharp, the kind that makes you feel genuinely alive. The cross-country trail begins just 250 metres from the front door of this four-bedroom chalet on Persbuåsen, and by the time you've clipped into your skis and pushed off into the tree line, the rest of the world has completely ceased to exist. That's the daily reality of owning a second home in Vegglifjell, and this particular cabin makes it very easy to stay a little longer than planned. Built in 2005 and kept in genuinely good shape, the chalet sits at around 813 metres above sea level in the highlands of Numedal, about 170 kilometres northwest of Oslo via the E134. It covers 99 square metres across two floors, with four bedrooms, two separate living rooms, and a bathroom with a private sauna — the kind of layout that works equally well for a family of five as it does for two couples sharing costs on a winter weekend. The ground floor sets the tone immediately. You come in through a practical entrance hallway with room for all the boots, jackets, and ski poles that mountain life demands, and from there the main living space opens up around a wood-burning stove. On a cold evening, that stove is the heart of everything — people gravitate toward it without thinking, dragging blankets from sofas, filling glasses of akevitt, recounting the day's run down Norefjell or the afternoon's skate-ski loop through the Vegglifjell terrain. The kitchen sits in open connection with the dining and living areas, fitted with solid wood cabinetry and a wooden countertop that feels more cabin-honest than showroom-slick. A glazed door off the kitchen leads directly onto the main veranda — 31 square ... click here to read more

Welcome to Persbuåsen 8! A beautiful cabin with excellent ski trails right outside the door.

Nestled in the heart of Norway, an enticing retreat awaits at Årsetvollen 5, 3628 Veggli. This cozy cabin beckons those yearning for a slice of mountainous paradise. Situated within Veggli, this property stands as a portal to serene landscapes and a lifestyle intertwined with nature's beauty. As a global real estate agent constantly navigating the bustling market, I offer you a glimpse into this captivating abode that whispers tales of tranquility, away from the routine grind. Walking up to this cabin, you’re swept into a narrative of lush greenery and sun-kissed horizons. Positioned on a generous plot of 1,575 square meters, this property offers a fantastic, expansive outdoor space where dreams of evening relaxation or weekend barbecues effortlessly come alive. Built back in 1967, it carries its rustic origin with pride, radiating warmth and simplicity that effortlessly complements the surroundings. Inside the cabin, you’re greeted with a bright living room, welcoming daylight through large windows which frame Norway’s jaw-dropping landscapes. A wood-burning stove sits snugly in the corner, ready to fill the room with warmth on cooler days—a quintessential feature for staying cozy after adventurous days exploring the local mountains. The kitchen doesn’t just speak of functionality; it invites connections. Equipped with profiled fronts, a gas stove, and fridge/freezer, it promises culinary adventures. The dining area, bathed in cheerful sunlight, presents the perfect setting for family time or intimate dinners. - 2 Bedrooms: Sizable, with enough room for comfy beds. - 1 Bathroom: Complete with paneled walls and natural ventilation. - Solar Panels: Eco-friendly energy, cutting costs while being sustainable. - Wood-bur ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom v/Gro Bredeveien Wergeland is pleased to present Årsetvollen 5!

Welcome to your new escape! Nestled in the quaint town of Veggli, in the scenic landscapes of Rollag municipality, this cozy cabin at Nordre Rennemogen 12 feels like a world of its own, yet it's just a short drive from conveniences. This picturesque spot is ideal for those yearning to experience the thrill of the great outdoors while keeping the comforts of home close by. The cabin is perfectly suited for seasonal retreats or making it your permanent getaway to break free from the hustle and bustle of city life. As you approach this secluded property, you'll find a recently extended road leading you directly to the large terrace, a perfect spot for relaxation and entertainment. The cabin itself has undergone some nice upgrades, perfectly blending a cozy atmosphere with functionality. Step inside to discover the warm embrace of a newly-installed clean-burning fireplace in the inviting living room, setting quite the mood for chill winter evenings or crisp summer nights. For those who enjoy cooking, the kitchen's ready with a stove and ample cupboard space—ideal for whipping up a meal after a day out hiking or skiing. The bathroom is conveniently fitted with underfloor heating, ensuring you stay warm even in the coldest months. And with three bedrooms inside, plus additional accommodations in the annex, you’ll have space aplenty to host family or friends who want a taste of this idyllic setting. Here's a quick run-down on what the property features: - 3 Bedrooms inside the cabin - Newly-installed clean-burning fireplace - Kitchen with stove and storage space - Underfloor heating in bathroom - Large 70 sqm terrace - Annex with additional guest accommodations - Recently painted exterior - Remote heating system - Easy acce ... click here to read more

Secluded cabin with newer fireplace and surfaces

Nestled amidst the serene landscapes of Veggli, the Høggerudseterlie 66 presents a charming cabin perfect for those seeking a tranquil retreat far from the bustling urban centers. This family-friendly property, set around 830 meters above sea level, offers the beauty of seclusion combined with the comforts of a homely dwelling. While it enjoys rustic aesthetics, intending buyers should note its simpler standard and its potent potential as a gratifying project for enthusiasts of personalization and design. This single-story cabin offers a quaint living room, a functional kitchen, three cozy bedrooms, and a combined shower room. Additionally, storage needs are met with a separate space that includes an outdoor toilet—a common feature in traditional cabins which adds to its rustic charm. While the property might need some modernization, especially in the sanitary facilities and possible expansions of living spaces, its solid structure and recent improvements, like the electricity update completed in 2019, provide a good foundation for renovations. The south-facing plot benefits from excellent sun exposure and privacy, enhanced by its location next to a dense forest. This proximity to nature does not only ensure peaceful living but also facilitates a range of outdoor activities right at your doorstep. Outdoor and Leisure Activities: - Hiking through diverse trails suitable for different expertise levels - Cross-country skiing in winter seasons, with trails starting near the property - Fishing and canoeing in nearby rivers during warmer months - Berry and mushroom picking in the late summer and autumn seasons Local Area Features: - Close vicinity to Vegglifjell, which makes it a sought-after location for year-long recreat ... click here to read more

Welcome to Høggerudseterlie 66!

A Tranquil Escape in the Heart of Norway's Majestic Mountains Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the crisp, invigorating scent of pine in the air. As the morning sun filters through the towering trees, you step out onto your private terrace, coffee in hand, and take in the breathtaking panorama of Veggli's rolling hills and lush forests. This is not just a holiday home; it's your personal sanctuary, a place where the pace of life slows down, and nature's beauty is your constant companion. A Cozy Haven Designed for Comfort and Connection Nestled in the serene enclave of Vegglifjell, this charming chalet offers a harmonious blend of rustic charm and modern convenience. The main cabin, with its inviting open-plan layout, is a testament to thoughtful design. Large windows flood the living space with natural light, creating a warm and welcoming atmosphere. The heart of the home, a cozy living room with a crackling fireplace, invites you to unwind after a day of adventure. The kitchen, equipped with smooth-fronted cabinetry and a durable laminate countertop, is both functional and stylish. Whether you're preparing a hearty breakfast before hitting the trails or a leisurely dinner with family, this space is designed for ease and enjoyment. The pine flooring and wooden paneling throughout the cabin add a touch of rustic elegance, seamlessly blending with the natural surroundings. A Retreat for Family and Friends With three thoughtfully designed bedrooms, this chalet comfortably accommodates family and guests. Each room is a haven of tranquility, offering restful nights and rejuvenating mornings. The additional outbuilding, complete with an extra bedroom and outdoor toilet, provides privacy and flexibility ... click here to read more

Welcome to Høggerudsetervegen 41!

Nestled in the serene heart of Veggli, Norway, this rustic cabin at Rustvegen 15, 3628 Veggli presents an inviting opportunity for those seeking a peaceful retreat with the comforts of home. At an asking price of approximately $371,794, this property is ready to welcome new owners yearning for the tranquility of mountain life. With 94 square meters of living space, the cabin provides ample room to craft your ideal sanctuary away from the hustle and bustle of urban settings. Surrounded by panoramic views of the majestic mountains and lush nature, the cabin offers a perfect escape while remaining accessible year-round. One of the distinct highlights of this property is its large, sunny terrace where you can enjoy some of the best sunlight exposure the area offers, perfect for soaking up the crisp, clean mountain air and spectacular scenery. With its location tucked away on a cul-de-sac, you can expect very little to no through traffic, making it an exceptionally peaceful spot for relaxation and contemplation. Inside, this cabin embodies a welcoming aura with its bright and airy atmosphere. The living room and dining area are well-suited for family gatherings or quiet evenings by the wood stove, a center of wonderfully crafted woodwork. If you have an affinity for rustic elegance, you’ll appreciate the carefully designed kitchen featuring Dokka Bondemøbler—a hallmark of fine Norwegian craftsmanship. The layout is practical, offering three bedrooms, each equipped with built-in wardrobes and beds, ensuring plenty of storage space to keep your personal retreats clutter-free. The two bathrooms, also finely appointed, provide convenience and comfort for family and guests alike. For those needing extra sleeping space, the loft ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom v/Gro Bredeveien Wergeland presents Rustvegen 15!

Hello there! Today I am thrilled, though a lil' bit rushed, to be introducing you to a charming chalet that could be your perfect holiday getaway or even a dreamy place to settle – especially if you’re looking to escape the daily hustle and bustle. Nestled within the naturally serenic landscapes of Veggli and located at Fjellstuevegen 16, this property offers a delectable mix of comfort and adventure, being in a good condition with tremendous potential to add your own personal touches. As a busy real estate agent, I can tell you this is indeed a gem waiting to be discovered! Property Overview: Imagine waking up in this delightful chalet which spans across a charming 118 square meters and feels indeed like your own mountain retreat. With four bedrooms and two bathrooms, it offers ample space for family and friends to gather and enjoy the peace and panoramic views of the scenic surroundings that stretch as far as the eye can see. Property Features: - Situated in a sunny position with sweeping views. - Located at Liset, close proximity to Veggli Fjellstue. - Approx. 880 meters above sea level, giving it those breathtaking views. - Year-round hiking trails and track networks nearby. - Short distance to Vegglifjell ski center for skiing enthusiasts. - Lit loop trail at Lauvhovd ski stadium within walking distance. - Two Floors providing spacious living. - Living rooms on both floors, offering cozy relaxation areas. - Sauna to unwind and warm up after a long day in the cold outside. - Storage and Laundry room for practicality. The chalet, while maintaining its cozy and rustic charm, gives off a welcoming atmosphere. You step inside and are greeted with an inviting living area, ideal for family gatherings or simply unwindin ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjellstuevegen 16!

Nestled high up in the pristine mountain landscapes of Norway, this spacious cabin at Fjellstuetoppen 18, in the quaint village of Veggli, offers a unique opportunity for those yearning for a slice of Scandinavian tranquility. With a price tag of 243,589 EUR, this property is not just a retreat but a gateway to the scenic beauty and thrilling outdoor activities that Veggli has to offer. Touted for its panoramic views, this 104 square meter cabin is perched approximately 880 meters above sea level, which ensures your mornings start with sweeping vistas right at your doorstep. On the interior, this rustic cabin built in 1984 sprawls across two cozy living rooms and two bedrooms, making it an ideal sanctuary for family gatherings or hosting guests. Its twin lofts provide additional sleeping quarters, making it effortlessly accommodating for visitors. Though built to last, this property’s energy efficiency rating is a G, meaning a little tinkering here and there for upgrades could enhance not just comfort but also save on utility costs in the long run. But think of these renovations as chances to add personal touches, customizing the coziness to fit your family's needs. Life in a cabin, especially one nestled such beautifully atop a mountain, offers a charming simplicity, where days are enriched by the rustic lifestyle complemented by stunning surroundings. Picture evenings spent curled up by the fireplace in one of the living rooms, while the soft aroma of pine drifts in. The air here is crisp and invigorating—a constant reminder of Veggli's lush natural backdrop. The area around the cabin is nothing short of a paradise for nature enthusiasts and thrill-seekers alike. Veggli is located in the heart of Norway's wilderness ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjellstuetoppen 18!

Step outside on a February morning and the world is completely still. The snow-covered ridge above Svartli catches the first pale light, a small mountain lake below the cabin holds a perfect reflection of the sky, and the groomed ski track two hundred meters down the slope is freshly set. You clip into your skis before breakfast. This is Tuesday. This is just a regular day at Soltoppen 7. Sitting at roughly 825 meters above sea level on the northern flank of Vegglifjell, this four-bedroom log chalet is one of those properties that makes you recalibrate what a mountain holiday actually means. Built in 2010 to a standard you rarely find in the Norwegian cabin market, it was put together with solid log construction, not the prefab shortcuts that date quickly. The walls are thick. The materials are honest. Thirteen-plus years on, it still feels new. From the moment you walk through the slate-tiled entrance hall — underfloor heating warming your feet as you shake off your ski boots — the quality of every decision made here becomes obvious. The main living area opens up generously, anchored by a stone-set fireplace that throws real heat on January evenings when temperatures outside drop hard. High ceilings and large windows mean the space never feels heavy despite the substantial log construction. Natural light pours in from multiple angles, which matters enormously at this latitude when you're chasing the winter sun across the sky. The living room furniture is from Kistefos, a Norwegian brand known for producing pieces built to outlast trends — solid, tactile, made to be used hard by families who actually live in their cabins rather than treat them as showpieces. The kitchen is built around the same philosophy. Dark solid ... click here to read more

Welcome to the beautiful log cabin at Soltoppen 7! Photo: Arild Brun Kjeldaas

Nestled in the heart of Vegglifjell, Lisetvegen 75 offers a unique opportunity to own a charming chalet that perfectly balances traditional allure with modern comforts. This delightful property is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle filled with adventure, relaxation, and the creation of cherished memories. Imagine waking up to the crisp mountain air, the sun gently filtering through the trees, and the promise of a day filled with exploration and tranquility. This chalet, with its rustic charm and contemporary upgrades, is the perfect base for those seeking a second home or holiday retreat in the picturesque Norwegian mountains. A Blend of Tradition and Modernity The chalet's design pays homage to traditional Norwegian architecture, with exposed timber beams and rustic details that evoke a sense of warmth and coziness. Yet, it doesn't compromise on modern conveniences. Recent renovations have elevated the living experience, ensuring that every moment spent here is comfortable and enjoyable. The open-plan living area is the heart of the home, where family and friends can gather around the fireplace, sharing stories and laughter. Large windows frame the stunning natural surroundings, allowing you to feel connected to the landscape even when indoors. A Culinary Haven The kitchen, renovated in 2021, is a chef's delight. With sleek black profiled fronts and integrated appliances, it offers both style and functionality. Whether you're preparing a hearty breakfast before a day of skiing or a gourmet dinner to enjoy by the fire, this kitchen is equipped to handle it all. Rest and Recharge The bedroom, finished in harmonious dark-stained tones, provides a peaceful retreat after a day of adventure. It's a s ... click here to read more

Welcome to Lisetvegen 75!

Nestled in the serene landscapes of Veggli, at Rusthøgdvegen 145, a picturesque chalet awaits a new owner. This well-maintained property, constructed in 2015, harmoniously blends modern comforts with the rustic charm typical of Norwegian architecture. Ideal for those keen on a tranquil lifestyle close to nature, this cabin offers a unique living experience in the heart of Scandinavia. The chalet spans a comfortable 115 square meters, comprising four cozy bedrooms and one bathroom, ideal for a family or a retreat home. The property is enveloped by heartwood pine, a material celebrated for its durability and resistance to weather and rot. Over time, the pine develops a silver-gray patina enhancing its aesthetic appeal and blending seamlessly with the surrounding Vegglifjell landscape. The green roof, covered with turf, not only provides excellent insulation but also complements the natural setting, elevating the traditional Norwegian appearance of the chalet. Inside, the high-quality interiors, featuring handmade furnishings and a palette of natural materials like wood and stone, create a welcoming ambiance, perfect for both relaxation and entertaining guests. Living in Veggli offers a plethora of activities and amenities. The area is a haven for outdoor enthusiasts, with opportunities ranging from hiking and skiing in the nearby mountains to fishing in pristine rivers. The local community is vibrant, hosting various cultural and social events throughout the year, making it easy for newcomers to integrate and feel at home. For families, the region provides a safe and nurturing environment with access to local schools and healthcare facilities. Shopping and dining options are available, offering both local and internati ... click here to read more

Welcome to your new cabin!

As a global real estate agent with countless properties under my belt, it's my pleasure to introduce you to this delightful chalet located in the heart of Veggli, Norway—a true haven for both peaceful retreats and active adventures. Tucked away at Svarteløkvegen 92 on the charming Vegglifjell South, this property sits at an impressive 860 meters above sea level, promising year-round pleasures and breathtaking views right from your own terrace. This chalet, not just any property, lies snugly at the foot of Svarteløkfjellet, offering owners the tranquility of being one of the most secluded spaces in this verdant region. Built in 1987, this traditional Buen chalet retains its timeless appeal, with lovely carvings adding a touch of historic craftsmanship to the modern updates. Perfectly suited for family gatherings, it provides ample room for seasonal or year-long living. The surroundings are very much inviting all year long. Whether it’s the lush green of summer or the snowy embrace of winter, Veggli offers a dynamic setting for the adventurous or those seeking peaceful respite. For winter sports enthusiasts, the prime location allows you to access freshly groomed ski tracks just 300 meters from your doorstep. Summer brings its own delights, offering excellent hiking trails right from your cabin into the picturesque landscapes. Living in Veggli presents a unique experience. The rural setting combined with community-friendly vibes is an excellent choice for families. The city's familiarity encourages a tighter-knit community feel, complete with opportunities to engage with local traditions or simply enjoy the panoramic vistas on less hurried days. The chalet itself is structured to offer comfort and space within its smar ... click here to read more

Welcome to Svarteløkvegen 92 at Vegglifjell.

A Tranquil Mountain Escape Awaits Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the crisp, invigorating air of the Norwegian mountains. At Sundtjønnskarven 45, nestled in the serene landscape of Vegglifjell, this dream becomes a reality. This charming chalet offers a harmonious blend of rustic allure and modern comforts, making it the perfect retreat for those seeking solace and adventure in equal measure. A Day in the Life at Sundtjønnskarven 45 As the sun rises over the majestic peaks, the chalet's large windows invite the morning light to dance across the cozy living room. The aroma of freshly brewed coffee fills the air as you step onto the sun-drenched terrace, where panoramic views of the surrounding mountains greet you. Here, the world feels both vast and intimate, a place where time slows down and nature takes center stage. Your day might begin with a leisurely breakfast on the terrace, followed by a brisk walk to the nearby cross-country ski trails, just 350 meters from your doorstep. In winter, the snow-covered landscape transforms into a playground for skiing enthusiasts, while summer unveils a tapestry of hiking trails, fishing lakes, and swimming spots. The Chalet: A Blend of Tradition and Comfort The main cabin, with its efficient single-level floor plan, offers 59 square meters of thoughtfully designed living space. The interior exudes warmth, with light-painted paneling and high-quality laminate flooring creating a welcoming atmosphere. The living area, bathed in natural light, is the perfect spot to unwind after a day of exploration. The kitchen, equipped with modern amenities, is a culinary haven. Whether you're preparing a hearty meal for family or hosting a summer barbecue, the space is ... click here to read more

Classic mountain cabin in a popular area at southern Vegglifjell. Welcome to Sundtjønnskarven 45!

Pull on your boots at the door and ski straight into 100 kilometers of groomed trails. That's the reality of mornings at this three-bedroom Norwegian mountain chalet in Veggli — a proper, no-fuss cabin sitting 850 meters above sea level at the end of a quiet cul-de-sac on Søre Vorsetkroken, where the only sound after snowfall is the creak of pine trees and, if you're lucky, the distant knock of a woodpecker working through the bark. This is Søre Vegglifjell. Not a resort, not a development — an established, authentic Norwegian cabin community where families have been coming for generations. The nearest trailhead is 350 meters from your front door. The nearest neighbor is far enough away that you won't hear them. And the road stays clear all year, which matters more than people realize until the first time they try to reach a Norwegian mountain cabin in November with a car full of kids and gear. Inside, the 76-square-meter layout does what good cabin architecture is supposed to do: it makes every meter count. Walk in and the wood-burning stove in the living room immediately does the emotional heavy lifting. It's that kind of room — windows framing the mountains to the west and northwest, the light changing through the afternoon from sharp and white in winter to long and golden in July, when the Norwegian summer stays bright until almost midnight. The open plan means the kitchen, dining area, and living space all flow together, which is exactly what you want when eight people are coming in from a ski day simultaneously, wet jackets piling up, something warm on the stove. The kitchen is sensible and complete — stove, fridge, microwave, all included. A bar counter separates it from the dining space, which opens directly o ... click here to read more

Welcome to Søre Vorsetkroken 42! Cabin with a beautiful location in an established cabin area at Vegglifjell.

Nestled in the serene wilderness of Veggli, Norway, this quaint cabin offers a unique escape for those yearning for peace and solitude away from urban chaos. Located at Vorsetvegen 335, 3628 Veggli, this cozy retreat, built in 1969, sits at approximately 874 meters above sea level. The cabin is surrounded by nature's bounty, with sprawling landscapes of mountains, heather, trees, and occasional glimpses of marshland. This detached sanctuary is freehold, ensuring privacy and exclusivity for its owner. A 20-minute walk on a footpath from the end of Vorsetvegen leads you to this secluded hideaway, promising good sun conditions and scenic views over the nearby pond. The property is placed amidst scattered cabin developments, adding a sense of community while maintaining your personal retreat. The absence of installed electricity or water becomes a charming feature for those inclined towards sustainable and mindful living. The rustic simplicity of the cabin speaks to a bygone era, making it an exciting opportunity for expatriates or foreign buyers seeking to invest in a piece of traditional Norwegian heritage. The cabin's proximity to a network of ski trails, merely 200 meters away, makes it a haven for winter sport enthusiasts. The extensive ski trails, stretching up to 111 km, ensure a long ski season, filled with exhilarating adventure. The Folk Help Cabin at Sundtjønn is nearby, offering snowmobile transport services, a testament to the welcoming and communal spirit prevalent in the area. - Secluded location at 874m altitude - Footpath access, 20-minute walk - Freehold plot - Simple and compact layout - Fireplace in living room - Open-plan kitchen arrangement - Portable gas cooking setup - Cozy 1-bedroom plus an additi ... click here to read more

DNB Eiendom ved Gro Bredeveien Wergeland har gleden av å presentere Vorsetvegen 335!

Nestled in the heart of Norway's enchanting mountain landscape, Fjordungsvegen 40 in Veggli offers a unique opportunity to own a quintessential Norwegian chalet. This charming property, located in the sought-after Skjerbrekka/Søre Vegglifjell area, is more than just a home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle filled with adventure, relaxation, and unforgettable memories. Imagine waking up to the serene beauty of the Norwegian mountains, where the air is crisp, and the views are nothing short of spectacular. This chalet, perched at approximately 792 meters above sea level, is a haven for those seeking a second home that combines rustic charm with modern conveniences. A Year-Round Retreat Whether you're an outdoor enthusiast or someone who simply appreciates the tranquility of nature, this chalet is perfectly positioned to offer the best of both worlds. In winter, the area transforms into a snowy wonderland, with meticulously groomed cross-country ski trails just a stone's throw away. As the snow melts, the landscape bursts into life, offering a paradise for hikers, cyclists, and nature lovers. Chalet Features: - Size: 77 square meters of cozy living space - Bedrooms: 2, offering flexible sleeping arrangements for families or groups - Bathrooms: 1, with a pumped shower and a separate composting toilet - Living Area: Spacious and filled with natural light, featuring a traditional wood-burning stove - Kitchen: Equipped with gas-operated appliances and a solid wood countertop - Power: 12-volt solar power system with two batteries - Heating: Wallas cabin heater, remotely activated for convenience - Outdoor Space: 12 m² terrace and a 6 m² external storage room - Plot: 1,000 m² leased lot surrounded by natural terrain A Lifestyle ... click here to read more

Welcome to Fjordungsvegen 40!

A Tranquil Mountain Retreat in Tinn Austbygd Imagine waking up to the gentle rustle of leaves and the crisp, invigorating air of the Norwegian mountains. As the sun rises over the peaks, its golden rays spill across your expansive veranda, inviting you to savor a steaming cup of coffee while soaking in the panoramic views of Skirvedalen. This is not just a vacation home; it's a gateway to a lifestyle steeped in nature, tranquility, and adventure. A Cozy Haven Amidst Nature Nestled at an elevation of 931 meters, this charming chalet at Lauvlivegen 8 offers a unique blend of comfort and functionality. Built in 1994, the property spans 53 square meters, thoughtfully designed to maximize space and comfort. The open-plan living area, bathed in natural light from large windows, creates a warm and inviting atmosphere. Here, a crackling fireplace becomes the heart of the home, perfect for cozy evenings after a day of exploration. The kitchen, practical and well-maintained, is a hub for culinary creativity, where you can prepare hearty meals to enjoy with family and friends. Three bedrooms provide restful retreats, each designed to offer privacy and comfort, whether for a weekend escape or an extended holiday. Outdoor Living at Its Finest Step outside onto the 32 square meter veranda, a true highlight of this property. This sun-drenched space is ideal for al fresco dining, entertaining guests, or simply unwinding with a book as you gaze over the valley and mountains. The veranda's orientation ensures you capture the best of the sun throughout the day, making it a cherished spot for relaxation. The chalet sits on a generous 999 square meter freehold plot, offering ample space for outdoor activities, gardening, or simply enj ... click here to read more

Welcome to Lauvlivegen 8!