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Comfort Hotel Karl Johan

A budget-friendly price tag on the most central street in Oslo.

Two minutes from Oslo Central Station. On the main pedestrian street. Steps from the Opera House. Drop your bags and you're already in the middle of everything, no tram ticket needed.

The rooms are small. The entry-level "Compact" category runs 10 to 15 square metres, which means opening a suitcase on the floor will block the path to the bathroom. Pay the upgrade to Standard or Superior. The extra space is worth every krone. The decor leans budget-trendy: exposed brick, neon signs, a vaguely youthful energy in the lobby where the reception doubles as a bar.

Now, the noise. Rooms facing Karl Johans gate catch the full pedestrian circus, day and night. Rooms facing the internal courtyard catch bass from the bar and music that runs late on weekends. Lower floors get it worst. Request a high floor facing the back when you book, not when you arrive. The view will be a brick wall. You'll sleep.

Housekeeping only comes every four days unless you ask. That's a Strawberry chain policy, not laziness, but it catches people off guard. Fresh towels require a specific request.

Free coffee in the lobby around the clock. In a city where a café latte costs 60 NOK, that adds up fast. The gym in the basement is open 24/7 and properly equipped, free weights and cardio machines both.


Skip the Compact rooms unless you're solo with a backpack. Request a high floor facing away from the street when booking. The view is a wall, but you'll sleep. Street-facing rooms and courtyard rooms are loud on weekends.


Star rating
3

Hotel category
Budget

Neighbourhood vibe


Karl Johans gate is Oslo's main pedestrian artery: tourists, shoppers, street performers, and weekend revelers at all hours. Bustling by day, loud by night.

What to do nearby


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The largest art museum in Norway exhibiting some of the most iconic Norwegian paintings, including the original Scream oil painting and famous national romantic paintings like The Bridal Procession on the Hardangerfjord that define Norway's national identity, all in one building.
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Floating saunas at a central Oslo pier that combine wood-fired heat, direct fjord access and bookable private or shared sessions.
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See the late-19th-century apartment where Henrik Ibsen lived and worked in his final years, now paired with a small theatre programme that brings his world into performance.

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