Travel 5 minutes 14 June 2025

One-of-a-Kind Hotels You Will Only Find in the Nordic Countries

Whether you're planning on visiting Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway or Sweden, The MICHELIN Guide has the perfect hotel for you.

When we describe a hotel as being 'interesting', we mean it as the ultimate compliment. People tend to use the word ironically or with a raised eyebrow. Not us. All we can ask from a hotel, other than having good service, is that it’s interesting – that it catches and continually holds your attention.

The most interesting hotels in the Nordic Countries are exactly what you hope they’ll be. Some are influenced by the iconic minimalism that the region is known for – with simple, stark interiors that won’t distract from the dazzling display of nature right outside your window – while others take on a certain rustic cosiness that you might expect from a region that encounters weeks to months of permanent midnight.

Here are a few of the hotels we find most wonderfully interesting across the Nordic Countries.


Denmark


© Hotel Sanders, Denmark
© Hotel Sanders, Denmark

Hotel Sanders

Copenhagen, Denmark
Copenhagen is certainly one of the world’s capitals of design, as well as the epicentre of hygge – that distinct cosiness that’s become the hallmark of Nordic hospitality. But until recently its hotel scene was somehow less than the sum of its parts. Among the hotels that are changing that, however, is Sanders, a 54-room luxury boutique hotel owned and operated by the celebrated Danish ballet dancer Alexander Kølpin.


© Zoku Copenhagen, Denmark
© Zoku Copenhagen, Denmark

Zoku Copenhagen

Copenhagen, Denmark
Zoku’s hybrid home-office lofts and compact rooms aim to provide a stylish residential work-life experience for travellers in town for days, weeks or more. It’s set in Amager Vest, an up-and-coming district on the island just to the south of the city centre. And its accommodations, sensibly, are geared towards the kind of creative work that takes place here, as well as to the youthful leisure travellers who gravitate here.


Finland


© Kakslauttanen Arctic Resort, Finland
© Kakslauttanen Arctic Resort, Finland

Kakslauttanen Arctic Resort

Saariselkä, Finland
Safe to say there’s nothing quite like the Kakslauttanen Arctic Resort, where you’ll sleep literally beneath the stars in an igloo made of glass – all so that you won’t miss a chance to see the Northern Lights. Most of the accommodations are actually log cabins with observation domes attached, for those who want slightly less exposure. Husky and reindeer safaris are available, as well as cross-country skiing and snowmobiling, and during the summer there’s a full complement of dry-land outdoor activities as well.


Iceland


© Hotel Ranga, Iceland
© Hotel Ranga, Iceland

Hotel Ranga

Hella, Iceland
Hotel Ranga is located on the southern coast of the Iceland, a little more than an hour east of Reykjavík – which, in Iceland, means you’re in pretty much the middle of nowhere. With a volcano behind it and the sea in front of it, it’s not hurting for scenery, but it’s at night that the Ranga really shines – during the Northern Lights there’s hardly a better place on earth from which to see them.


© ION Luxury Adventure Hotel, Iceland
© ION Luxury Adventure Hotel, Iceland

ION Adventure Hotel

Selfoss, Iceland
Located on the edge of the Þingvellir National Park, in a landscape of lichen and long-dormant lava fields, ION has the otherworldly landscapes angle covered. And the hotel, it must be said, certainly holds up its end of the bargain; it’s as green as anything, built largely from reclaimed and renewable materials, and heated geothermically. True to its name, it caters to just about any appetite for adventure. Recovery comes in the form of a ten-metre outdoor hot tub where you can take in the panoramic view.


© The Retreat at Blue Lagoon, Iceland
© The Retreat at Blue Lagoon, Iceland

The Retreat at Blue Lagoon

Grindavík, Iceland
Iceland’s famous Blue Lagoon is also the site of the incredibly stylish and unmistakably high-end Retreat Hotel. It’s got its own guests-only lagoon, so that you can skip the very busy public pool, as well as a lavish day spa that makes the most of Iceland’s unique volcanic resources. The suites are by a considerable distance the country’s most luxurious, with views of the private lagoon or the lava fields in the middle distance – some even open directly onto the water. Completing the picture is One-Michelin-Starred Moss, whose tasting menu showcases the best of the island's ingredients.


© Umi Hotel, Iceland
© Umi Hotel, Iceland

Umi Hotel

Hvolsvöllur, Iceland
For quite a long time, Iceland’s spectacular beauty was rather let down by its relatively ordinary hotels. Lately, however, a new movement is afoot, complementing this island nation’s sublime, unearthly landscapes with some equally inspiring modern architecture and design. And it doesn’t take much more than a glance at the Umi Hotel to identify it as an example of exactly what we’re talking about.


Norway


© Eilert Smith Hotel, Norway
© Eilert Smith Hotel, Norway

Eilert Smith Hotel

Stavanger, Norway
The Eilert Smith Hotel is nothing if not unique. It’s a converted 1930s warehouse by an architect of the same name, whose early-modernist, functionalist style now stands in stark contrast to the traditional wooden houses and contemporary glass buildings that make up the rest of the cityscape. What makes it a compelling destination, though, isn’t the building so much as what’s inside: 12 quietly stylish rooms with spas baths and heated floors, and, just as importantly, the Three Michelin-Starred RE-NAA restaurant.


© Juvet Landscape Hotel, Norway
© Juvet Landscape Hotel, Norway

Juvet Landscape Hotel

Valldal, Norway
The word 'spectacular' barely begins to describe the Juvet Landscape Hotel, an hour and a half’s drive inland along the fjords from Ålesund. From the outside, these glass-and-wood cubes are stunning enough, but it’s from the inside that you begin to really appreciate what it is to be a 'landscape hotel'; with one or two walls made of full-length glass, each cabin takes in a truly vast forest panorama.


© Manshausen, Norway
© Manshausen, Norway

Manshausen

Manshausen Island, Norway
Even by Norwegian standards, Manshausen Island is out there. This island in the Steigen Archipelago was once a traders’ outpost, and the hotel’s 1880s-vintage main house is a relic of this era. The sea cabins are quite a bit newer, however; these pared-down larchwood-and-glass structures perch right at the water’s edge, affording vertiginous views through full-length windows from living rooms furnished with mid-century reproduction furniture.


© Storfjord Hotel, Norway
© Storfjord Hotel, Norway

Storfjord Hotel

Ålesund, Norway
It doesn’t get much more picturesque than the Storfjorden, on Norway’s west coast, where the Storfjord Hotel sits surrounded by thousands of acres of protected woodland. It’s constructed in the traditional lafta style, with whole timbers, and the interiors are ruggedly elegant, furnished with antiques and classic Norwegian furnishings. Of course it’s not only the interiors you’re here to see, but the landscape as well, and each of the bedrooms has a balcony looking out over the fjord and the surrounding mountains.


Sweden


© Copperhill Mountain Lodge, Sweden
© Copperhill Mountain Lodge, Sweden

Copperhill Mountain Lodge

Åre, Sweden
A naïve observer might expect a five-star ski hotel in the mountains of northern Sweden to be a stark, stimulating, modernist sort of place, where the drama of the cutting-edge architecture and stylish, urbane interiors is only heightened by the sublime alpine landscape. This is one of those times when the naïve observer is exactly right. Mount Åreskutan is by some measures Sweden’s top ski town, and it’s here that you’ll find the stark, stimulating, modernist Copperhill Mountain Lodge.


© Ett Hem, Sweden
© Ett Hem, Sweden

Ett Hem

Stockholm, Sweden
Even if Ett Hem’s aesthetic isn’t strictly homegrown – designer Ilse Crawford is London-born, to a Danish mother – the fact is, it’s probably the finest example anywhere of the current tendency in local boutique hotel design: away from the kind of modernism that’s synonymous with 'Scandinavian' design and toward something much warmer, a luxe, stylish sort of cosiness, and an eclectic approach which makes use of mid-century modernism as just one element among many historical references.


© ICEHOTEL, Sweden
© ICEHOTEL, Sweden

ICEHOTEL

Jukkasjärvi, Sweden
Swedish Lapland’s famous ICEHOTEL, it turns out, is open year-round. From December to April, guests check in to Ice Rooms made out of ice from the Torne River, or upgrade to Art Suites, which come with unique snow and ice sculptures. But there’s also the all-season Icehotel 365, whose solar-powered building stays cool enough to house permanent Ice Suites. And then there’s also the so-called Warm Accommodation, a selection of more traditional hotel rooms or chalet apartments, all housed in permanent wooden structures.


© Steam Hotel, Sweden
© Steam Hotel, Sweden

Steam Hotel

Västerås, Sweden
The lakeside inland city of Västerås has never seen anything like the Steam Hotel. Here, a beautiful old red-brick power plant has been expanded and transformed into an 18-storey, 227-room luxury hotel whose 'industrial-romantic' interiors would be the talk of many a much larger town. The Voltage Lounge features an indoor pool heated by one of the power plant’s old turbines, and there’s also an indoor water park, complete with waterslides, spanning eight of the structure’s floors.


© Treehotel, Sweden
© Treehotel, Sweden

Treehotel

Harads, Sweden
We’re happy to report that this is exactly what you would hope a hotel called Treehotel would be. Just south of the Arctic Circle, in Swedish Lapland, a young couple took over a Thirties guest house, which travellers more or less ignored in favour of the single treehouse suite. So, with the help of seven different Swedish architecture firms, they built seven more, from the vertiginous Cabin to the dizzying Mirrorcube and the whimsical UFO.


Hero Image: © Manshausen Hotel on Manshausen Island in Norway

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