Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen

    13-Day Road Trip

    Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen

    Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 1Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 2Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 3Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 4Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 5Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 6Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 7Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen photo 8

    At a Glance

    Distance

    320 km

    Duration

    13 days

    Stopovers

    14

    About This Trip

    This is Norway at its most complete. The route from Kristiansand to Oslo via the west coast and Trondheim is not a highlight reel - it is the full film. Every major element of what makes Norway extraordinary for campervan travellers appears somewhere on this journey: iconic hikes above vertical fjords, a living glacier arm descending through a valley of waterfalls, the UNESCO world heritage of Geirangerfjord, the legendary hairpin mountain road of Trollstigen, an Art Nouveau coastal city built on islands, Norway's great medieval cathedral at Trondheim, and finally the long, tranquil drive south through mountain valleys back to Oslo. For those arriving by ferry from Denmark into Kristiansand, this route makes a natural and supremely satisfying grand loop of western and central Norway.

    The route follows Norway's famous National Scenic Routes for much of its length - roads designated by the Norwegian government specifically for their exceptional landscape quality, and equipped with extraordinary rest stops, viewing platforms, and architectural installations. The Geiranger–Trollstigen scenic route is perhaps the finest of all eighteen: a single continuous strip of dramatic mountain and fjord scenery that includes some of the most photographed roads on earth. Driving it in a campervan - slowly, with the windows down, stopping whenever something extraordinary appears around a bend - is one of those travel experiences that stays with you for life.

    Norway's allemannsretten law remains in force throughout: wild camping is legal anywhere on uncultivated land, 150 metres from the nearest dwelling, for up to two nights. On this route, the opportunities for spectacular wild camping are genuinely endless -beside a glacier lake in Briksdalen, on the plateau above Geiranger, by a river in the Romsdalen valley, or on a fjordside shelf somewhere between Trondheim and Oslo. Use the Park4Night app to find spots others have used and loved.

    Camping bucket list

    • Stand 604 metres above the Lysefjord on the flat granite plateau of Preikestolen at 6am with the mist below you

    • Step onto the Kjeragbolten boulder, wedged in a crevasse nearly 1,000 metres above the fjord, for the most surreal photo in Norway

    • Walk Bergen's UNESCO Bryggen waterfront at golden hour and eat fresh shrimp at the Fish Market afterwards

    • Hike to the Briksdalsbre glacier through a valley of roaring waterfalls and emerge at an electric-green glacial lake

    • Ride the Trollstigen — 11 hairpin bends on a 1:12 gradient, with the Stigfossen waterfall thundering beside you

    • Take the ferry through the Geirangerfjord and watch the Seven Sisters waterfall plunge 250 metres down the sheer cliff face

    • Drive the Atlantic Ocean Road on the Kristiansund approach, crossing eight bridges over open ocean with waves breaking across the road

    • Wake up wild-camped beside a mountain river somewhere between Trondheim and Oslo to absolute silence and a sky full of stars

    • Stand inside Nidaros Cathedral in Trondheim — the northernmost medieval cathedral in the world — at dusk when the tourists have gone

    Route Map

    Map showing the Fjord Dream: Kristiansand to Bergen route

    Stopovers

    Good to Know

    Check road and pass openings before you drive.

    Trollstigen, the Gamle Strynefjellsvegen, and several other mountain roads on this route are seasonal — typically open June to October but subject to snow closure even in summer. Campervans over 12.4 metres are banned from Trollstigen. Always check current road status at vegvesen.no or the free ViaTraf app before driving any mountain pass. Some routes also have height, weight, and width restrictions that apply specifically to motorhomes.

    Budget for ferries - there are many on this route.

    This route involves approximately 6–8 ferry crossings depending on exact routing — including the Hirtshals–Kristiansand crossing (if arriving from Denmark), Stavanger area fjord ferries, the Geiranger fjord ferry from Hellesylt, and several shorter fjord crossings on the approach to Bergen and heading north. Most are operated by Fjord1 or Norled and payable by contactless card via AutoPASS.

    Packing Checklist

    Weather & Seasonality

    May

    19°
    9°
    10d

    Jun

    22°
    12°
    11d

    Jul

    24°
    14°
    12d

    Aug

    24°
    14°
    11d

    Sep

    20°
    10°
    9d

    Oct

    14°
    6°
    8d

    Budget Breakdown

    Campsites25 – €60 per night

    Frequently Asked Questions