Stavanger
City Guide

Stavanger

Norway · Best time to visit: May-Sep.

Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget NOK120.00/day
Best season May-Sep
Language Norwegian
Currency NOK
Time zone Europe/Oslo
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

From Pulpit Rock to the Painted Street — One Decisive Day

08:00

Preikestolen (Pulpit Rock)

Landmark
Duration: 5h30m Estimated cost: €45

Catch the 07:00 Pulpit Rock shuttle from Stavanger Byterminalen (ticket booked the night before) — 40 minutes through the Ryfast sub-sea tunnel to the trailhead. Start climbing immediately; you want to reach the 604-metre granite plateau before the 11:00 tour-bus crowds. The last ridge opens without warning onto a flat slab hanging straight over Lysefjord, and the drop at your toes is the reason people fly to Norway.

Tip: Wear real hiking shoes — the trail is a bouldery scramble and keeps snow patches into early June. Stepping onto the plateau before 09:45 means you photograph the cliff edge with nobody in frame; by 10:30 there is a literal queue for the rock.

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13:45

Fisketorget Stavanger

Food
Duration: 45m Estimated cost: €22

The shuttle drops you back at Byterminalen — walk 5 minutes south along Vågen harbour to the glass-fronted Fisketorget at the water's edge. Order fiskesuppe (creamy Stavanger fish soup, 165 NOK) at the counter and a rekesmørbrød (fresh-shrimp open sandwich, 195 NOK), then eat on the waterside benches watching the wooden sailboats.

Tip: Skip the pre-wrapped sushi at the front. The fiskesuppe is made fresh twice a day from the morning catch — ask the counter what fish is in today's pot. Cash is not needed; everywhere in Norway takes card.

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14:45

Gamle Stavanger

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h15m Estimated cost: €0

Cross the small harbour footbridge and climb 4 minutes west up Øvre Strandgate into Gamle Stavanger — 173 white clapboard houses from the 1700s, the largest preserved wooden settlement in Northern Europe. Wander the cobbled lanes slowly; the mid-afternoon sun strikes the west-facing facades full-on, which is exactly when the white planks and red geraniums read cleanest on camera.

Tip: Øvre Strandgate 20-28 is the stretch every postcard is shot on. For a people-free photo, cut one block uphill to Nedre Blåsenborg — same 18th-century timber, a tenth of the tourists, and you can see the harbour framed at the end of the lane.

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16:15

Norwegian Petroleum Museum (Exterior)

Landmark
Duration: 45m Estimated cost: €0

Walk 12 minutes back east around the north quay of Vågen to Kjeringholmen. You are here for the building itself — stacked steel drums and glass cylinders cantilevered straight over the fjord, an honest translation of an offshore oil platform into architecture. The outdoor Geopark behind it, built entirely from retired rig parts, is a free sculpture playground that locals' kids actually use.

Tip: The cleanest architecture frame is from the wooden pier on the east side — you get the drums, the mirror-black fjord, and a historic wooden schooner moored below in one shot. Skip the 180 NOK interior ticket; a layover day is better spent outside.

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17:15

Fargegaten (Øvre Holmegate)

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h15m Estimated cost: €0

Walk 8 minutes south-east from the museum, past the 1850s Valberg watchtower, onto Øvre Holmegate. The whole street was hand-painted in saturated pastels by a local hairdresser tired of Stavanger's white-and-grey uniform — pink, mustard, mint, cobalt, lavender, block after block. The low late-afternoon sun hits the west-facing side first, and the colour blocks stack into a single gradient when you frame them correctly.

Tip: Stand at the Skagenkaien (south-west) end and shoot straight down the street — the pastels compress into a single rainbow band. Avoid 18:00-18:30 when cruise passengers arrive en masse and stand in the middle of the road for selfies.

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19:00

Renaa Matbaren

Food
Duration: 1h30m Estimated cost: €55

2 minutes' walk from Fargegaten to Breitorget square. Sven Erik Renaa is the Michelin-starred chef who put Stavanger on Norway's food map, and the Matbar is his open-kitchen casual room — same produce, half the formality. Order the fiskedagen (catch of the day, 345 NOK) and the burrata with smoked trout roe (210 NOK), plus a glass of Riesling; this is where Stavanger eats when it wants to eat well without reservation theatre.

Tip: Book online by 15:00 — the Matbar is small and the 19:00 slot goes fast. Counter seats facing the kitchen are walk-in first-come; arrive at 18:50. Avoid every restaurant on Skagenkaien (Dickens, Hansen Hjørnet, the neon-lit 'fjord seafood' platters) — cruise-ship menus at 1.5× the price, and the shellfish is often frozen; locals never eat on that strip.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Stavanger?

Most travelers enjoy Stavanger in 1 days, with enough time for headline sights and a slower meal or museum stop.

What's the best time to visit Stavanger?

The easiest season for most travelers is May-Sep, especially if you want good weather and manageable crowds.

What's the daily budget for Stavanger?

A practical starting point is about €120 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Stavanger?

A good first shortlist for Stavanger includes Preikestolen (Pulpit Rock), Norwegian Petroleum Museum (Exterior).