Stockholm
City Guide

Stockholm

Sweden · Best time to visit: May-Sep.

Recommended stay 1 days
Daily budget SEK85.00/day
Best season May-Sep
Language Swedish
Currency SEK
Time zone Europe/Stockholm
Day-by-day plan

Choose your pace

Day 1

Fourteen Islands in a Single Breath

09:00

Stockholm City Hall

Landmark
Duration: 1h Estimated cost: €0

From T-Centralen, walk west along Hantverkargatan for ten minutes — the City Hall's hundred-metre tower topped with three golden crowns will pull you forward like a compass needle. The 1923 building commands the Riddarfjärden waterfront, its eight million red bricks glowing warm copper in the morning eastern light. Walk through the open courtyard arcade and along the waterside terrace for an unobstructed panorama of Riddarholmen's medieval church spire and the ochre rooftops of Gamla Stan — the same view that opens the Nobel Prize broadcast every December.

Tip: Walk down to the southeast corner of the waterside terrace, where the tower aligns with Riddarholmen Church's cast-iron spire — most visitors stay in the courtyard and never find this angle. Arrive before 10:00 and you'll have the terrace nearly to yourself; by mid-morning tour buses unload at the main entrance.

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10:15

Gamla Stan

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €0

Cross Stadshusbron bridge heading east — the twelve-minute walk gives you Riddarholmen Church reflected in still morning water, one of Stockholm's most painted silhouettes. Enter the medieval labyrinth through Munkbron gate and let the narrow cobblestone lanes pull you south into Stortorget, the sunlit square ringed by merchant houses in ox-blood red and mustard gold where Nobel Prize winners are announced each October. Wind through Prästgatan's quiet curves to Mårten Trotzigs Gränd — at ninety centimetres wide and thirty-six worn stone steps, the city's narrowest alley — then emerge north at the Royal Palace's baroque façade, where stone lions guard Europe's largest inhabited royal residence.

Tip: Mårten Trotzigs Gränd hides between Prästgatan 22 and 24 — look for the narrow iron railing descending to your left and photograph from the bottom step looking up for the shot everyone tries to replicate. The Royal Palace guard change happens at 12:15 (April–October), but waiting burns thirty minutes on a tight schedule; the soldiers assembling in the outer courtyard from 11:45 are equally photogenic and free. Skip every restaurant ringing Stortorget — they charge triple for reheated tourist food.

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12:00

Östermalms Saluhall

Food
Duration: 45min Estimated cost: €18

From the Royal Palace's north side, cross Strömbron — the short bridge where Lake Mälaren's fresh water meets the Baltic's salt, sometimes visible as two different colours in the current below. Walk through Kungsträdgården park and up Sibyllegatan for fifteen minutes to reach Stockholm's legendary food hall, open since 1888 in a cathedral-like red-brick building. Head straight to Lisa Elmqvist's marble counter for a räksmörgås — hand-peeled Skagen shrimp piled generously on sourdough (185 SEK / €16) — or their silky fisksoppa with aioli and rye bread (165 SEK / €14). Eat standing at the counter like every local in the room and you'll be out in twenty minutes.

Tip: Use the standing counter on the left side of Lisa Elmqvist — identical menu, half the wait time of the sit-down tables. If the queue still wraps around, Tysta Mari two stalls down does an equally excellent fish soup for twenty kronor less. Budget 150–220 SEK (€14–20) for a full lunch.

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13:00

Strandvägen

Neighborhood
Duration: 1h15 Estimated cost: €0

Step out of the food hall and walk south on Nybrogatan for five minutes — the harbour opens up at Nybrokajen where white archipelago ferries line the quay. Turn left onto Strandvägen, Stockholm's most opulent boulevard: one and a half kilometres of linden trees, Art Nouveau façades with ornate balconies, and vintage wooden boats moored in the canal below. Walk the full length on the harbour side as the early afternoon sun lights up the ornate building fronts across the water. The boulevard ends at Djurgårdsbron — a bridge flanked by two gilded Norse gods — where the Nordic Museum's fairy-tale tower rises straight ahead and the Gröna Lund rollercoaster silhouette breaks the treeline to the right.

Tip: Stay on the south pavement — the harbour side — for unobstructed water views the entire walk. Near Strandvägen 27, look down at the canal where a line of restored 1920s wooden sailing boats are moored year-round — free to photograph from the quayside and one of Stockholm's most quietly beautiful scenes that bus tourists never see.

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14:30

Djurgården

Park
Duration: 2h30 Estimated cost: €0

Cross Djurgårdsbron under the gilded bridge sentinels and bear left onto Stockholm's green island — a royal hunting ground since the fifteenth century turned cultural parkland. Follow Djurgårdsvägen along the waterfront past the Nordic Museum's soaring Renaissance tower and the ship-shaped Vasa Museum, both worth returning for if Sweden gives you another day. Continue on the oak-lined paths toward Rosendals Trädgård, where the afternoon light filters through centuries-old oaks and the hum of the city fades to birdsong. Loop back along the southern waterfront for wide-open views across to Södermalm's cliffs — a different Stockholm entirely from the one you walked this morning.

Tip: Rosendals Trädgård is the island's best-kept secret — a biodynamic garden café where pastries are baked with flour milled on-site. The apple cake with vanilla sauce (75 SEK / €7) is the one thing locals would riot over if it left the menu. In May and June the wisteria tunnel in the garden's south corner is Stockholm's most photographed spot that tourists never find.

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19:00

Sturehof

Food
Duration: 1h30 Estimated cost: €50

Retrace Djurgårdsbron and walk west along Strandvägen — golden-hour light now hits the façades from the opposite angle, worth a second look. Turn right on Grev Turegatan and in five minutes you reach Stureplan, Stockholm's social epicentre since the 1890s. Sturehof has anchored this corner for over a hundred and twenty years — part brasserie, part oyster bar, part living room of the city. Open with Toast Skagen, the dish Sweden gave the world: hand-peeled shrimp, crème fraîche, and dill mounded on crisp bread (189 SEK / €17). Follow with their plankstek or the catch of the day. Budget 400–600 SEK (€35–55) per person with one drink.

Tip: Book an outdoor terrace table online for May through September — it is Stureplan's best people-watching seat in the city. Walk-ins always find room at the long bar counter inside. Tourist trap warning: the restaurant row along Biblioteksgatan between here and NK department store survives on foot traffic alone — overpriced, under-seasoned, and not where a single Stockholmer would spend their money. You already found the right place.

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FAQ

Frequently asked questions

How many days do you need in Stockholm?

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

What's the best time to visit Stockholm?

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

What's the daily budget for Stockholm?

A practical starting point is about €85 per person per day before hotels, then adjust based on museums, dining, and transport.

What are the must-see attractions in Stockholm?

A good first shortlist for Stockholm includes Stockholm City Hall.