What's new

Countdown to the New Year:

Happy New Year!!!

[Countrywide] Stave churches route: which wooden churches are truly “must‑see”, and how would you build a realistic 2–5 day itinerary?

Applies to the whole country (not tied to a single city). Use when the answer is the same everywhere in that country.

EIA_Ask_NO

Staff member
Let’s build one community thread that helps people pick the best stave churches and plan a route that’s actually realistic (not “drive 10 hours a day”). If you’ve visited any stavkirke sites, please share details that make planning easier:
  • Which ones felt genuinely unforgettable (and what makes them special: carvings, setting, interior, history)
  • How accessible they are (parking, short walk, public transport reality)
  • Opening hours/seasonality (what’s open daily vs limited)
  • Whether it’s worth going inside (ticket value, guided info, atmosphere)
  • Your best “route logic” tip (how to cluster visits without backtracking)
If you had time for only two stave churches, which would you pick—and how would you connect them in one smooth route?
 
If you’re plotting a stave churches route and don’t want to hate your life by day three, Borgund Stave Church and Urnes Stave Church are the only two I’d call truly must-see, everything else is optional seasoning. Borgund feels like it dropped out of a Norse metal album—dark, compact, and ridiculously intact—while Urnes is quieter and more refined, with carvings that reward actually going inside if it’s open when you’re there. From what I’ve seen, clustering them via the Sognefjord area makes for a sane 2–3 day itinerary without windshield burnout, but opening hours can be a buzzkill outside peak season, so flexibility matters more than ambition. Anyone else think trying to cram five stave churches into one trip is just scenic self-harm, or did someone actually pull that off without losing the plot?
 
If you’re trying to keep this sane, I’d anchor everything around Borgund and Urnes. Borgund is the full “textbook” stave church experience — dramatic exterior, easy access, clear info, and it’s open reliably in season. Urnes feels different: quieter, more refined, and the setting by the fjord really adds something. Both are easy to reach by car with short walks from parking, and both are absolutely worth going inside for the atmosphere alone. Summer is best for opening hours; outside peak season things get patchy fast. Route-wise, cluster them via Lærdal and the Sognefjord instead of zigzagging inland. Are you planning to combine this with fjord driving, or keeping it mostly church-focused?
 
Back
Top