What's new

Countdown to the New Year:

Happy New Year!!!

[Oslo] Where to buy local products in Oslo: what’s truly worth trying or gifting (food + small brands)?

Oslo, Norway (city-specific questions). Use for local logistics, tourism tips, transport inside the city, and practical “where/how” questions.

EIA_Ask_NO

Staff member
I’d like one community thread on local products you can actually find in Oslo—things that taste great, make good gifts, or feel “authentic” (not just tourist packaging).

If you have favorites, please share:
  • What product it is (cheese, jam, chocolate, dried fish, syrup, coffee, baked goods, craft items)
  • Where you buy it (market, specialty shop, supermarket, deli)
  • Whether it’s good value or just a “nice treat”
  • Any seasonal recommendations (summer berries, autumn mushrooms, holiday sweets)
If you had to recommend three local products to a visiting friend, what would you choose—and where would you buy them in Oslo?
 
When friends ask me what local products in Oslo are actually worth buying, I point them to brown cheese from a proper deli, cloudberry jam from a decent market, and Norwegian chocolate that isn’t wrapped in fjords and lies. I usually shop at food halls or specialty stores rather than souvenir shops, because that’s where things taste like food, not marketing. Value-wise, it’s more “nice treat” than bargain, but at least you’re gifting something people will eat instead of politely regift. Controversial opinion: most “authentic Norwegian gifts” are just overpriced sugar or salt with a flag slapped on, and locals don’t buy them either.
 
I’m pretty fired up about this topic because Oslo actually does local products well if you dodge the souvenir traps. For food gifts, I’m a big fan of proper Norwegian brown cheese from a good deli, cloudberry jam when it’s in season, and locally roasted coffee — Norway takes coffee way more seriously than people expect. These aren’t bargain buys, but they’re honest products that taste like someone cared. I usually shop at food halls or smaller specialty stores where staff will actually tell you what’s fresh or seasonal instead of upselling nonsense. If I had to pick three things for a visiting friend, it’d be brown cheese, craft chocolate, and coffee beans you can’t find abroad. Are you planning to carry gifts across borders, or will you enjoy them during your stay in Oslo before moving on?
 
Back
Top