The coolcation trend – choosing destinations specifically for their summer temperatures rather than the traditional sun-and-beach calculus – has been building for three years and in 2026 it’s fully landed. Norway, Sweden, Finland, Denmark: all four are seeing significant increases in summer visitor numbers from travellers who are consciously choosing cooler destinations. This isn’t contrarianism. It’s a response to summers that have become genuinely difficult in traditional Mediterranean hotspots and a growing recognition that Nordic summers offer something different in kind, not just in temperature.
A Nordic summer day in July averages around 20-22 degrees Celsius in Oslo or Stockholm, which sounds mild until you’re sitting outside at 9pm in daylight, eating well, feeling genuinely comfortable rather than heat-exhausted. The midnight sun phenomenon – full daylight extending well past 10pm in midsummer – changes the rhythm of a trip completely. You don’t lose hours of usable time to midday heat. You don’t need to structure your day around air conditioning. You walk more, explore more, and feel less wrung out at the end of a travel day.
There is also the sustainability dimension, which matters increasingly to how people choose to travel. Nordic countries consistently lead global sustainability rankings, and travelling in a region that has genuinely embedded environmental values into its infrastructure – from public transport to food systems to hotel operations – feels different from destination sustainability marketing that doesn’t go very deep. Browse Strawberry Hotels across Scandinavia – their properties are built around exactly this Nordic-sustainable travel philosophy.
The Less Obvious Destinations Within the Obvious Region
Oslo and Stockholm are the entry points most people start with, and both are excellent. But the Nordic travel argument gets more interesting when you move beyond the capitals. Bergen in western Norway is the gateway to the fjords and, in June and July, one of the most breathtaking places in Europe. Gothenburg in Sweden has a food scene and cycling infrastructure that makes it one of the most pleasant city destinations on the continent. Turku in Finland is small, charming, and essentially unknown to visitors who haven’t specifically sought it out.
The island routes are what the Nordic region does that nowhere else quite replicates. The Stockholm archipelago – 30,000 islands spreading east from the city into the Baltic – is accessible by ferry from central Stockholm and within an hour you can be on a small island that feels genuinely remote. The Norwegian island communities accessible from Bergen by fast boat are similar. These aren’t destinations in the conventional sense. They’re experiences, and they’re the kind that travel writing struggles to adequately describe without sounding like it’s making them up.
Accommodation in these settings is where Strawberry Hotels has built something genuinely interesting. Their portfolio spans urban design hotels in the capitals to properties in smaller cities that are often the best place to stay in town, designed with a Scandinavian aesthetic sensibility that feels native rather than imposed. Find a Strawberry Hotels property for your Nordic dates – availability in summer fills faster than most travellers expect.
Practical Reality: What It Costs and Why It’s Worth It
I won’t pretend Nordic travel is cheap. It isn’t. Oslo is one of the most expensive cities in the world for visitors – restaurant meals, alcohol, transport all run significantly higher than Western European averages. This is known and it’s not a reason not to go, but it does require a different approach to budgeting than you’d apply to a trip to Lisbon or Athens.
The counter to the cost argument: you do less, but better. Nordic culture – particularly in the Scandinavian countries – is not about filling every hour with activities and spending. It’s about quality over volume. A long dinner in Bergen that costs twice what it would in Barcelona is also twice as good and goes on for two and a half hours without anyone rushing you. A day hiking in the fjords costs almost nothing and is unforgettable. The price-per-memorable-experience ratio is better than the per-day cost suggests.
Self-catering for some meals is the practical budget strategy that works best in Nordic destinations. Supermarkets are excellent, local food products are genuinely worth eating, and having breakfast and lunch from a supermarket while splurging on dinners at good restaurants is a satisfying approach. Most Strawberry Hotels properties have kitchen facilities in their extended-stay formats if this matters to your budget planning. Check Strawberry Hotels room types and facilities before you book to find what works for your trip.
Destination
Best Summer Month
Approx Daily Budget
Highlight
Oslo
July
120-180 EUR
Fjord day trips
Bergen
June-July
100-160 EUR
Fjord gateway, fish market
Stockholm
June-August
110-170 EUR
Archipelago islands
Copenhagen
June-July
130-190 EUR
Cycling, food scene
“Nordic travel is not about filling a schedule. It is about slowing down enough to notice why the light is different and why the food tastes better and why you feel less tired than you expected to.”
How to Travel the Nordic Region Well
Slow travel works better here than in almost any other region. Booking two or three nights in a place rather than one, taking the train between cities rather than flying, choosing ferry connections where they exist – the pace of Nordic travel rewards the traveller who isn’t trying to maximise location count. The region’s transport infrastructure is excellent, the scenery between destinations is often as beautiful as the destinations themselves, and a six-hour train through the Norwegian mountains is not a transportation cost – it’s one of the best experiences of your trip.
The light is the thing to plan around. In June, midsummer light means outdoor dining until 10pm feels natural. The light quality at 7-9pm on a clear Nordic summer evening is extraordinary for photography – warm, long, and completely unlike anything you get in a Mediterranean summer where that golden window lasts twenty minutes before dark falls. Structure your days to be outside during those evening hours and you’ll come home with photos that look nothing like what you expected Nordic travel to look like. Plan your Nordic itinerary with Strawberry Hotels as your base across multiple cities.
Nordic summer travel in 2026 is the version of going somewhere before it gets fully discovered that travel writing promises more often than it delivers. The window where it feels genuinely off the well-worn path is closing. The travellers finding it now are going to feel, in five years, like they got there at exactly the right time. That time is now. Check Strawberry Hotels availability for this summer before the best rooms disappear.