Why Strawberry Hotels Keeps Coming Up in Conversations
If you have spent any time in Nordic travel circles in the last few years, you will have heard Strawberry Hotels mentioned. Not in the breathless way that boutique hotel chains get promoted, but in the quieter, more convincing way that comes from people who actually stayed there and want to talk about it. That kind of word-of-mouth tends to mean something.
Strawberry is Scandinavia’s largest hotel chain – which sounds like it should be a warning. Large chains are usually where design goes to become beige and service goes to become transactional. Strawberry has somehow avoided most of that, and understanding why involves looking at what they actually built, not just how they describe it.
I want to be straight about what this is: an honest account of what Strawberry Hotels offers, who it works best for, and where it falls short. There are affiliate links throughout because I think the chain is genuinely worth exploring – but the opinion is mine, not a press release.
The Nordic Design Philosophy (What It Actually Means in Practice)
Nordic design in a hotel context can mean a lot of things. It can mean whitewashed walls and a single plant on a shelf and charging you extra for that. Strawberry’s version is more considered. The rooms prioritise functional clarity – storage that works, lighting you can actually control, beds that are the focus of the space rather than an afterthought in it.
What you notice most is the absence of unnecessary things. There is no decorative clutter, no carpet patterns from 2003, no inexplicable wallpaper accent wall. The restraint is the design. It sounds simple and it is genuinely hard to get right, which is why so many hotels fail at it and Strawberry mostly does not.
The public spaces tend to be better than the rooms, which is interesting. Lobbies and restaurant areas often have a warmth that comes from natural materials – wood, stone, good textiles – combined with the kind of lighting that makes you want to sit down and stay. You can browse current Strawberry properties by city to see which ones have had the most recent interior investment, because not all properties are equal.
The Sustainability Piece – Genuine or Marketing?
Sustainability claims in the hotel industry range from meaningful to performative, and it is worth being specific about where Strawberry sits. They have made commitments that go beyond removing plastic straws. The food sourcing in their restaurants emphasises Scandinavian and local producers. Their energy targets involve actual measurement rather than vague pledges. The building renovation projects they have undertaken in older properties have included significant investment in reducing energy consumption.

Is it perfect? No. Large chains cannot be, and the carbon footprint of running hundreds of hotels across multiple countries is real regardless of the offset credits. But within the realistic spectrum of what hotel sustainability looks like, Strawberry is doing more than most. That matters to a certain kind of traveler and is irrelevant to another kind – knowing which you are is useful before you decide how much to weight it.
“The best hotel chains are the ones that have a point of view – on design, on food, on what staying somewhere should feel like. Strawberry has one. That is rarer than it sounds.”
The Summer Pass: What It Is and Whether It Makes Sense
The Strawberry Summer Pass is one of the more interesting things they offer and also one of the more confusing at first glance. The concept is a flat-rate subscription that gives you access to stays across the network during the summer months – you pay a set amount and can book available rooms without additional per-night charges within the terms of the pass.
For frequent travelers within Scandinavia during summer, the maths can work out very favourably. The Summer Pass details and current availability are worth checking directly because the terms have evolved season to season. The key questions to ask yourself: how many nights will you actually use, and do the specific locations you want fall within the participating properties? If yes to both, it is worth calculating against your usual room rate spend.
If you are planning just one or two Scandinavian stays, the standard booking route makes more sense. The pass rewards volume and flexibility, not occasional visits.
Price Range and Who This Is Actually For
| Property Tier | Typical Price Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Comfort / budget properties | EUR 80-130/night | Value-focused travelers, longer stays |
| Mid-range city hotels | EUR 130-200/night | City breaks, business stays with leisure time |
| Design and lifestyle properties | EUR 200-350/night | Treat stays, weekend trips where the hotel is part of the experience |
| Premium / flagship | EUR 350+/night | Special occasions, anniversary travel |
Strawberry Hotels is a good fit if design matters to you but you are not trying to pay boutique-hotel premiums for it. It is also good if you are traveling around Scandinavia and want consistency – knowing that a chain’s standards are reliable takes some of the uncertainty out of multi-city trips. Explore the full property map across Norway, Sweden, Denmark and Finland to see the network’s current scope.

It is less ideal if you want a truly independent, one-of-a-kind property with a very specific local character. Strawberry has design and quality but it is still a chain, and chains have a certain sameness even when they do it well. The most individual of their properties are the older buildings they have renovated rather than the new-builds.
The Food and Breakfast Question
The breakfast situation at Strawberry properties is generally excellent. Scandinavian hotel breakfast culture runs more seriously than most of Europe – smoked fish, excellent bread, good cheese, proper coffee, and enough cold options that you are not stuck with one bowl of something warm. The quality across properties is consistent enough that booking a rate with breakfast included is usually worth considering.
Restaurant quality varies more by property. Some of the flagship hotels have restaurants that are genuinely good on their own terms, not just “fine for a hotel.” Others are serviceable. It is worth checking reviews for the specific property rather than assuming the restaurant will be a draw.
The bar situations tend to be well-considered. The same restraint that applies to the room design usually applies to the drinks offering – not trying to be too many things, doing the core things well. Check which properties have been recently reviewed for food and drink before you plan around a specific meal.
The Honest Verdict
Strawberry Hotels has earned its reputation. They have built something that sits in a genuinely difficult middle ground – not budget, not luxury, but a considered version of the space between. The design integrity is real, not aspirational marketing language. The sustainability focus involves actual choices rather than just communications strategy.
The chain is not flawless. Individual properties have varying levels of investment. Some rooms in older buildings are smaller than you would want. Not every restaurant is worth your dinner booking. But as chains go – and specifically as large Scandinavian chains go – they are doing something worth paying attention to.
If you are planning any travel around Norway, Sweden, Denmark or Finland in the next year, it is worth including them in your search alongside the obvious options. The prices are competitive for the quality, and the consistency across the network means you know what you are getting. See all available Strawberry properties and book your stay.
