Tour Guide

Museum Guide

🖼️ Viking Ship Museum

Three 1,200-year-old royal burial ships — the richest Viking Age collection on earth

The Oseberg ship excavation at Viking Ship Museum in Oslo, showing the 1,200-year-old Viking burial vessel
Photo: Kulturhistorisk museum, UiO · Wikimedia Commons · CC BY-SA 4.0

Overview

The Viking Ship Museum on Oslo's Bygdøy peninsula houses three burial ships that represent the most significant concentration of Viking Age material culture anywhere in the world. All three vessels were interred as graves — their owners sealed inside with possessions intended to accompany them into the afterlife — and all three were excavated from clay burial mounds along the shores of the Oslofjord between 1867 and 1904.

The Oseberg ship (c. 820 CE, buried 834 CE) is the most extraordinary: a 21-metre clinker-built vessel whose carved stem post rises in a tightly coiled spiral of interlocking animal motifs that define the Oseberg style of Norse art. The burial contained two women — possibly a queen and her handmaiden — along with 15 horses, 6 dogs, 4 oxen, three ornate sledges, a wooden cart, kitchen equipment, weaving tools, and dozens of decorative objects. The clay burial mound preserved organic material that would otherwise have rotted completely in less than a century.

The Gokstad ship (c. 895 CE) is larger at 24 metres and built for open-ocean sailing — its hull form was so seaworthy that a replica sailed the Atlantic in 1893 in 28 days. The burial of a powerfully built man surrounded by twelve horses, six dogs, two peacocks, and a ship's boat speaks to a very different Norse ideal of kingship than the Oseberg burial. The Tune ship (c. 900 CE) is the most fragmentary of the three but preserves elements of construction technique critical to understanding Viking shipbuilding evolution.

A new, expanded museum building on the Bygdøy peninsula was under construction as of 2026 to provide better conservation conditions and exhibition space for the extraordinary collection of burial goods that accompany the ships.

When to Visit

Open daily year-round. Summer (May–September): 10 AM–6 PM. Winter (October–April): 10 AM–4 PM. The museum is least crowded before 11 AM and after 3 PM in summer; midday in July and August can be extremely busy with tour groups. Allow 2–3 hours for a thorough visit. The Bygdøy ferry from Aker Brygge runs mid-April through September and takes 10 minutes — the most scenic approach. The ferry also serves the Fram museum pier, making a morning circuit of both accessible without a car.

Admission and Costs

Adults: NOK 160. Children under 6: Free. Reduced rate for students and seniors: NOK 110. The Oslo Pass covers museum entry and includes the Bygdøy ferry — an excellent value for visitors planning to see multiple Oslo museums. Private guided tours from the museum entrance: NOK 1,500–2,500 for groups of up to 6 (typically 90 minutes). Group tours from major operators: NOK 350–500 per person.

The Case for a Guide

Standing in front of the Oseberg ship without context, visitors see an impressive old wooden boat. A guide transforms it into one of the most revealing windows into a civilisation that existed on the edge of the known world 1,200 years ago.

  • Decoding the carvings: The Oseberg ship's animal-head post and carved bed posts are not decoration — they are ritual objects whose imagery connects directly to Norse mythology, specifically the Vanir gods associated with fertility and the underworld. A guide identifies the specific mythological scenes and explains why this particular artistic vocabulary surrounded the dead.
  • Who were the two women?: The identity of the Oseberg burial's two occupants is one of Norwegian archaeology's unresolved mysteries. A guide walks through the competing theories — queen, völva (seeress), and ritual sacrifice — and explains what the burial goods reveal about each hypothesis.
  • Shipbuilding engineering: The Gokstad ship's hull was built to flex rather than resist the sea, with strakes attached to each other but only loosely to the ribs — a counter-intuitive engineering solution that made it more seaworthy than rigid-hulled contemporary vessels. A guide demonstrates this at the actual hull.
  • Reading the burial goods: The Oseberg burial contained a remarkable collection of 9th-century everyday objects — a cart, sledges, textiles, kitchen equipment — that provide more information about how wealthy Norwegians lived than any written source from the period. A guide contextualises each object category.
  • The 1893 Atlantic crossing: The story of the Viking — a Gokstad replica that crossed from Bergen to Newfoundland in 28 days in 1893 — is told in one of the museum's exhibits. A guide connects this to the historical evidence for Norse settlement in North America four centuries before Columbus.

Tips for Visitors

Arrive before 11 AM to avoid the worst midday congestion in summer. The Bygdøy ferry from Aker Brygge pier 3 is the most atmospheric way to arrive and avoids bus stops. Combine the visit with the Fram polar ship museum next door — the two together cover the full span of Norwegian maritime achievement from the Viking Age to the Arctic. Photography is permitted inside the museum; tripods are not allowed. The museum shop stocks high-quality reproductions of Viking Age jewellery and carvings. Audio guides are available in multiple languages but are no substitute for a live specialist guide for the burial goods interpretation.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes the Oseberg ship so significant?

The Oseberg ship, built around 820 CE and buried as a royal grave in 834 CE, is the most ornately decorated vessel ever found from the Viking Age. Its carved prow — a spiral of interlocking animal motifs — represents the pinnacle of Oseberg style art, a form so precisely dated by the burial that it names an entire chapter of Norse art history. What preserved it was the clay sealing of the burial mound, which excluded oxygen before it could destroy the wood. The result is a 70%-intact hull that still shows the individual tool marks of its builders. Alongside the ship, archaeologists found a wealth of everyday objects — textiles, sledges, wooden carts, kitchen equipment — that collectively form the most complete picture of elite Viking material culture ever discovered.

When is the Viking Ship Museum open?

The museum is open daily throughout the year. Summer hours (May–September) are 10 AM to 6 PM; winter hours (October–April) are 10 AM to 4 PM. The museum relocated from its original building and a new, expanded facility on the Bygdøy peninsula was under construction; confirm opening hours on the museum's official website before visiting as arrangements may still be transitional in 2026.

How do I get to the Viking Ship Museum from central Oslo?

From Aker Brygge, the seasonal passenger ferry (Bygdøy ferry) reaches the museum pier in approximately 10 minutes — the most atmospheric approach. From mid-April through September the ferry runs every 20–30 minutes from pier 3 at Aker Brygge; adults pay approximately NOK 60 one way. Alternatively, bus 30 from the National Theatre stop reaches the museum in 15 minutes. By tram, take line 13 to Tjuvholmen and walk 5 minutes to the Aker Brygge pier. The museum shares the Bygdøy peninsula with the Fram polar ship museum and the Norwegian Folk Museum, making a half-day peninsula circuit an excellent itinerary.

How long should I plan for a visit?

The core collection — three ships, burial artefacts, and contextual displays — takes 1.5 to 2 hours at a relaxed pace without a guide. With a knowledgeable guide who decodes the Norse mythology, burial rituals, and material culture in detail, allow 2.5 to 3 hours. The museum is housed in a purpose-built hall designed around the ships themselves, so the spatial experience of walking around vessels this size is itself part of the attraction.