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Hurtigruten

Norway's working coastal route since 1893 — authentic, not a holiday

The Norwegian Coastal Express — a working postal-and-passenger route since 1893, sailing every day, year-round between Bergen and Kirkenes. 7 ships, 34 ports, hybrid-electric propulsion on the newer vessels. The authentic Norwegian coast experience, not a resort cruise. Sister brand HX runs the polar/expedition arm.

1893
Founded — Norway's original coastal express
7
Ships on the Bergen–Kirkenes route
34
Ports of call daily, north and south
365
Days a year — working route
Hybrid
Electric ships on the newer fleet
HX
Sister brand for polar expedition
Itineraries

Find a Hurtigruten voyage

Real itineraries, real prices — sourced live. Use the filter inside the widget for dates and length.

Why book Hurtigruten

Why a Hurtigruten voyage?

Six reasons we recommend this line to the right kind of traveller.

The original Norwegian Coastal Express

Since 1893, Hurtigruten's ships have sailed the Bergen-Kirkenes route every single day, year-round. It started as a mail and freight route, still carries Norwegian coastal communities and goods, and the cruise experience is built on top of a working ship — not the other way around.

34 ports — every day a new place

The Bergen-Kirkenes round-trip calls at 34 ports — major destinations like Ålesund, Tromsø, Trondheim and Bergen plus tiny working fishing villages the bigger cruise lines can't reach. A new port at sunrise and another at sunset every day of the voyage.

Hybrid-electric Norwegian engineering

The newer Hurtigruten ships (Roald Amundsen, Fridtjof Nansen) use hybrid-electric propulsion — battery packs reducing emissions, silent operation in sensitive fjords, lower fuel consumption. Norway's working route, sustainably evolved.

Year-round, including winter

Hurtigruten sails the coast every day, every season. Winter sailings (November-March) are the Northern Lights season — Hurtigruten guarantees you'll see the aurora on the Classic Round Voyage between October and March, or you get a free cruise. Summer brings the midnight sun.

Real Norway, not a cruise bubble

Local Norwegians get on at one port, off at the next. You'll buy bilberries from a local in Trondheim, sail past their cousin's house in Stamsund. The route is local infrastructure, not a holiday product designed in a marketing office. The experience is more honest than glossy resort cruising.

Sister brand HX for true expedition

Hurtigruten Expeditions (HX) is the separate polar/expedition arm — purpose-built for Antarctica, the Arctic, Galapagos, Northwest Passage. Same operating-company DNA, much smaller more expedition-focused ships. Look for HX if your goal is polar rather than Norwegian coastal.

The honest version

Might not be for you if…

No cruise line is for everyone. Here's where Hurtigruten might not fit. We'll point you elsewhere if so.

You want a resort cruise

Hurtigruten ships are working ships first, cruise ships second. No theatre productions, no waterparks, no headline acts, no casinos. The "entertainment" is the Norwegian coast outside your window. For resort cruising look at Royal Caribbean, MSC or NCL.

You want fine dining

Hurtigruten dining is honest Norwegian — locally sourced ingredients from coastal producers, served in a single main restaurant, with sensible-not-spectacular menus. There are speciality dinners but no Michelin-starred chefs. For chef-led cruising look at Silversea, Seabourn or Celebrity.

You hate small ports and quick stops

Many of the 34 ports are quick stops — 30 minutes to disembark for cargo while you stay on board, or a few hours for a quick walk. Only the bigger ports have substantial time ashore. If you want full days in port at every call, this isn't the right format.

You want all-inclusive

Hurtigruten fares are not all-inclusive. Drinks, speciality dining and excursions are separate. The optional Beverage Package adds drinks; the Excursion Package adds shore tours. The atmosphere is honest-pricing, not premium-inclusive.

The fleet

Meet the Hurtigruten ships

Showing the Norwegian Coastal Express fleet by default — use the search inside the panel to switch to other ships in the fleet.

Dining

Honest Norwegian dining — coast-sourced, served simply

Multi-course main dining serving locally sourced Norwegian ingredients from coastal producers. Speciality dinners (cocktail evenings, Christmas tables) at modest upcharge; the everyday meal is fresh, regional, served simply.

Main Restaurant
Three-meal-a-day main dining — Norwegian coastal cuisine, locally sourced. Included on every fare.
Brygga Bistro
Casual lunch and snack venue on newer ships — local sandwiches, fish dishes, salads.
Multe Bakeri
Bakery and pastry counter — Norwegian breads and pastries, made daily.
Aune Restaurant
Premium dining venue on the newer ships — chef's tasting menus, paired wines, modest cover charge.
Christmas Tables
Traditional julebord (Christmas tables) on selected sailings — Norwegian festive feast with akevitt and aquavit.
Local Producers Programme
Hurtigruten partners with Norwegian coastal producers — the dining showcases regional cheeses, breads, fish and meats from each port region.
Lounge Bar
Norwegian craft beers, akevitt (caraway spirit), aquavit, local wines. Paid.
Quick-stop snacking
At short port calls, local vendors come aboard with fresh produce and bilberries.
On board

What you actually do all day

The Norwegian coast outside your window

Mountains rising from black water, fishing villages with red wooden boathouses, polar dawns and dusks, the Lofoten archipelago, the Vesterålen islands, the Tromsø crossing, the North Cape, and the Russian-border port of Kirkenes. The view is the entertainment.

Northern Lights guarantee

Hurtigruten guarantees you'll see the Northern Lights on the Classic Round Voyage between October and March. If the aurora doesn't appear during your voyage, you receive a free 6- or 7-day cruise as a replacement. A genuine put-your-money-where-your-mouth-is offer.

Lectures and coastal experts

Onboard expedition team of Norwegian coastal experts, naturalists and historians — lectures on the route, the fjord geology, the wildlife and the working ship. Less academic than HX expedition voyages, more practical than entertainment cruising.

Sauna and panoramic decks

Newer ships have Norwegian-style sauna with panoramic windows, observation decks with hot tubs, full gym. The wellness is functional rather than spa-resort scale — but the views from the sauna are unbeatable.

No surprises

What's included in your fare

Every Hurtigruten fare bakes these in.

Main dining

Multi-course Norwegian coastal dining included on every fare

Coastal-expert lectures

Onboard lectures and port talks throughout the voyage

Working-ship experience

The route, the ports, the local rhythm — included in the price

Wi-Fi (basic)

Free basic Wi-Fi on the newer ships; streaming-tier paid

Sauna & gym

Use of fitness facilities, included on every fare

Aurora guarantee

Free replacement voyage if Northern Lights don't appear (Oct-Mar Classic Round)

Practical

Good to know

Minimum age
Children are welcome on Hurtigruten Coastal Express — no formal age minimum. Family cabins available; expedition voyages (HX) have stricter minimums (typically 12+).
Drinking age
18+ on all Hurtigruten ships (Norwegian rules). Wine and beer; spirits from age 20 in some Norwegian contexts.
Voyage length
Classic Round Voyage (Bergen-Kirkenes-Bergen): 12 nights. One-way northbound (Bergen-Kirkenes): 7 nights. One-way southbound: 6 nights. Shorter port-to-port segments also bookable.
Dress code
Casual throughout. No formal nights, no jacket-and-tie expectation, no Gala evenings. Practical layered clothing for outdoor decks is more important than evening wear.
Gratuities
NOT typically expected. Norwegian tipping culture is restrained. Crew are paid through the cruise line. Voluntary tipping for exceptional service is welcome but not customary.
Drinks
Bar drinks at modest Norwegian prices — wine ~£7-8 a glass, beer ~£6, akevitt £6. Optional Beverage Package available. Norwegian alcohol prices ARE higher than the UK; budget accordingly.
Wi-Fi
Free basic Wi-Fi on the newer ships. Streaming-tier available for an upgrade. Older ships may have only paid Wi-Fi.
Currency on board
Norwegian Krone (NOK) on most Hurtigruten ships. Some ships accept Euros. Cashless system; credit/debit cards work everywhere.
FAQ

Quick answers about Hurtigruten

Is Hurtigruten really a cruise?
It's a hybrid — a working postal and coastal route that has carried passengers since 1893. The ships still carry mail, freight and local Norwegian passengers alongside cruise guests. So it's a cruise EXPERIENCE built on top of a working maritime route, not a purpose-built cruise ship. The pace, format and feel are genuinely different from any resort cruise line.
What's the difference between Hurtigruten and HX?
Hurtigruten Coastal Express runs the Bergen-Kirkenes route daily as Norway's working coastal service since 1893. HX (Hurtigruten Expeditions) is the separate polar and expedition arm — purpose-built ships for Antarctica, the Arctic, Galapagos, Northwest Passage and remote destinations. Same operating company, different products. The Coastal Express is about Norway; HX is about exploration beyond.
Is the Northern Lights guarantee real?
Yes. If you sail the Classic Round Voyage (Bergen-Kirkenes-Bergen, 12 nights) between October and March and don't see the Northern Lights, Hurtigruten gives you a free replacement 6- or 7-night cruise. Aurora viewing is best in the inland Norwegian coast where light pollution is minimal.
What's the dress code?
Casual throughout. No formal nights, no jacket-and-tie expectation, no Gala evenings. Practical layered clothing for outdoor decks is more important than evening wear. Most guests live in fleeces, jeans and good waterproof boots; dinner is unfussy.
How does Hurtigruten dining work?
Honest Norwegian — three meals daily in the main restaurant serving locally sourced coastal ingredients (fish, lamb, root vegetables, foraged berries, regional cheeses) with menus that change with the itinerary. Speciality evenings (Christmas tables, cocktail-and-tasting evenings) carry a modest upcharge. Not fine dining; not trying to be.
Do I need a passport?
Yes — a passport with at least six months' validity beyond your voyage end date is essential for every Hurtigruten sailing. Schengen-area visa rules apply for non-EU/UK travellers; UK travellers get unrestricted entry to Norway as Schengen-associated.
Are gratuities expected?
Not as a daily charge — Norwegian tipping culture is restrained and crew are paid through the cruise line. Voluntary tipping for exceptional service is welcome but not customary. No daily per-guest service charge is added.
Can I sail just one direction or a short segment?
Yes — Hurtigruten Coastal Express sells the route in segments. Northbound Bergen-Kirkenes is 7 nights; southbound Kirkenes-Bergen is 6 nights. The full round is 12 nights. Shorter port-to-port tickets are also sold and treated more like a working ferry route than a cruise. Many UK guests do the full round-trip for the complete Norwegian coast experience.
Loyalty

Hurtigruten Returner

Hurtigruten doesn't run a points-and-tiers loyalty programme — too small a fleet, too local a route to need it. Returning guests receive personal touches on board and access to exclusive returning-guest offers via direct mailing.

First voyage
On booking
Welcome cabin gift, on-board orientation by expedition team, complimentary first-night reception
Returning guest
After voyage 1
Personalised on-board gestures, returning-guest mailing list with exclusive offers and itinerary previews
Frequent guest
Repeated bookings
Cabin recognition, on-board cocktail with the Captain on selected sailings, milestone-cruise gifts

Ready to sail with Hurtigruten?

A Travel Designer who knows Hurtigruten will pick the right ship, the right itinerary, and the right cabin tier for you. No call centres.