← Back to Compare

Stavanger vs Bergen

Which destination is right for your next trip?

Quick Verdict

Pick Bergen for UNESCO Bryggen wharf, Floibanen funicular sunsets, and Naeroyfjord cruises out of the harbor. Pick Stavanger if Preikestolen's 600m cliff edge and Kjerag's wedged boulder are the actual reason.

🏆 Bergen wins 72 OVR vs 70 · attribute matchup 12

Stavanger
Stavanger
Norway

70OVR

VS
Bergen
Bergen
Norway

72OVR

85
Safety
86
90
Cleanliness
90
47
Affordability
46
68
Food
68
53
Culture
63
65
Nightlife
65
79
Walkability
79
65
Nature
65
99
Connectivity
99
64
Transit
64
Stavanger

Stavanger

Norway

Bergen

Bergen

Norway

Stavanger

Safety: 85/100Pop: 145KEurope/Oslo

Bergen

Safety: 86/100Pop: 290KEurope/Oslo

How do Stavanger and Bergen compare?

Two Norwegian gateways to the western fjords — and the choice comes down to what you want to do in the daytime. Bergen is the historic one: Bryggen's UNESCO Hanseatic wharf with its tilted wooden houses, the Fløibanen funicular up Mount Fløyen for the harbor view, fish-market lunches on the quay, and the easiest jumping-off point for Nærøyfjord and Sognefjord cruises (the Norway in a Nutshell route runs from here). Stavanger is the active one — Norway's oil capital and the base for Preikestolen (Pulpit Rock, a 4-hour return hike to a 600m cliff edge) and Kjerag, with its famous boulder wedged in a chasm — two of the country's most photographed day hikes.

Mid-range budgets land around $210–220/day in both — Norway is genuinely expensive, and there's no way around it. A pizza in either city runs $25, and beer is the line item that quietly eats the trip ($14/pint). Bergen wins on cultural depth and walkable old-city character. Stavanger is in a different league for hike access and dramatic landscape. Both are tied on weather pain; bring rain gear regardless of season.

Both peak June through August, with bookend value in May and again September. Many travelers do both via the daily $80–120 Bergen–Stavanger flight or the longer ferry — three nights in each is the comfortable rhythm. Pro tip: if you're hiking Preikestolen, start before 7 AM in summer to dodge crowds — the trail has a single chokepoint in the final 200m and can take two hours from peak hiker arrival to actually getting onto the rock for a photo.

💰 Budget

budget
Stavanger: $110-150Bergen: $120-150
mid-range
Stavanger: $180-240Bergen: $180-250
luxury
Stavanger: $380+Bergen: $400+

🛡️ Safety

Stavanger85/100Safety Score86/100Bergen

Stavanger

Stavanger is extremely safe by international standards — one of the lowest violent-crime rates in Europe, a visible and polite police presence, and a high degree of institutional trust. Petty theft is uncommon but not zero in the central harbour in high season. The more serious safety calculus is outdoors: Preikestolen, Kjerag, and the fjords are genuinely dangerous for the unprepared, and most injuries and fatalities in the area are weather or exposure-related rather than anything else.

Bergen

Bergen is one of Europe's safest cities — Norway ranks consistently in the top five globally for personal safety, and Bergen specifically benefits from small size and strong social cohesion. Violent crime is vanishingly rare; petty theft targeting tourists exists but is low by Western European standards. The realistic risks here are weather, terrain, and water — slippery cobbled streets in rain, fast weather changes on the mountain ridges, and cold fjord water.

🌤️ Weather

Stavanger

Stavanger has a mild maritime climate — warmer winters and cooler summers than you might expect for 59° north, thanks to the Gulf Stream and the sheltering Jæren peninsula. The flip side is rain. A lot of rain. Stavanger sees roughly 1,200 mm annually across 200+ rainy days, and even the driest months record some rainfall. Pack waterproofs year-round. Summer daytime highs sit 15–20°C; winter lows rarely drop below -2°C at sea level. The Preikestolen and Kjerag hiking season runs essentially April (snow permitting) to October.

Spring (March - May)3 to 13°C
Summer (June - August)12 to 20°C
Autumn (September - November)4 to 15°C
Winter (December - February)-1 to 5°C

Bergen

Bergen has a temperate oceanic climate moderated dramatically by the Gulf Stream — mild winters (rarely below freezing), cool summers (18–22°C is a hot day), and famously abundant rain. 2,250mm annually, 270+ rainy days a year, and a local tradition of cheerful fatalism about the forecast. Snow at sea level is uncommon and rarely lies; the mountains surrounding the city hold snow until May. The rain is typically soft and persistent rather than dramatic — Bergeners walk through it without umbrellas.

Spring (March - May)3 to 13°C
Summer (June - August)11 to 20°C
Autumn (September - November)5 to 15°C
Winter (December - February)-1 to 5°C

🚇 Getting Around

Stavanger

Stavanger is compact and almost entirely walkable within the city centre — Gamle Stavanger, the harbour, the cathedral, Fargegaten, and the Petroleum Museum are all within a 20-minute walk of each other. Beyond the centre, the Kolumbus bus network is the practical option, with a single tram-like airport bus line (Flybussen) to Sola airport. Ferries to the Ryfylke fjords and Preikestolen depart from the central harbour. There is no urban metro or light rail.

Walkability: Excellent within the central 1.5 km. Gamle Stavanger, the harbour, the cathedral, Fargegaten, and the Petroleum Museum are all walkable in a single morning. Beyond the centre (Sverd i fjell, airport, Preikestolen) bus and ferry become necessary, but the city core rewards the feet far more than the wallet.

WalkingFree
Kolumbus city and regional buses43 NOK per journey (~$4.30)
Kolumbus fjord ferries100–400 NOK one way

Bergen

Bergen is one of the most walkable small cities in Europe — the medieval core, Bryggen, Bergenhus, the Fish Market, KODE, and the bottom of the Fløibanen are all within a 15-minute stroll of each other. A single modern light rail line (Bybanen) connects the centre to the airport and the southern suburbs (where Troldhaugen sits). Buses fill the remaining gaps, and most visitors never need a rental car unless venturing into the surrounding fjords.

Walkability: Exceptional for a small city. The compact harbour-bowl street grid puts every major sight within a 15-minute walk of the Fish Market, and the street surface is a mix of modern pavement and cobbles that mostly favours pedestrians. Add sensible shoes and a rain shell and you will rarely need transit except for the airport and Troldhaugen.

Bybanen (Light Rail)45 NOK single (~$4.20)
Skyss City Buses45 NOK single (~$4.20)
WalkingFree

📅 Best Time to Visit

Stavanger

Jun–Sep

Peak travel window

Bergen

May–Sep

Peak travel window

The Verdict

Choose Stavanger if...

you want the base for Norway's most famous hike — Preikestolen's 604m cliff over Lysefjord, plus Kjeragbolten's wedged boulder, Gamle Stavanger's white wooden houses, Nuart street art, and the Norwegian Petroleum Museum

Choose Bergen if...

you want the gateway city of the Norwegian Fjords — UNESCO Bryggen, the Fløibanen funicular, the Bergen Railway to Oslo, Nærøyfjord day cruises, and Edvard Grieg's Troldhaugen, even if it rains 270 days a year

StavangervsBergen

Try another