The Swedish west coast does not look like the rest of Sweden. There are no deep forests here, no dark lakes reflecting pine trees. Instead, the landscape has been scraped clean by ice and sea over millennia into something raw and elemental: smooth granite bedrock polished to grey and pink, islands rising from the sea in great rounded humps, fishing villages perched between rock and water in colours so vivid they seem painted. This is Bohuslän – and it is unlike anywhere else in the country.
It stretches from Gothenburg north to the Norwegian border, about 160 kilometres of coast so broken and complicated by islands, inlets and skerries that its actual shoreline measures thousands of kilometres. Most visitors – even Swedish ones – barely scratch the surface.
The Landscape: Granite and Sea
The defining character of Bohuslän is the rock. It is everywhere, in every scale: great whale-backed slabs warming in the summer sun, smaller outcrops wrapped in seaweed, polished shelves dropping straight into green water. Swimming here means walking across warm granite to the edge and dropping in. Sunbathing means lying on rock that has stored the day's heat and radiates it back at you like a natural sauna. The granite is ancient – among the oldest exposed rock in Europe – and it gives the landscape a primordial, timeless quality.
The sea itself behaves differently on this coast than on Sweden's Baltic side. It is the North Sea here, influenced by the Gulf Stream, and it carries salt, movement and a mild but definite energy. The water temperature in summer – typically 18–22°C at peak – is warm enough to swim in comfortably. The clarity, in the sheltered bays and inlets, is remarkable.
Smögen: The Most Famous Village
Smögen is probably the most recognisable image of the Bohuslän coast: a long wooden boardwalk – the Smögenbryggan – lined with fishermen's storage houses (sjöbodar) painted in reds, yellows and blues, standing directly over the water. In summer it is lively, busy and undeniably photogenic. The fish auction at the harbour is one of the last traditional fish auctions in Sweden and runs several mornings a week through the season.
The prawns from Smögen are among the best in the world. Large, sweet and sold straight from the boat, they are eaten on the quayside with bread and mayonnaise and cold beer. This is one of those eating experiences so simple and so specific to place that it is impossible to fully replicate elsewhere. If you are on the west coast of Sweden in summer, the Smögen prawn experience is non-negotiable.
🍤 West Coast Prawn Experience
Buy freshly boiled prawns (räkor) directly from the boat in Smögen, Lysekil or Grebbestad harbours – typically sold by the litre from boats that arrive in the morning. Eat them on the dock with white bread, butter and mayonnaise. A cold Swedish lager alongside. This is the definitive Bohuslän meal and costs almost nothing.
Marstrand: The Island Fortress
Marstrand is reached by a short ferry crossing from the mainland – cars are not permitted on the island – and the moment you step off the boat, the pace of life changes. The island is dominated by Carlsten Fortress, a 17th-century fortification that looms magnificently over the small town below. Guided tours of the fortress run through summer and include stories of its famous prisoner, the Swedish adventurer Lasse-Maja, who allegedly escaped from captivity multiple times.
Below the fortress, Marstrand is a prosperous and pretty sailing town with good restaurants, summer boutiques and a harbour full of beautiful wooden boats. It is the preferred summer retreat of the Swedish royal family's more sporty members and hosts major international sailing regattas. The atmosphere in July is one of relaxed, salty elegance.
Tanumshede: Bronze Age Rock Carvings
In the Tanum municipality, a short drive from the coast, lie some of the most extensive and remarkable Bronze Age rock carvings in the world. The Tanum rock carvings are a UNESCO World Heritage Site and cover an area of some 45 square kilometres with panels depicting humans, boats, animals, ploughs and abstract symbols carved into the rock between 1700 and 500 BC.
The most famous site is at Vitlycke, where a large panel shows a scene of astonishing vitality – figures hunting, farming, fighting, dancing, making love – as vivid and communicative across 3,500 years as anything. A good museum at Vitlycke explains the context and helps you understand what you're seeing. Arriving early in the morning, when the low light rakes across the rock surface and makes the carvings stand out in sharp relief, is by far the best time to visit.
🗿 Visiting the Rock Carvings at Tanum
The main site at Vitlycke has a museum, parking and clear paths to the panels. Arrive before 10am for the best light and fewest visitors. The carvings are painted red to improve visibility (they were originally painted). Allow at least two hours for Vitlycke alone – the UNESCO site covers multiple locations across the area, each with its own character.
Grebbestad and Fjällbacka
Grebbestad is the oyster capital of Sweden. The cold, clean waters of the Kosterfjord produce oysters of exceptional quality – plump, briny and complex – and the village has built a small but serious food culture around them. An oyster safari, where you kayak out to the oyster beds and eat them straight from the water, is one of the more memorable food experiences in Scandinavia.
Fjällbacka is a village so perfectly proportioned and beautifully situated that it almost seems too good to be real. Squeezed between the sea and a dramatic cliff face, its wooden houses cluster around a small square and harbour. The crime writer Camilla Läckberg set her hugely popular mystery novels here, and the village has embraced the association while remaining genuinely charming rather than merely touristy.
The Koster Islands
Sweden's westernmost inhabited islands, the Koster islands, sit in the Kosterfjord – the deepest fjord in Sweden – and are surrounded by Sweden's first marine national park. The car-free islands are reached by ferry from Strömstad in the north and offer extraordinary diving and snorkelling in some of the richest cold-water marine environments in the country. On land, the islands are gentle, green and beautiful in a way that feels genuinely apart from the mainland world.
Getting There and Around
Gothenburg is the natural base and gateway to the Bohuslän coast. The E6 motorway runs the length of the coast northward and is the main access route. By train, the Bohusbanan line connects Gothenburg to Strömstad with stops at several coastal towns.
Exploring properly requires a car – or a kayak. The coast is so fragmented that distances between interesting places are short but the roads are winding. A car with a good map and no fixed schedule is the ideal way to travel. One week is enough for a good overview. Two weeks is not too much for those who want to get into the rhythm of the coast.