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Coldcation

Everything in one place – from flights and accommodation to budgeting and packing. We've done the research so you don't have to.

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Getting to Sweden

Stockholm Arlanda (ARN) is the main international hub, with direct flights from most European capitals and many long-haul destinations. For Lapland, fly into Kiruna (KRN) or Luleå (LLA). Gothenburg has its own international airport (GOT).

We recommend booking 6–8 weeks ahead for summer, 4–6 weeks for other seasons. Prices are typically 30–40% lower than comparable southern European destinations.

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Travelling by Train

Sweden has one of the most extensive and modern rail networks in Europe – and almost all of it is fully electrified. Travelling by train here is not just convenient, it is one of the lowest-carbon ways to move around the continent.

SJ (Swedish Railways) connects Stockholm to Gothenburg in under 3 hours, Malmö in 4.5 hours, and runs daily overnight services all the way to Kiruna in the Arctic north – a 17-hour journey that is an experience in itself. Wake up above the Arctic Circle.

From Copenhagen, direct trains cross the Öresund Bridge to Malmö every 20 minutes. From the continent, rail connections via Hamburg, Copenhagen and Malmö make Sweden reachable by train from most of Europe without flying at all.

Book trains with SJ ↗
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Road Tripping Sweden

A road trip is the best way to explore Sweden's coastlines, lake districts and mountain regions at your own pace. And Sweden is exceptionally well set up for electric vehicles – making it one of the top countries in the world for EV road trips.

Fast chargers are found at virtually every motorway rest stop, most supermarkets and all major towns. Range anxiety simply doesn't exist here. The national charging network is dense, reliable and increasingly rapid – 150–350kW stations are common. EV drivers from Germany, the Netherlands and the UK regularly choose Sweden specifically because the infrastructure is so good.

Car rental companies at all major airports offer EVs. If you're driving your own electric vehicle, the Öresund Bridge connects Denmark directly to Sweden, making an EV road trip from central Europe entirely feasible.

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Climate-Conscious Travel

Sweden is one of the most sustainable travel destinations in the world – and visiting here is a genuinely low-impact choice compared to many alternatives.

The rail network is electrified and powered substantially by renewable energy. The hotel industry leads Europe in sustainability certifications. The food culture prioritises local, seasonal produce. And Swedish nature – the forests, the rivers, the clean lakes – is actively protected by some of the strongest environmental legislation anywhere.

There's also something deeper: choosing Sweden instead of a flight to a Mediterranean beach destination is itself a climate-conscious act. Shorter flights or none at all. A destination that doesn't need air conditioning. A country that has invested seriously in its natural environment for generations.

Travel here and you're voting with your feet for the kind of tourism that actually makes sense as the planet warms.

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Where to Stay

Sweden has every type of accommodation imaginable: boutique hotels in city centers, forest cabins (stugor) by the lake, luxury lodges in Lapland, and hostels for budget travelers. Our favorite is renting a stuga – a traditional Swedish cabin – directly by a lake or in the forest.

Booking.com has excellent coverage of Sweden, including many unique rural properties that you won't find elsewhere.

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Activities & Experiences

From Northern Lights tours and dog sled adventures to archipelago sailing and mushroom foraging courses. GetYourGuide has a strong Sweden selection, and many experiences can be booked last-minute.

Don't forget: Sweden's Allemansrätten (right to roam) means hiking, wild camping, berry picking and swimming in any lake is completely free by law.

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When to Go

Every month in Sweden offers something distinct. There truly is no bad time – just different Sweden.

JanDeep winter, snow
FebNorthern Lights ⭐
MarSnow + sunshine ⭐
AprIce thaws, spring
MayWildflowers bloom
JunMidnight sun + Midsommar ⭐
JulPeak summer ⭐
AugCrayfish parties ⭐
SepGolden forests
OctMushrooms, moose
NovFirst snow north
DecChristmas markets ⭐
January — The darkest month but starkly beautiful. Frozen lakes, deep snow, Northern Lights at their most frequent. Best for dog sledding and ice fishing. Fewer crowds, lowest prices.
February — A favourite for Northern Lights chasers. Snow conditions are excellent and days are lengthening. Temperatures in Lapland reach −15°C to −25°C — dress for it and it's magical.
March — The best winter month. Long sunny days, deep snow and temperatures mild enough to be comfortable. Skiing in Åre is at its peak. Northern Lights still visible on clear nights.
April — The great thaw. Ice leaves the lakes, birch trees bud, birds flood back from the south. Unpredictable weather but deeply atmospheric. The best month for Lapland in transition.
May — Sweden wakes up properly. Wildflowers across Öland's alvar, rapeseed turns Skåne yellow, the archipelago opens for the season. Shoulder season prices with summer light.
June — Midsommar, midnight sun in the north, the first warm beaches. The archipelago is glorious. Stockholm buzzes. One of the very best months to visit.
July — Peak summer. Warmest swimming, liveliest atmosphere, highest prices. Book everything well ahead. Gotland, Bohuslän and the archipelago are at their absolute best.
August — Crayfish parties, late summer light and the first hints of autumn colour arriving in the north. Warm enough for swimming, costs lower than July. The perfect shoulder-summer month.
September — Autumn arrives with extraordinary colour — birch forests turn gold, the first moose safaris, mushroom season peaks. Northern Sweden in September is a photographer's dream.
October — Quieter, atmospheric, deeply Swedish. Foraging season continues. The first Northern Lights appear as darkness returns to Lapland. Great value across the board.
November — Snow begins in the north, the first ice on the lakes. A transitional month with few visitors and a moody, cinematic quality. Ideal for those seeking solitude.
December — Sweden in December is a different world. Christmas markets fill the old towns of Stockholm, Gothenburg and Malmö — mulled glögg, gingerbread, candlelight and snow. Lucia Day on the 13th is one of the most moving traditions in Europe. And in Lapland, reindeer truly do pull sleds through the dark. This is the Sweden of every winter fairytale.
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Budget Guide

Sweden has a reputation for being expensive, but smart travelers can make it very affordable – especially compared to equally beautiful destinations in Norway or Iceland.

CategoryBudgetMid-rangeSplurge
🏡 Accommodation (per night)€40–70 (hostel/stuga share)€90–160 (cabin or hotel)€200–500+ (ICEHOTEL etc)
🍽 Food (per day)€20–30 (self-catering)€50–80 (mix)€100+ (restaurants)
🎒 Activities (per day)€0 (hiking, swimming, roaming)€40–80 (guided tours)€150+ (dog sled, ICEHOTEL)
🚗 Transport (per day)€10–20 (public)€40–60 (car rental split)€80+ (private)
Total daily estimate€70–120€180–300€400+