Stockholm, Sweden

Stockholm Stadshotell

Price per night from$1,315.42

Price information

If you haven’t entered any dates, the rate shown is provided directly by the hotel and represents the cheapest double room (inclusive of taxes and fees) available in the next 60 days.

Prices have been converted from the hotel’s local currency (SEK12,797.33), via openexchangerates.org, using today’s exchange rate.

Style

Design-devoted den

Setting

Grandly gabled Södermalm

Originally designed in the 19th century for King Oscar I, Södermalm’s Stockholm Stadshotell reigns supreme for its dashing design and fittingly regal grandeur. Hand-crafted furnishings are shaded with cosy wool throws and colourful rugs across rooms and suites, but this spot’s crowning achievement is culinary. Downstairs, the acclaimed restaurant lures for its comforting, seasonal plates, and fine-dining dishes under the second-floor chapel’s restored frescoes serve up splendour without ceremony.

Smith Extra

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Seasonal fruit and a bottle of wine

Facilities

Photos Stockholm Stadshotell facilities

Need to know

Rooms

32, including eight suites.

Check–Out

Noon, and check-in is at 2pm. Both are flexible, on request and subject to availability.

More details

Rates don’t include breakfast, but à la carte options are available at the Bistro for an additional charge.

Also

One Small Double Room and one Deluxe Room have been adapted for guests with limited mobility, and all the communal spaces are accessible. It’s worth noting that Södermalm’s surrounding streets are cobbled, and may be challenging to navigate for wheelchair users.

At the hotel

Outdoor courtyard, charged laundry service and free WiFi throughout. In rooms: smart TV, Bluetooth speaker, climate control, minibar, free bottled water, steamer, bathrobes and bespoke Stora Skuggan bath products.

Our favourite rooms

Grand arched windows welcome light into every room, but for an idyllic shot of the magnolia trees, we’d snag the Corner Studio for its courtyard-facing outlook. The Penthouse Suites offer top-floor panoramas, separate living spaces, cockle-warming fireplaces and freestanding tubs.

Spa

There’s a small spa, with a sauna, ice bath and sensory shower that you’re welcome to book in for. If you’re in need of some intensive deknotting, massages can be arranged on request for an extra fee.

Packing tips

Enough confidence to roam these Scandi streets with the same amount of flair as its à la mode locals.

Also

The hotel has partnered with SPR Athlete Factory, less than five minutes’ walk away, that you can use for free — just be sure to book in advance.

Pet‐friendly

Well-behaved pups are welcome for free in some Cosy Rooms, Deluxe Rooms and Corner Suites, subject to availability. See more pet-friendly hotels in Stockholm.

Children

Welcome; there’s no kids’ club, but babysitting can be arranged on request for an extra charge. Free baby cots can be added to all rooms, and some rooms accommodate an extra bed for an additional cost.

Food and Drink

Photos Stockholm Stadshotell food and drink

Top Table

Under the restored frescoes and gold-laced columns in the old chapel.

Dress Code

Anything from Acne Studios, Ganni or Filippa K will fly best in this fashion-forward side of Stockholm.

Hotel restaurant

The deft crew behind Bistro is helmed by Olle T Cellton — the lauded name behind Södermalm’s loved-by-all Babette. Menus follow the natural call of the calendar and place focus on fresh, regional fare, meaning options are ever evolving. Check in on the chalkboard’s specials each morning for your lunch and dinner dishes, which often include marinated local meats, saltcrusted catches and all sorts of sides. Breakfast features all the classics (eggs any which way, pastries, granola and porridge), as well as fried chicken sandwiches and sweet French toast. There’s a second, intimate restaurant — Matsalen — set on the second floor in the building’s former chapel, with a daily-changing set menu, from Wednesday to Saturday, and selected wine pairings.

Hotel bar

Dark-toned wood furnishings and rich-red flooring accent the hotel’s moody bar, where cocktail connoisseur Andrés Basile creates punchy concoctions with a lengthy list of liquors and creative mixers. Continental wines hit the high notes, too, and there are brews on tap for the beer buffs.

Last orders

Bistro serves breakfast from 7am to 11am; lunch is from 11.30am and dinner is dished until midnight. Matsal is open for reserved dinners from 6.30pm till midnight, Wednesday to Saturday. And the bar pours from 4pm to 1am (from noon on weekends).

Room service

Dishes can be delivered to your door between 7am and 11pm; after-hours bites are available on request and subject to availability.

Location

Photos Stockholm Stadshotell location
Address
Stockholm Stadshotell
Björngårdsgatan 23
Stockholm
118 52
Sweden

Stockholm Stadshotell sits in Södermalm, an artsy area in the Swedish capital’s southern district.

Planes

Most European hubs have direct routes to Stockholm’s Arlanda Airport, which is around 45 minutes from the hotel by car (depending on traffic). Private transfers can be arranged from SEK2,100 each way.

Trains

Three of the city’s central metro stations — Mariatorget, Slussen and Medborgarplatsen — are less than a 10-minute walk from the hotel for around-Stockholm routes. Daily long-distance trains to other Swedish cities and towns leave from Stockholm Centralstation and Södra Station. The latter is a two-minute walk, and the former is 10 minutes by car.

Automobiles

There are strong transport links in Stockholm, so a set of wheels isn’t essential. If you are driving, there’s street parking and several public carparks nearby.

Worth getting out of bed for

Rent a bike and recce your Scandi surroundings like a local, starting on the south-side of Guldbron, exploring the hotel’s adjacent Mariatorget district, where vintage stores, cafés and independent art galleries thrive. Further visual inspo is on offer at Fotografiska, which is storied for its rotating exhibitions and boundless Baltic views. Skinnarviksberget, Tantolunden and Ivar Los Park are your green-swathed picnic spots during the warmer months; and between April and October, Hornstull’s weekend markets fill with local food and artisan stalls.

Local restaurants

Named after the Roman god of wine, Bacchanale brings a French bistro feel to Södermalm with rustic, flame-flickered interiors, a moreish mix of sharing and larger plates, and sommelier-selected pairings. Deli-style Schmaltz wouldn’t look out of place in Brooklyn with its perfect-for-lunch bagels and revered Reuben sandwiches. Sourdough pizzas with seasonal toppings appear from the open kitchen at Babette, where wooden tables host chattering locals.

Local cafés

Hyper-local ingredients are used to fill over-flowing sandwiches at Café Pascal, and freshly blended brews make it a winning morning pitstop.

Local bars

Head to Omnipollos Hatt for quirky, flavoured brews (blueberry and mango are a couple of on-tap options); and at Café Nizza, reams of local wines are paired with light bites.

Reviews

Photos Stockholm Stadshotell reviews
Zebedee Helm

Anonymous review

By Zebedee Helm, Ingenious illustrator

We named it the beige beast and it embarrassed me. Mrs Smith and I had bought the thing online days earlier without gauging its enormous size. I wheeled it self-consciously across the courtyard to our hotel — peach-hued, pedimented and clock-topped, it exuded understated class. Precipitous granite steps led up to the seaweed-green front door. Panic struck. How could I possibly maintain an air of nonchalant panache while heaving this vast lump of beige baggage up those stairs? Mercifully, an alert staff member smiled, like a blond Jeeves, and with the touch of a tastefully concealed button the steps magically descended into the ground. This enabled us to shuffle forward onto the top one and be lifted vertically, like the 17th-century warship Vasa from the Stockholm sea bed, and we glided into the embrace of Swedish capital’s hippest new hotel.

From the reception you could already appreciate its reputation as the most sought-after place to stay in the city. Despite being 4pm and a weekday, the bistro-bar-café area was buzzing with (we have it on good authority) the cream of Stockholm celebs, laughing, chatting and removing flecks of dill from their sparkling teeth. Thick, plaited ropes of blonde hair swung from every other
head; we were definitely in Sweden.

Our Studio Suite was on the ground floor and consisted of an abundantly cupboarded hall, which led to a sitting room housing the minibar, whose doors I threw open and left open. It was the size of a wardrobe, mirrored inside and filled with the most delectable-looking eatables you could hope to encounter. There were smoked almonds, green olives, spiced tuna, pistachio nougat, miniature bottles of booze (one with a menacing cat on it, a warning surely that it contained an aquavit so strong it would claw your throat on its way down), even a leafed Sicilian lemon on a wooden board with a sharpened Opinel knife at its side for slicing perfect curls of zest. I was in heaven. Mrs Smith called from the blond-marble bathroom the four words I most long to hear on first entering a
hotel room: 'We have a bath!' I’m familiar with the justifications of shower-lovers: hygiene, convenience, etc, but nothing beats a bath, particularly on a city break. After walking 20,000 steps a day, your poor feet — only a soak in a hot tub of fragrant water will revive them. 

Our impatience to explore the city drew us from our island, the Shoreditch of Stockholm, with its vintage shops and dinky mismatched cafés, into the old town. We were amused by a procession of plumed cavalry officers trotting past in the pouring rain as we ducked into a cosy café for a slice of princess cake and a cup of tea. We learned later that, had we any patience or regard for pageantry, we would have been rewarded with a glimpse of the King and Queen of Sweden! The cavalry, it turned out, was heading a National Day procession (!) that included further
back their majesties in a horse-drawn carriage. As we returned to our courtyard, beaming blonde staff members rushed towards us with umbrellas to protect us from the National Day weather. We headed straight to our bath tub. 

The Stadshotell boasts two eateries. We swooped up thickly carpeted stairs, to the posher one, Matsalen. After some vigorous hand-shaking with the maître d’, we sunk into a scalloped mohair banquette. The room was light and elegant with arched windows, classical pilasters and marbled walls. We ordered cocktails so strong they evaporated at dizzy-making speed. There followed a succession of courses, the provenance of which were narrated in detail by our waiter, Isaiah. Mrs Smith is not interested in hearing where the baby carrot she is about to decapitate was grown, so I did my best to prolong these encounters with what I considered pertinent questions. I can be quite annoying like that. Due to the cocktails, it’s hard to remember exactly what delicious things we ate, but a crispy little artichoke grown on a distant island by a man named Sven sticks in the mind. The events of the day catching up with us, we embraced the staff like family and exited bedwards.

Overlooking a complete lack of liquorice on the pillow, the bed was huge and glorious, with a wraparound pale wooden headboard like the dashboard on a vintage Saab. It straddled an art deco rug the colour of cardamom bun. The Swedes don’t muck about when it comes to beds. Taking their lead from the princess and that vicious little pea, they go with two mattresses. The top mattress is called a topper but bears no similarity to the quilt-like thing with strappy elastic corners we have in Britain. We slept like pine logs on a quiet mossy bank somewhere far out in the archipelago.

In the interests of research, our morning started early and with a private sauna, which is located in the cosy dungeon. It’s not a thing I’d normally get involved with, but when in Sweden… It made me very hot, then very cold in quick succession, which Mrs Smith assured me was quite normal. Now, ravenous for our first Swedish breakfast, we barged past Björn Borg and most of ABBA, and situated ourselves in a corner of the bistro. Eschewing the breakfast soup (chicken and pork!?), I plumped for the boiled egg with smoked caviar, which turned out to be feisty little dollop of taramasalata that went excellently well with my egg. Mrs S’s heart was swayed by what looked like a joyless prison porridge wearing a greyish beret of apple sauce, but which apparently was equally spot-hitting.

Suddenly and sadly, like stabbing away with a fork in the cloudy remnants of a jar of pickled herring to find there are none left, our time was up. While checking out at reception, Mrs Smith joked that her only disappointment was the lack of liquorice-on-pillow after turn-down. In a flash, Christophe, the maître d’, rushed from his post, a wild look in his eyes, returning moments later from the corner
shop bearing bags of liquorice chews. 'Enjoy,' he said, 'they are wonderfully salty.' As the granite stairs bore us slowly downwards, we turned and waved. I wish our smiles were as ecstatic as intended, but I fear we were grimacing, for the liquorice really was incredibly salty.

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Price per night from $1,315.42