Is the Oslo Pass worth it?
Tick the attractions and transport you plan to use. The calculator compares your à-la-carte total against the Oslo Pass (24/48/72h). Prices are realistic 2026 estimates — always verify on the official Oslo Pass website before purchasing.
What are you planning to do?
Museums & attractions
Transport
Duration & travellers
À-la-carte total
Oslo Pass options
When is the Oslo Pass worth buying?
The Oslo Pass makes sense if you plan to visit at least 3–4 paid attractions in one or two days, AND use public transport multiple times daily. It covers unlimited rides on the T-bane (metro), trams, buses, and select ferries within Oslo — worth around NOK 130–260 per person per day in transit alone.
It's less useful if you plan to spend most of your time outdoors (Vigeland Park, Ekebergparken, Oslo waterfront — all free), or if you prefer the flexibility of a transit day pass (NOK 130/day). The Munch Museum and National Museum are the big-ticket items; if you do both, you're already saving over NOK 400 vs. à-la-carte on attractions alone.
Read our honest deep-dive: Is the Oslo Pass worth it?
Want to make the most of your Oslo visit? See guided tours and combo experiences.
Oslo Pass guide →