Best Things to Do in Sweden (2026 Guide)
Sweden offers one of the world's most varied travel experiences: the cosmopolitan culture and museum excellence of Stockholm, the seafood culture and Michelin-starred restaurants of Gothenburg, the medieval city of Visby on Gotland island, the Sami culture and reindeer herding of Swedish Lapland, and the Aurora Borealis above Abisko National Park. Midsommar (mid-June) is Sweden's most beloved festival. This guide covers the best things to do in Sweden.
Find Things to Do →The unmissable in Sweden
These are the staple sights — don't leave Sweden without seeing them.
Stockholm Old Town (Gamla Stan)
Stockholm Royal Palace (Kungliga Slottet)
Vasa Museum (Vasamuseet)
Explore Sweden on the map
Destinations in Sweden
More attractions in Sweden
Stockholm City Hall (Stadshuset)
Drottningholm Palace (Drottningholms Slott)
Skansen Museum
Nordic Museum (Nordiska Museet)
ABBA The Museum
Stockholm Archipelago (Stockholms Skärgard)
Djurgarden
Stockholm Cathedral (Storkyrkan)
Nobel Prize Museum
Royal Swedish Opera (Kungliga Operan)
Kungsträdgarden (Kungsan)
Tivoli Gröna Lund
Uppsala Cathedral (Uppsala Domkyrka)
Uppsala Castle (Uppsala Slott)
Malmö Castle (Malmöhus)
Avenyn (Kungsportsavenyn)
Liseberg Amusement Park
Stockholm National Museum
Sodermalm
Stockholm Concert Hall (Konserthuset)
Riddarholm Church (Riddarholmskyrkan)
The best things to do in Sweden are spread across an extraordinarily long country — Sweden extends 1,574km from north to south. Stockholm is the obvious anchor: the Vasa Museum, Gamla Stan, and Djurgården’s museum quarter are among Europe’s finest city attractions. Gothenburg’s Feskekyrka (Fish Church) seafood market, the Liseberg amusement park, and the Gothenburg Museum of Art make it Sweden’s most underrated major city. Gotland island — Sweden’s most popular domestic summer destination — has Visby’s UNESCO-listed medieval ring wall and Scandinavia’s best-preserved medieval streetscape. In Swedish Lapland, the Icehotel at Jukkasjarvi (rebuilt from ice and snow each winter), the ASSA dog sledding operation, and Abisko National Park’s Northern Lights viewing station are the winter highlights.Best time to visitSweden has dramatically different seasons. Summer (June-August): midnight sun in Lapland, midsommar celebrations, archipelago sailing, and temperatures of 20-25°C in the south. This is peak tourist season. Autumn (September-October): stunning foliage (especially in Swedish Lapland), elk and bear wildlife tours, and fewer crowds. Winter (December-March): Northern Lights (best probability in Abisko, 200+ clear nights/year), dog sledding, Icehotel, and ski resorts (Are, Salen). Spring (April-May): migratory birds returning, Gotland’s wildflowers blooming, and off-peak prices. Midsommar (the weekend nearest June 21) is the unmissable Swedish cultural experience.Getting aroundSweden’s SJ train network connects Stockholm to Gothenburg (3 hours by X2000), Malmo (4.5 hours), and Uppsala (40 minutes). For northern Sweden, overnight sleeper trains from Stockholm to Abisko (18 hours) and Gallivare are comfortable and practical. SAS, Norwegian, and Ryanair serve domestic routes including Stockholm to Kiruna (1.5 hours). The Inlandsbanan — a slow but scenic rail route through the Swedish interior — operates May-September. Within Stockholm, the SL transit system (metro, trams, buses, ferries) covers the whole city. In Gotland, car hire in Visby is the practical choice.What to eat and drinkSwedish food is built on seasonal foraging and preservation traditions. Köttbullar (meatballs) and smörgåsbord are iconic but represent only a small part of Swedish gastronomy. Modern Swedish cuisine — particularly in Stockholm and Gothenburg — is among Europe’s finest: Frantzen (3 Michelin stars), Oaxen Krog (2 Michelin stars), and Gothenburg’s many seafood restaurants rank globally. Key ingredients: wild chanterelles (kantareller), lingonberries, Arctic cloudberries (hjortron), gravlax (cold-cured salmon), and surströmming (fermented Baltic herring — an August specialty). Fika — coffee with kanelbulle (cinnamon bun) or cardamombulle — is the essential Swedish social ritual performed 2-3 times daily. Aquavit (dill or caraway schnapps) is drunk at festive occasions; Systembolaget (state alcohol monopoly) stocks excellent Swedish craft gin and beer.Regions to exploreStockholm — The capital across 14 islands: Gamla Stan, Djurgården, Södermalm. Vasa Museum, ABBA Museum, Skansen. The obvious starting point for any Sweden trip.Gothenburg (Goteborg) — Sweden’s second city on the west coast: Liseberg (Sweden’s most visited amusement park), the Gothenburg Archipelago, and the best seafood restaurants in the country at Fiskekyrka and Sjoman.Skåne (Scania) — Sweden’s southernmost province: Malmo’s Turning Torso, the Øresund Bridge to Copenhagen, and the Astrid Lindgren Museum at Vimmerby. Beer-brewing capital of Sweden.Swedish Lapland — Above the Arctic Circle: Icehotel at Jukkasjarvi, Abisko National Park Aurora Borealis, Sami cultural tours in Jokkmokk, and Are ski resort. Reachable by overnight train or flight to Kiruna.Gotland — Sweden’s largest island: Visby’s medieval ring wall (UNESCO), medieval churches, and the best beaches in the Baltic (Folhammar, Tofta). Ferry from Nynäshamn or Oskarshamn (3-4 hours).FAQWhat are the best things to do in Sweden?The best things to do in Sweden: Vasa Museum and Gamla Stan in Stockholm, Northern Lights in Abisko (November-March), Midsommar celebrations (June), medieval Visby on Gotland, Icehotel at Jukkasjarvi, and eating seafood in Gothenburg’s Feskekyrka market.How many days do I need in Sweden?Stockholm alone needs 3-4 days. A classic Sweden trip: Stockholm (4 days) → Gothenburg (2 days) → Gotland (2 days) → return by ferry. A Lapland-focused trip needs at least 4 days in the north.Is Sweden expensive?Yes, Sweden is one of Europe’s most expensive destinations. Restaurants: €20-35 for a main. Coffee: €5-6. Hotels: €120-200+ per night in Stockholm. Budget travellers can use hostel accommodation and the Systembolaget for drinks, keeping costs lower.