How to Book a Hop-On Hop-Off Bus in Stockholm

The first time I tried to walk Stockholm I lost the better part of an afternoon between the Vasa Museum and Fotografiska. On the map it looks like a fifteen minute stroll. In reality it’s a bridge, an island, another bridge, a steep climb, and a very confused conversation with a kiosk owner about which T-bana stop you actually want. I was footsore and sweating by the time I reached the photography museum, and I’d still missed half the things I’d planned for the morning.

The hop-on hop-off bus exists for exactly this reason. Stockholm spreads across fourteen islands stitched together by fifty-seven bridges, and unless you have local knowledge or a stack of T-bana tickets, the geography eats your day. A 24 or 48 hour pass on the red sightseeing bus, ideally with the boat add-on, drops you at the door of every major sight from Gamla Stan to Skansen with a recorded narration and zero navigation effort. Below is everything I’d want to know before booking, and the three tickets I’d actually pick.

Red Hop-On Hop-Off bus parked in Stockholm
The signature red bus you’ll be flagging down all day. Most pickup points have a small numbered post and a printed timetable, but in summer they get busy. Photo by Suyash Dwivedi / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Scenic view of Gamla Stan Stockholm from across the water
Gamla Stan from the water. The bus drops you a ten minute walk from this view; the boat puts you within a hundred metres of it. If you only do one stop, do this one.
Aerial view of Stockholm skyline with Kastellet
The view that explains why Stockholm is slow on foot. Every one of those islands needs a bridge to reach, and a few of the bridges are surprisingly long.

What the Hop-On Hop-Off Actually Covers in Stockholm

The bus loop and the boat loop are designed to overlap, which is the whole point. You can ride the bus out to Djurgården, walk between Vasa, Skansen and the ABBA Museum, then take the boat back to Gamla Stan instead of doubling back on the bus. Or vice versa. It’s the only way to make Stockholm’s island geography work in your favour rather than against it.

City Sightseeing red double-decker open-top bus in Stockholm
City Sightseeing runs the red bus loop. The open top is great in July; less so in early May or late September when it can be cold and windy on the upper deck. Photo by AleWi / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Bus stops you’ll actually use

The full bus loop has around fifteen stops, but four or five of them are where you’ll spend most of your day. Central Station is the natural starting point if you’re arriving by train or staying near Norrmalm. Gamla Stan is the medieval old town and the stop you’ll keep coming back to. Djurgården is the museum island; the bus circles it with stops near Vasa, Skansen and the ABBA Museum. Södermalm covers Fotografiska and the cliff-top viewpoints around Monteliusvägen, and Östermalm gets you to the upmarket end of town with the Östermalmstorg market and Hedvig Eleonora church.

Two stops that tend to confuse first-timers: the Vasa stop is not the same as the Skansen stop, even though they’re on the same island. Walking between them takes about ten minutes if you cut through Djurgårdsbron, but the bus does the loop in roughly the same time. Decide based on which side of the island you’re starting from.

Vasa Museum exterior in Stockholm with masts visible above the roof
The Vasa Museum building is recognisable from a long way off because the original ship’s masts poke through the roof. The bus drops you at the door. Our Vasa Museum tickets guide covers entry options if you want to add it on.
Skansen open-air museum buildings in Stockholm
Skansen is the world’s first open-air museum, opened in 1891, and it sits on Djurgården about a fifteen minute walk from Vasa. If you’ve got a 48 hour pass, set aside a full afternoon. Photo by Øyvind Holmstad / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Boat stops add the angle the bus can’t

The boat loop is shorter and slower, with about six or seven stops depending on the operator. It runs roughly between Strömkajen (near the Royal Palace), Skeppsbron in Gamla Stan, the Vasa Museum jetty, and the City Hall waterfront. It’s the same geography as the bus, but from the water. The view of Gamla Stan from a boat is one of those photographs everyone takes from Stockholm; the same view from a bus window is fine but not memorable.

Sightseeing boats cruising on Stockholm Strom
Strömmen, the channel between Gamla Stan and Östermalm, is the busiest stretch of the boat loop. Sit on the right side facing the bow for the Royal Palace shot.
Illuminated Stockholm cityscape from the water
If you’re here in winter the boat service may not run because the channels freeze. Check before you book a combo ticket; some operators refund the boat portion automatically, others don’t.

Why the Map Lies About Walking Distances

This is the bit nobody tells you. Look at central Stockholm on Google Maps and it appears to fit inside a small square. Vasa to Fotografiska shows as roughly 2 km in a straight line. The reality: you can’t walk that line. There are bridges in the way, water in the way, and a steep climb up Katarinavägen at the end. Allow 45 to 50 minutes on foot, with a stop for breath on the climb.

Fotografiska Stockholm museum building exterior on Sodermalm
Fotografiska sits on the south side of Slussen on Södermalm. The bus drops you at the door; on foot from Djurgården, plan on close to an hour. Photo by ArildV / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Stockholm punishes overconfident walkers in two specific ways. First, the bridges are longer than they look. Centralbron between Norrmalm and Gamla Stan is over 600 metres of pedestrian-unfriendly traffic noise. Second, Södermalm is up. Not a gentle slope, an actual cliff with a lift carved into it. Once you’ve made the climb you stay up there until you walk back down, which usually means you give up on the next planned stop and find a café instead.

Mariahissen and historic Sodermalm buildings in Stockholm
The Mariahissen lift on Södermalm. You can take it up if you really want, but the bus does the climb for you with views.
Centralbron Stockholm illuminated at night
Centralbron at dusk. Pretty from a distance, hostile on foot. The bus crosses it in a minute and you stay seated.

What about the T-bana?

Stockholm’s metro is excellent and a single ticket costs about 42 SEK. So why not just buy a 24 hour T-bana pass for around 175 SEK and skip the bus? Three reasons. First, the metro doesn’t go to Djurgården at all; you still need a tram or a long walk from Slussen. Second, you don’t get the narration; the hop-on bus has a 10 to 15 language audio guide that turns the city into a moving lecture. Third, the boat. The metro can’t replicate the water leg, and the water leg is the better photograph every time.

If you’re staying for a week and want to live like a local, get the T-bana pass and walk. If you’ve got two or three days and want to see the headline sights, the hop-on bus pays for itself by lunchtime.

Three Tours I’d Actually Book

I’ve shortlisted these three after looking at every Stockholm hop-on hop-off product on the market. Each one suits a different kind of trip. Pick the one that matches your timetable, not the cheapest.

1. Stockholm: Hop-On Hop-Off Bus or Boat Option: $24

Stockholm Hop-On Hop-Off Bus or Boat Option
The default 24 hour ticket. Bus, boat, or combo, your call at checkout.

This is the most popular Stockholm hop-on ticket because of one feature: at checkout you can pick bus-only, boat-only, or both at the same per-day price. For most first-timers the combo wins, particularly if you’ve already pencilled in the walking tour or a separate boat tour and want orientation that fills the gaps. Free Wi-Fi on board and audio guide in ten languages are useful additions, though the audio quality varies depending on which vehicle you board.

2. Stockholm: City Sightseeing Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour: $37

Stockholm City Sightseeing Hop-On Hop-Off Bus Tour red double-decker
The City Sightseeing red bus, recognisable from every city loop in Europe.

City Sightseeing is the operator most cruise passengers end up on because the loop swings out to the cruise terminal at Frihamnen. It’s also the one to pick if you want a 72 hour ticket rather than just 24, which makes the per-day cost competitive on a longer trip. One important caveat I’d flag: a few visitors have reported the last buses leaving the cruise terminal earlier than the schedule suggests, so don’t cut it fine getting back to the ship. The audio guide runs in eleven languages and the buses come every thirty minutes during the day.

3. Stockholm Hop-On Hop-Off Bus & Boat: $24

Stockholm Hop-On Hop-Off Bus and Boat combination
The 1.5 hour combined orientation. Useful if you’re squeezed for time.

This Viator-listed combo runs a tighter 1.5 hour orientation that swings through the major sights and ferries you between the bus and boat legs without requiring a full day’s commitment. It’s the one I’d pick if you’ve come in on a morning train and only have the afternoon. The audio commentary lists fifteen languages, which is wider than the bigger operators. Couple of practical notes: there can be confusion between operators sharing similar stops, so look for the boarding pass colour, and the loop is a single direction with limited reboarding opportunities.

How to Plan Your 24 Hours: A Realistic Itinerary

The 24 hour pass is the sweet spot for most trips. You activate it on first boarding and it runs for a full calendar day from that moment. Here’s the loop I’d run if I were doing it again with a single day to play with.

Stockholm Stadshuset City Hall on the waterfront
Stadshuset, where the Nobel Prize banquet is held. Most loops stop here in the morning. The tower climb adds about 90 minutes and is worth it if you’re early.

Morning, 9:00 to 11:30: Start at Central Station, ride the bus across to Stadshuset. The City Hall tower climb (separate ticket) is worth the detour for the view back over Gamla Stan. Then bus or boat to Gamla Stan and walk Stortorget, Storkyrkan and the Royal Palace courtyard before the changing of the guard at noon. Our walking tour guide covers the route if you want a guide for an hour rather than self-guiding.

Royal Palace Stockholm exterior facade
The Royal Palace courtyard. The changing of the guard happens at noon and the bus drops you ten minutes early; aim to be in place by 11:50. Photo by Suicasmo / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

Lunch in Gamla Stan, 12:00 to 13:30: Pick a place on Stora Nygatan rather than Västerlånggatan; the latter is the tourist drag and prices reflect it. Then catch the boat (not the bus, save the bus seats for the afternoon) across to the Vasa Museum jetty.

Narrow alley in Gamla Stan Stockholm
One of the narrower Gamla Stan alleys. The streets off Stora Nygatan stay quieter than Västerlånggatan even at peak season.
Stortorget square in Gamla Stan with Christmas market
Stortorget at Christmas. If you’re visiting in December the market here runs through advent and is genuinely worth a stop, even if the gløgg is overpriced.

Afternoon, 13:30 to 17:00: Vasa Museum first (it’s smaller than Skansen and easier to do in 90 minutes), then either Skansen for the rest of the afternoon or the ABBA Museum if you’ve a music lover in the group. Our guides for Vasa, Skansen and ABBA cover ticket types and timing in detail; just be aware Skansen is large enough that 90 minutes is barely a taste.

Vasa ship lateral view inside Vasa Museum
The Vasa is huge. The first time you see it from above the lower deck you understand why it sank: massively top-heavy and over-decorated. Photo by Jules Verne Times Two / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
Wooden buildings at Skansen open-air museum
Skansen’s wooden farmhouses come from across Sweden. The reindeer enclosure is at the far end if you’ve got kids who’ll want to see them. Photo by Murat Özsoy / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)
ABBA the Museum exterior winter Djurgarden Stockholm
The ABBA Museum is interactive enough that even reluctant teenagers tend to come out smiling. Buy timed tickets in advance; same-day walk-up rarely works in summer. Photo by I99pema / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)

Evening, 17:00 onwards: Bus over to Södermalm for sunset at Monteliusvägen, then dinner anywhere along Bondegatan or Skånegatan. The bus loop usually shuts down by around 18:00 in shoulder season and 20:00 in peak summer, so if you want to reach Fotografiska’s late opening, plan to walk down the Katarina lift afterwards. Don’t try to climb back up.

Tyska Kyrka illuminated at night above Skeppsbron Stockholm
Tyska Kyrkan from Skeppsbron at night. If you’ve still got energy for a Gamla Stan after-dark walk, our ghost walk guide picks the alleys that come alive after the day-trippers leave.

Cruise Passenger Logistics

If you’re arriving on a cruise, the City Sightseeing tour is built for you. Most other Stockholm sightseeing buses don’t go to Frihamnen; this one does. The catch is that the connection between the cruise terminal and the main loop runs less frequently than the central stops, often every 60 to 90 minutes rather than every 30. Check the timetable on the day, ask the driver to confirm the last return run, and budget at least an hour of buffer before your ship’s all-aboard time.

Skeppsbrokajen Gamla Stan from Skeppsholmen Stockholm waterfront
Skeppsbron at Gamla Stan, the busiest cruise drop-off point. Most central tour boats and pickups happen along this stretch. Photo by Julian Herzog / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)

If you’ve only got six or seven hours ashore, drop the boat. It’s the prettier option but slower, and you can’t make it to Skansen and back on the boat alone. Instead, ride the bus to Vasa, walk the ten minutes to Skansen, and bus back to Gamla Stan for an hour before returning. That’s the maximum sensible loop in a half-day.

When to Visit (and When the Boat Doesn’t Run)

Peak season is mid-June to late August. The buses run every twenty to thirty minutes, the open top is usable, and the boat is at full schedule. The downside is queues at popular stops, especially Gamla Stan and Vasa. If you can stagger your day so you’re at Vasa before 11:00 or after 15:00, you’ll skip the worst of it.

Spring view through an archway of Stockholm waterfront
Stockholm in spring. May and early June are my favourite weeks here: long days, light evenings, and the bus loop is running but not yet packed.
Stockholm waterfront architecture in winter
Winter Stockholm has its own quiet beauty, but the upper deck of the bus is brutal in January. Sit downstairs, plan more indoor stops, and check whether the boat is running at all.

Shoulder season runs late April to early June and September to mid-October. This is when I’d actually go. The bus is still running every 30 minutes most of the day, the boat may have a slightly reduced schedule, and the city is noticeably quieter. Pack a windbreaker for the upper deck.

Winter is the trickiest call. The bus runs all year but the boat usually stops between November and March because the channels freeze. Some operators sell a “winter pass” that’s bus-only at a discount. Don’t pay full price for a combo ticket and discover the boat isn’t sailing.

The Things Nobody Mentions

Stockholm Gamla Stan aerial view in summer
Gamla Stan from above. The orange roofs are the medieval core; the bus loop runs around the edge but doesn’t go inside the old town itself. Walking is the only option once you’re there.

The audio guide quality is hit or miss. The recordings are often years old and you’ll occasionally pass a building that’s been replaced or renamed. Treat the narration as a starting point rather than a Wikipedia entry. If you want detail, our walking tour piece covers the alternatives, including small-group walks that go deeper.

The first bus of the day is rarely on time. If the official start is 9:30, the actual first bus you can catch at a less central stop is closer to 10:00. Plan accordingly if you’ve got a timed entry ticket somewhere.

The headphones are usually clean but bring your own. The disposable earbud sets work but the audio compression is awful. Wired in-ears with the standard 3.5mm jack plug into the bus seats and sound considerably better.

Stockholm cityscape with church spire across the water
The church spire on the Gamla Stan side is Storkyrkan, the cathedral. The bus drops you a five minute walk away and the boat brings you within sight of it.

The boat seats fill up faster than the bus. Especially the upper deck. If you want a particular view, board ten minutes before departure rather than running for it on the half hour.

You can switch sides on the same ticket. Most operators let you ride the bus in one direction and the boat in the other on the same pass. If your ticket says “combo” this is implicit; double-check before you assume.

What I’d Pair With the Hop-On Hop-Off

The bus and boat are an orientation tool, not a substitute for going inside the sights. The pattern that works best is to ride the loop on day one, identify the three or four places you actually want to spend time in, then book proper tickets for those on day two. Vasa needs at least 90 minutes, Skansen needs three to four hours if you do it properly, and ABBA can be done in an hour but is more fun when you don’t rush it.

Stockholm historic centre Gamla Stan from the water
The Gamla Stan view from the boat. This is the photograph that ends up on most Stockholm postcards. The bus version is the mirror image from the bridge above.
Vasa warship displayed inside Vasa Museum Stockholm
The salvaged Vasa warship up close. Three hundred and thirty three years underwater and 98% of the wood is original. Worth the museum entry by itself.

For the water specifically, a dedicated Stockholm boat tour with a longer narrative is a better second-day add than just doing more loops on the hop-on boat. The same applies to a deeper dive into the Stockholm archipelago; the hop-on boat doesn’t leave the central waters, and the archipelago is where Stockholm gets really beautiful.

Hop-On Hop-Off in Other Cities (For Comparison)

If you’ve used a hop-on bus elsewhere in Europe, Stockholm sits at the more useful end of the spectrum. The geography genuinely benefits from the bus-and-boat combo in a way that, say, Warsaw’s flat layout doesn’t. The closest comparison is Copenhagen, where a similar bus-and-boat product makes sense for the same reasons. Oslo’s loop is shorter but covers the same kind of fjord-and-island terrain. Brussels and Budapest are bus-only cities where the same product is more about ticking landmarks than solving geography. Stockholm is firmly in the first category.

Stockholm tenements and a bridge from the water
The bridge-and-water view that defines Stockholm. The hop-on boat traces this kind of geography for ninety minutes; on foot it would take you all day.

Practical Stuff: Tickets, Refunds, and Family Pricing

Adult 24 hour passes start around $24 USD on the entry ticket and run up to about $50 for the longer combos. Kids under 5 are free; ages 6 to 15 are usually around half price. Family tickets exist but the maths only works out if you’ve got two adults and two or more kids. Check both options at checkout.

Stockholm City Hall tower view
The City Hall tower charges separately for the climb. Worth combining with a hop-on stop here in the morning before the queue forms.

Tickets bought through GetYourGuide or Viator are mobile, no print needed, and most are free cancellation up to 24 hours before. That’s worth more than it sounds in shoulder season when the weather forecast can change overnight; if Tuesday’s looking like rain you can move to Wednesday at no cost. The local operators sell direct from kiosks at Central Station and Sergels Torg, but you generally pay the same rate for less flexibility.

Paper tickets are still issued at the boarding gate; mobile passes are scanned by the driver. Both work fine, but the printed pass tends to get rain-damaged after about six hours of use. Keep it in a bag, not your jacket pocket.

Stockholm City Hall with sailing boats at sunset
Stadshuset at sunset. The boat loop passes within thirty metres of this view in summer; from the bus you see it from across the bridge instead.

If You Skip the Hop-On Hop-Off

There are trips where the bus isn’t worth it. If you’ve got more than four full days, a Stockholm Pass or a T-bana 7 day card paired with selective ferry tickets gives you more flexibility for less money. If you’re a serious walker comfortable with hills and willing to plan your route around the bridges, you can absolutely do the city on foot. And if you’re here in deep winter when the boat is grounded, a 24 hour T-bana pass plus the occasional Bolt taxi is more practical than a bus-only sightseeing ticket.

But if you’ve got 24 to 48 hours, want to see the headline sights, and don’t fancy fighting the geography, the hop-on bus is the rational choice. The combo with the boat is the better version. And the City Sightseeing operator is the one to pick if you’re on a cruise.

Stockholm historic skyline from above
The view that pulls everything together: the islands, the bridges, the boats. Twenty four hours of the right ticket and you’ll see most of what’s in this frame from ground level.

Building the Rest of Your Stockholm Trip

The hop-on hop-off is your orientation; the rest of the trip is about depth. Pair it with a small-group walking tour for the layers of Gamla Stan history that no audio guide will give you, a proper boat tour for the inner archipelago, and a day trip out to the archipelago if you’ve got an extra morning. Add a Gamla Stan ghost walk after dark for the Stockholm Bloodbath story and the alleys you won’t see from a bus. Together that’s a full week of Stockholm without ever feeling repetitive.

Stockholm waterfront with boats and historic buildings
One last shot of the Stockholm waterfront. From here you can reach all four of those linked guides on foot in under thirty minutes, or about ninety on foot if you forget your hop-on ticket.
Colourful waterfront buildings in Stockholm
The painted facades along Strömkajen. The boat passes them all in about twenty minutes; on foot you’d need an hour and you’d still miss the angle.
Riddarholmen Church and surrounding waterfront in Stockholm
Riddarholmen Church, on the smallest of the central islands. Most loops swing past it but few stop directly; the boat usually gets you closer than the bus does.

Affiliate disclosure: We may earn a small commission from bookings made through links in this article, at no extra cost to you. The recommendations reflect our own ranked picks, not paid placements.