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The Nordics • Eat & drink • All the Michelin star restaurants in Oslo – 2026 edition
Oslo’s 2026 Michelin list looks static until you read the small print. The city still counts 14 stars across 11 restaurants, with Maaemo and Kontrast holding the top, but Credo’s National Library move replaces Hyde instead of expanding the map. With Bar Amour and Hot Shop closing in 2026, the one-star layer feels unusually fragile. Here’s the full list.
Top photography courtesy of Kontrast
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As co-founder and head chef of Oslo’s only three-Michelin-starred restaurant, Esben Holmboe Bang has set an exceptionally high bar for himself and his team. Maaemo, a name that means Mother Earth in Finnish, makes its priorities clear: the tasting-menu kitchen works with organic, biodynamic and wild produce, and treats Norway’s terroir as the main material. Guests enter a dramatic, high-ceilinged dining room designed by local firm Radius Design, where the dim light, open kitchen and polished service make the experience feel both sophisticated and slightly secretive. The food remains precise, rooted and deeply Norwegian.
Read the full article on Maaemo.
Photography courtesy of Maaemo
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Photography courtesy of Kontrast
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Photography courtesy of À L’aise
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Bar Amour, which earned its first Michelin star in 2024, offers an intimate meeting of Portuguese culture and Nordic cuisine above Tranen in Oslo. The low-ceilinged room is dark, theatrical and deeply red, with subtle nods to the brothel that once occupied the space. Chef Carlos De Medeiros runs a tasting menu built around Norwegian produce such as skrei cod, the prized seasonal Arctic cod, and reindeer, pulled through Portuguese flavour, wine and warmth. It is small, characterful and time-sensitive too: Bar Amour takes its last guests in June 2026.
Photography courtesy of Bar Amour
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Photography courtesy of Credo
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Hot Shop, named after the sex shop that formerly filled the premises, is part of Oslo’s semi-fine dining scene: high-quality fare at reasonable prices in a fringe location, without the stiffness. Founded by Jo Bøe Klakegg and Siri Haslund, partners in life and business, the one-Michelin-starred neighbourhood bistro in Dælenenga serves a Nordic-style set menu where local produce takes the lead. The cooking is casual only on the surface, with pure ingredients, sharp technique and the kind of vegetable focus that makes turnips with oysters sound entirely logical. Go in 2026: Hot Shop closes permanently in December.
Photography courtesy of Hot Shop
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Photography courtesy of Mon Oncle
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Photography courtesy of Sabi Omakase Oslo
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Savage, inside the Revier hotel in Oslo’s Kvadraturen district, is fine dining with less Nordic homework and more pulse. Led by Italian chef Andrea Selvaggini, whose cooking draws on memory, travel and Norwegian landscapes, the one-Michelin-starred restaurant filters local ingredients through global flavour rather than polite regional storytelling. The main menu, Shapes of Nature, moves from ocean to city across eighteen to twenty-one courses, while Classics gathers fourteen Savage favourites. The room has hotel polish, counter seats, sharp light and a bold mural, but the food does the real shouting: technical, expressive and not especially interested in behaving.
Photography courtesy of Savage
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Photography courtesy of Stallen
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Photography courtesy of Statholdergaarden
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