Sverige

A field guide for the journey

Sweden for the Thai Traveler: Örebro, Gothenburg & Stockholm

Sweden will ask something of your wallet — there is no way around that. But it will give you something back that is harder to put a price on: an unhurried pace, extraordinary food crafted with real care, forests and waterways you can walk into freely, and a culture that prizes conviviality over spectacle. This guide is organized to help you spend wisely and feel like a guest who actually knows the place, rather than a tourist being processed through the highlights.

Tap any place name ’s Open in Maps button to get directions on your phone. Blue links open official sites and reviews. Prices show SEK first, Thai baht in parentheses.

01

Örebro

Örebro sits at the geographic heart of Sweden, on the banks of the Svartån river where it widens into Lake Hjälmaren. It is a university city — young, surprisingly cosmopolitan, and far less trampled by tourism than Stockholm or Gothenburg. You will be able to have a café to yourself here. That alone is worth something.

Sights & Landmarks

Örebro Castle

165 SEK (≈570 THB) adults, 125 SEK (≈430 THB) children (3–16) Open in Maps

Rising straight out of the Svartån on a small island at the center of the city, Örebro Castle is one of the best-preserved medieval fortresses in Sweden, with a history stretching back over 700 years. The cylindrical towers and their reflections in the water make an almost absurdly picturesque sight from the bridges on either side. Inside, the guided tour — included with admission — takes you through grand halls, painted ceilings, and the kind of staircase that makes you feel like you are inside a very serious fairy tale. The castle has housed regents, prisoners, and a university over the centuries, and seasonal exhibitions keep the interior rotating. Örebro Castle official site confirms tours run daily from May through October, with reduced winter hours.

Wadköping Open-Air Museum

On the western bank of the Svartån, about ten minutes' walk from the castle, Wadköping gathers roughly twenty historic timber buildings — old shops, craftsmen's workshops, a pharmacy, and a church — that were relocated here from central Örebro before demolition could take them. Walking through it feels less like a museum and more like stumbling into a 19th-century neighborhood where someone simply forgot to lock up. Many buildings are still in active use as workshops and studios; you might hear a violin being repaired or smell wax being applied to wooden furniture. It is genuinely lovely and genuinely free. Traveller Guide on Wadköping has a solid overview of the site.

Svampen Water Tower

small fee for the lift; café coffee ~45 SEK (≈155 THB) Open in Maps

"Svampen" means mushroom in Swedish, and the name is entirely apt — this 58-meter concrete tower, inaugurated in 1958, swells outward at the top into a round observation deck that perches above the city like a cap on a stem. The architect Sune Lindström created something that was celebrated internationally at the time for its elegant engineering, and it remains a symbol of Örebro. You can ride up to the café inside the head of the mushroom for coffee and a cinnamon bun with a 360-degree view of the entire city and its surrounding forests and lakes. Visit Örebro's page on Svampen confirms it is open almost every day, all year.

Nature & Free Outdoor Experiences

Oset & Rynningeviken Nature Reserve

Three kilometers from Örebro's main square, this reserve was formed on the site of a former landfill and industrial area — which makes it all the more extraordinary that it has become one of the richest bird habitats in central Sweden, with over 250 recorded species. The Svartån river meets Lake Hjälmaren here, and the wetlands, reedy shores, and walking paths make for a slow, unhurried afternoon. Spring and early autumn are the best seasons for birds, but the walking is good any time. The Örebro municipality's nature reserve information includes a downloadable map.

Karlslund Manor & Cultural Reserve

garden always free; Technical Mill has a small entry fee (50% discount with valid card) Open in Maps

A few kilometers north of the city center, Karlslund is the kind of place you arrive at expecting to spend an hour and leave two and a half hours later. The core is a beautifully preserved 18th-century manor with formal gardens, a working mill, and a café. But the reserve extends into meadows and a forested park with grazing animals, a petting zoo for children, and well-maintained walking paths. The garden itself is free, and the Visit Örebro article on Karlslund describes it as a scenic area with long cultural history at its heart.

Stadsparken

Örebro's city park sits on the eastern edge of the center along the Svartån canal and covers about eight hectares of rose gardens, lawns, tennis courts, a small outdoor stage, and — most importantly — a charming café and bakery inside the walled kitchen garden Stadsträdgården. On a warm afternoon the park fills with university students and families; it is as pleasant a patch of urban green as you will find anywhere in Sweden.

Gustavsvik Resort & Area

varies by activity; outdoor areas free to walk Open in Maps

Gustavsvik is Örebro's big family resort complex — it has Sweden's largest water adventure area ("Lost City"), a five-star campground, sports facilities, and outdoor concerts in summer. Even if you skip the ticketed attractions, the surrounding area near the lake is pleasant to walk, and the complex sits right next to Gustavsvik's lakeside paths. Visit Örebro on Gustavsvik gives the full picture of what's available.

Food & Fika Spots

Hälls Konditori

pastries from ~40 SEK (≈140 THB), coffee ~45 SEK (≈155 THB) Open in Maps

Örebro's oldest café, founded in 1910, Hälls Konditori on Engelbrektsgatan has earned the kind of deep local loyalty that no amount of marketing can manufacture. It is a proper konditori in the Swedish sense — glass display cases of layer cakes, prinsesstårta (the green marzipan dome), and cookies made to recipes that have not changed in decades. Come for fika at its most unperformed. Visit Örebro's café guide names it as a city favorite.

Konditori Vasa

café prices Open in Maps

On Vasagatan in the heart of the city, Konditori Vasa is a high-rated local bakery-café that makes its own kanelbullar, cardamom buns, and seasonal Swedish pastries. The kind of place where you will see a retired couple at the corner table and a student with a laptop by the window, both equally at home. Rated among the city's best by Populära Bagerier.

Sveas Stortorget

dagens lunch ~120–140 SEK (≈415–485 THB) Open in Maps

Right on Örebro's main square — Stortorget 15–17 — Sveas is a konditori and café with a proper lunch menu. The location could not be more central, and the daily lunch special makes it one of the most straightforward options if you want a warm meal in the heart of the city without a detour. Highly rated among Örebro bakeries at Populära Bagerier.

Cultural & Unique Experiences

Örebro Castle Dark History Tour

included with castle admission Open in Maps

The standard historical tour included with your castle ticket is already excellent, but the seasonal "Dark History" guided tour — running June through August — goes through the castle's more shadowed chapters: the prisoners held in the towers, the political intrigues, the legends that have accrued over seven centuries. The castle's official events page lists current tour schedules. This is not a horror-show experience; it is genuinely thoughtful history that happens to be atmospheric.

Thai & Chinese in Örebro

Swedish Thai food is its own genre — adapted to local palates over decades, often gentler on the chili and heavier on the peanut sauce than what you'd find in Bangkok, but with deep neighborhood loyalty and surprising authenticity in the right spots. Your Thai friend will find this either charming or hilarious. Either way, it's an experience.

Coco Thai

lunch buffet ~159 SEK (≈550 THB); mains from 125 SEK (≈430 THB) Open in Maps

Right on Stortorget, Örebro's main square, Coco Thai is one of the city's longest-running Thai restaurants and a weekday lunch staple for the city-centre crowd. The buffet rotates classic Thai-Swedish dishes — green curry, pad thai, sweet-and-sour, spring rolls — at a flat price that includes salad bar and coffee. Not subtle, but reliable and warm. Tripadvisor's listing confirms it as a local fixture.

Restaurang Wongs

dagens lunch 115–125 SEK (≈395–430 THB); à la carte 125–225 SEK (≈430–775 THB) Open in Maps

A short walk from the castle on Olaigatan, Wongs is Örebro's most consistently reviewed Asian restaurant — a Chinese-Thai pan-Asian kitchen that's been a local institution for years. FokusKina's Matbrigaden food column called it exactly that: a genuine institution. The weekday dagens lunch is the move; the dining room has castle views and the kind of unhurried atmosphere that makes a midday meal feel like a small event (FokusKina review).

Smart Value Moves in Örebro

Örebro's compact center means you can walk between the castle, Wadköping, Stadsparken, and the main café street without needing any transit. The city's nature reserves — Oset and Rynningeviken in particular — and the walking paths around Karlslund give you full days outdoors at no cost. Dagens lunch at any of the restaurants on or near Stortorget (typically Monday–Friday, 11am–2pm) is your best tool here: 120–150 SEK (≈415–520 THB) for a complete meal. The castle tower view is free from the bridges; pay for the interior only if history genuinely interests you.

02

Gothenburg (Göteborg)

Gothenburg is Sweden's second city, but it carries itself like a first city that simply chose not to bother with status. Built by Dutch engineers in the 17th century, crossed with canals and divided by the wide Göta älv river, it has a maritime soul, an independent streak, and the best fika street in Sweden. Locals call it Göteborg and are mildly proud that tourists mispronounce it.

Sights & Landmarks

Haga District

free to walk Open in Maps

Haga is Gothenburg's oldest surviving neighborhood — a grid of cobblestone streets, low 19th-century wooden houses painted in warm yellows and reds, independent boutiques, antique dealers, and café after café after café. It was once a working-class area that fell into disrepair and was saved from demolition by residents in the 1970s; today it is one of the most pleasant urban neighborhoods in Scandinavia to simply wander. The main artery is Haga Nygata, and on a Saturday morning it is alive with locals doing exactly what you will want to do: drink coffee and move slowly. Gothenburg Tourism's Haga guide describes it as a must-see district.

Café Husaren — Home of the Hagabullen

Hagabullen ~60–80 SEK (≈205–275 THB) Open in Maps

At Haga Nygata 28, inside a landmarked 19th-century building, Café Husaren serves the Hagabullen — a cinnamon bun roughly the diameter of a dinner plate, dense with butter and cardamom, dusted with pearl sugar. It is not a gimmick; it is genuinely one of the best kanelbullar in Sweden, just scaled to a size that invites sharing. The café has been here for decades, and the building around it has the high ceilings and worn wooden floors of something that has absorbed a great deal of coffee. Gothenburg Tourism confirms the café at Haga Nygata 28 is open daily from 8am.

Feskekôrka (The Fish Church)

free to browse Open in Maps

Built in 1874 and shaped like a Gothic church — hence the nickname — Feskekôrka is Gothenburg's indoor fish market on the Rosenlundskanalen canal. The soaring iron-and-glass interior smells powerfully of the sea, and the counters are loaded with whole fish, shellfish, smoked salmon, and the West Coast shrimp that Gothenburg is quietly obsessed with. You can buy to cook, or eat at one of the small restaurants inside. It is best experienced on a weekday morning when the fishmongers are fully stocked and the atmosphere is working rather than touristic. Feskekôrka's own site details the traders and opening hours.

Stora Saluhallen

At Kungstorget in the city center, this is Gothenburg's main covered market hall — built between 1888 and 1889, it was the first major Swedish building constructed entirely of stone, iron, and glass. Forty specialized traders inside sell cheese, spices, bread, coffee, local charcuterie, and international foods. You can also sit at a stool at one of the small eateries inside for an honest meal. The daily lunch specials at the hall's restaurants hover around 135–155 SEK (≈465–535 THB). Stora Saluhallen's site has current trader and hours information (closed Sundays).

Paddan Canal Boats

~250 SEK (≈860 THB) adults Open in Maps

The Paddan boats are flat-bottomed sightseeing vessels that thread through Gothenburg's 17th-century moat and canal system, departing from Kungsportsplatsen in the city center. The boats are deliberately built low to pass under Gothenburg's famously shallow bridges — some so low that passengers have to duck — and the commentary covers the city's construction, its Dutch-influenced street grid, and its merchant history. It is a genuinely pleasant hour, and the view of Gothenburg from water level is completely different from the view on foot. Stromma's Paddan tour page has current schedules and booking.

Liseberg Amusement Park

from 95 SEK (≈330 THB) admission only; from 365 SEK (≈1,260 THB) admission + unlimited rides Open in Maps

Liseberg is Sweden's most-visited amusement park and is genuinely excellent — not a generic theme park but a beautifully landscaped garden park that happens to contain some of Europe's better roller coasters, including the wooden Balder (regularly rated among the world's best) and the steel Helix. Be honest with yourself about whether the rides are your reason for going: admission only (95 SEK) lets you walk the grounds, see the gardens, and eat; the full ride pass is the real cost. Book online for the best prices, as Liseberg's ticket page shows online pricing is 10–25 SEK lower than at the gate.

Nature & Free Outdoor Experiences

Slottsskogen Park & Free Zoo

Slottsskogen is where Gothenburg goes to breathe. This sprawling woodland park in the Linnéstaden area has free-roaming elk (moose), Gotland ponies, Gute sheep, seals, and penguins in the park's free zoo — the animal enclosures are open year-round and cost nothing. The petting zoo and pony rides run from April to September. Beyond the animals, the park has trails through beech and linden forest, open meadows ideal for picnics, and outdoor events in summer. Gothenburg Tourism's Slottsskogen page describes the free zoo as a city institution.

Slottsskogens Våffelstuga — Café Bräket

waffles from ~75 SEK (≈260 THB) Open in Maps

Right inside Slottsskogen, next to the park zoo, is a small wooden café that has been serving traditional Swedish waffles since — well, long enough that it is simply part of the park. Sit outside with a waffle topped with cloudberry jam and whipped cream while an elk grazes twenty meters away. The combination of free admission to the surrounding park and honest café pricing makes this one of the most genuinely satisfying hours you can spend in Gothenburg. Gothenburg's waffle guide features it specifically.

Botaniska Trädgården (Gothenburg Botanical Garden)

voluntary contribution of 30 SEK (≈105 THB) suggested; open daily, 24 hours Open in Maps

Over 20,000 unique plant species from 130 countries make this one of the finest botanical gardens in the world, and you could easily argue that a 30 SEK suggested donation to walk through it is one of the best uses of your money in Sweden. The rock garden is particularly striking — an enormous sloping garden of alpine plants that in May and June is vivid with color. In the Japanese dell the paths narrow and the light goes quiet. The visitor center has a café; the garden itself never closes. Gothenburg Botanical Garden's English site has seasonal highlights.

Älvsnabben Ferry — Free Harbor Crossing

free (Älvsnabbare 286, Stenpiren–Lindholmen route) Open in Maps

The Älvsnabbare 286 ferry crosses the Göta älv between Stenpiren on the south bank and Lindholmen on Hisingen island, running every few minutes. It is operated by Styrsöbolaget on commission from Västtrafik and is entirely free to ride. The crossing takes about five minutes and gives you a view of the harbor, the cranes, and the skyline that you simply cannot get from a bridge. Ride it, ride it back, and you have had an excellent moment for nothing. Wikipedia's Älvsnabben entry and Lindholmen Innovation District's transit guide confirm the free service.

Saltholmen → Styrsö / Vrångö Archipelago Day Trip

covered by Västtrafik day pass (~165 SEK / ≈570 THB); ferry lines 281/282 Open in Maps

Take tram 11 from the city center to the Saltholmen terminal at the end of the line (about 30 minutes), then board the public ferry into the southern archipelago. The islands of Styrsö and Vrångö are connected to each other by a footbridge and offer rocky coastline, summer swimming, and quiet lanes where bicycles have right of way over cars. Bring a picnic from the city. The entire trip runs on your Västtrafik transit card — no extra ticket needed. Tripadvisor's southern archipelago page has useful visitor notes.

Cultural & Unique Experiences

Masthuggskyrkan Viewpoint

Perched on the hill Stigsberget in the Masthugget neighborhood, the Masthuggskyrkan church (built 1914) sits at the top of a long flight of stone steps and offers one of the city's most panoramic views: the Göta älv river, the harbor, the cranes of Hisingen island, and the rooftops of the old Haga district spread out below. The church itself is a fine example of National Romantic architecture — heavy granite, Romanesque arches, and a bell tower that reads as much fortification as church. The view from the square in front of the entrance is entirely free.

Skansen Kronan Fortress

grounds free; interior varies for events Open in Maps

High above Haga on the hill Risåsberget stands Skansen Kronan — the Crown Sconce — a 17th-century star-shaped redoubt built to defend Gothenburg against Danish attack. The climb up the rocky steps rewards you with sweeping views over the city, and at the base of the hill is the Våffelcafé Soldattorpet — a tiny waffle café in the old soldier's cottage that serves freshly made waffles from a garden surrounded by hammocks and blankets, open on weekends. Gothenburg Tourism on Skansen Kronan describes it as a must-see spot for a scenic coffee break.

Magasinsgatan & Linnégatan Food Scene

free to walk Open in Maps

Magasinsgatan stretches from Lilla Torget toward Vasastan and is Gothenburg's most concentrated strip of serious food culture: the coffee roastery and café da Matteo (Magasinsgatan 17A), the bao truck Jinx, the chocolate shop Berzelii Choklad, and the Asian fusion restaurant Hello Monkey all sit within a few blocks of each other. Running parallel to the south, Linnégatan and the surrounding streets of Linnéstaden are equally packed — Bar Italia for a pistachio croissant, Brunchoteket for all-day Swedish pancakes, and Egg & Milk for waffles. Gothenburg Tourism's Magasinsgatan guide and Linnégatan guide both have detailed neighborhood food breakdowns.

da Matteo

coffee from ~45 SEK (≈155 THB) Open in Maps

Gothenburg's most respected specialty coffee operation, with its roastery and flagship café at Magasinsgatan 17A. The coffee is roasted on site, the baristas compete (and win) nationally, and the sourdough bread and pastries are made with the same rigor. The courtyard fills with sunseekers the moment the weather permits; order a flat white and a cardamom bun and find a seat before someone else does. Tripadvisor and Gothenburg Tourism both confirm it is a city institution.

Egg & Milk

waffles and pancakes from ~75–135 SEK (≈260–465 THB) Open in Maps

On Övre Husargatan 23 in Linnéstaden, Egg & Milk is an American-style diner-café open every day from 7am to 3pm that takes Swedish pancakes and waffles seriously. Four-pancake portions, Belgian waffles with fresh berries and cream, and milkshakes — all made to order. Walk-ins only; the line on weekend mornings moves quickly. Egg & Milk's own website lists the full menu and prices.

Kebab Pizza in Gothenburg

Pizzeria Barolo

pizza from ~135 SEK (≈465 THB) Open in Maps

At Stora Badhusgatan 30 in the city center, Pizzeria Barolo is a classic Swedish-Italian pizzeria that does kebab pizza the way it should be done: proper flatbread base, tomato, cheese, onion, beef kebab, and kebab sauce. Local bike-tour guides recommend asking for it "half burned" the way the owner himself prefers it (BikeGothenburg). It is straightforward, unapologetic, and exactly right.

Pizzeria Pomodoro

pizza ~130–150 SEK (≈450–520 THB) Open in Maps

At Welandergatan 58 in the Guldheden neighborhood, Pizzeria Pomodoro was ranked the best kebab pizza in Gothenburg in 2023 and 2024 by local food critic Viktor Skatt (Göteborgs-Posten's 2024 list). The pizza has a thin, well-charred base, the kebab is properly seasoned, and the balance between sauce and toppings is careful. It is slightly out of the center but worth the tram ride.

Burgers in Gothenburg

MAX Burgers — Norra Hamngatan

burgers ~90–130 SEK (≈310–450 THB) Open in Maps

The Gothenburg central location of Sweden's own burger chain is at Norra Hamngatan 20, open late (until 2am on weekdays). MAX uses 100% Swedish beef and has been doing this since 1968, long before the current burger renaissance. The Classic MAX is the one to order — simple, properly cooked, and quietly the best fast-food burger in Sweden. Tripadvisor's listing confirms the location.

Stockyard Burger Joint

burgers ~140–180 SEK (≈485–620 THB) Open in Maps

Gothenburg's best smash burger by most local accounts — a heavy crust on the patty, soft potato bun, and serious commitment to American-style technique. A worthy splurge if you want to see how high the Swedish burger scene goes outside Stockholm. Gothenburg Tourism's listing describes it as a destination spot for burger devotees.

Thai & Chinese in Gothenburg

Gothenburg has one of Sweden's stronger Thai food scenes — a function of the port-city diversity and a long-standing Thai community in the Linné district. The Chinese noodle scene is smaller but punches well above its weight.

Bangkok Kitchen

lunch ~100–130 SEK (≈345–450 THB); mains ~140–200 SEK (≈485–690 THB) Open in Maps

On Andra Långgatan in the Linné district — the street locals call Gothenburg's own Khao San Road — Bangkok Kitchen is the city's most TheFork-rated Thai restaurant with a 9.4/10 from over 800 verified reviews across 2025–2026. Big portions, properly built curries, and a kitchen that doesn't pull punches on chili if you ask. The street itself is worth the visit even before you sit down (TheFork reviews).

Samui Thai Kitchen

lunch buffet 139 SEK (≈480 THB) — six dishes plus salad and coffee; à la carte 169–179 SEK (≈585–620 THB) Open in Maps

A small family-run spot near Avenyn with an unusually generous vegan and vegetarian section — Thatsup lists it among Gothenburg's best Thai restaurants. The 139 SEK weekday buffet is one of the best Thai-food values in the city centre, and the name is a small gift to any traveler arriving from Ko Samui (Thatsup Gothenburg Thai guide).

Noodle Master — Taste of Xian Kitchen

mains ~159 SEK (≈550 THB) Open in Maps

Over on Hisingen, this casual Chinese noodle house is repeatedly named the best Chinese noodle spot in the city by r/Gothenburg regulars. Handpulled Lanzhou-style biangbiang noodles made in front of you, properly fiery Sichuan chicken, and portions that defeat most adults. A short tram ride from the centre and worth it for the noodles alone (Gothenburg Vegan review).

Smart Value Moves in Gothenburg

The Västtrafik day pass (~165 SEK / ≈570 THB) covers tram, bus, and the Saltholmen archipelago ferries in one card — use it for the Styrsö day trip and you have already extracted excellent value. The free zoo in Slottsskogen and the free ferry crossing at Älvsnabben are genuine highlights that cost nothing. Dagens lunch across Linnégatan runs 135–160 SEK (≈465–555 THB) for a full meal; the street is also lined with grocery stores (ICA, Hemköp) for assembling picnic materials. The Botaniska Trädgården's voluntary 30 SEK (≈105 THB) entry means you pay what you feel.

03

Stockholm

Stockholm needs no justification as a destination, but it does need navigation. The city is built on fourteen islands and is simultaneously one of the most expensive cities in Northern Europe and one of the most walkable. The islands give you a natural itinerary: Gamla Stan for history, Djurgården for museums and parks, Södermalm for wandering, and Östermalm when you want to be confronted with beautiful food in a beautiful room. The metro is an art gallery. The tap water is excellent.

Gamla Stan (The Old Town)

Stortorget — The Great Square

Stockholm was founded in 1252 and Stortorget is where it all began — the city's oldest square, surrounded by patrician houses in deep ochre, rust, and slate-blue, with a 17th-century stock exchange building on the north side that now houses the Nobel Museum. On market days in the Middle Ages this was the trading heart of the city; in 1520 it was the site of the Stockholm Bloodbath, when King Christian II of Denmark had approximately ninety Swedish nobles executed in the space of two days. Stand in the square and consider that. Then have a coffee. Wikipedia's Stortorget entry and A View on Cities both give the full history.

Mårten Trotzigs Gränd

At 90 centimeters wide at its narrowest point, Mårten Trotzigs Gränd is the narrowest street in Stockholm — a steep staircase alley that descends through Gamla Stan and is the only preserved staircase of its kind in the old town. It was named in 1949 after a German merchant named Marten Traubtzig who owned houses here in the early 17th century. As The Hidden North's Gamla Stan walk notes, the buildings tilt inward with age, making the passage slightly narrower each decade.

Storkyrkan

small fee (40–60 SEK / ≈140–205 THB) Open in Maps

Stockholm's cathedral sits between the Royal Palace and Stortorget, and it has been on this spot in some form since the 13th century. The current interior is late Gothic with Baroque additions — heavy columns, painted vaults, and the extraordinary carved altarpiece — but the piece most people come to see is the sculpture of St. George and the Dragon, completed in 1489, which fills an entire chapel with wood and bone and gold. The Stockholm churches guide from Eurocheapo covers Storkyrkan alongside Riddarholmskyrkan for a combined cultural walk.

Riddarholmskyrkan

small fee in summer when open for visitors Open in Maps

On the tiny island of Riddarholmen, just off Gamla Stan, the Riddarholmskyrkan is the burial church of Swedish monarchs — nearly every king and queen from Magnus Ladulås (died 1290) to Gustav V (died 1950) lies here. The cast-iron spire is one of Stockholm's most recognizable silhouettes. The church is open to visitors in summer and gives a quietly powerful sense of Swedish royal history compressed into one space.

Sundbergs Konditori

pastries from ~40 SEK (≈140 THB), coffee ~50 SEK (≈170 THB) Open in Maps

At Järntorget 83 in Gamla Stan — baking since 1785, making it one of the oldest continuously operating konditorier in Sweden — Sundbergs is the place to have fika before or after your Gamla Stan walk. The interior is all dark wood, red velvet, and the kind of chandelier that suggests the place has been there long enough to have seen several of its neighbors demolished and rebuilt. The cinnamon buns are excellent. Tripadvisor's listing confirms the address at Järntorget 83.

Slingerbulten

mains ~170–220 SEK (≈585–760 THB) at dinner; lunch specials lower Open in Maps

At Stora Nygatan 24 in Gamla Stan, Slingerbulten is a small, charming restaurant with worn wooden tables and handwritten menus that focuses on Swedish traditional dishes made from scratch. This is where you come for pannkakor (Swedish pancakes) served with lingonberry jam and cream, for homemade köttbullar, and for the kind of husmanskost (home cooking) that reminds you Swedish food is actually exceptional when no one is trying too hard. The Tripadvisor listing confirms it is open for lunch and dinner.

The Royal Palace & Changing of the Guard

Stockholm Royal Palace

apartments and museums 180 SEK (≈620 THB) adults; Changing of the Guard free Open in Maps

The Royal Palace at Gamla Stan is one of the largest royal palaces in the world still in use, with over 600 rooms. The exterior — a severe Baroque rectangle in Italian style — is best appreciated from the water or from Skeppsbron across the canal. The Changing of the Guard takes place every day at the outer courtyard: on summer weekdays the full mounted parade from the Cavalry Barracks is genuinely spectacular, arriving with music and horses and uniforms that are unchanged since the 18th century. Sweden's Defence Forces page has the current daily schedule.

Museums on Djurgården

Vasa Museum

195 SEK (≈675 THB) Jan–Apr & Oct–Dec; 240 SEK (≈830 THB) May–Sep; free under 18 Open in Maps

The Vasa warship sank in Stockholm harbor in 1628 — on its maiden voyage, approximately 1,300 meters from shore, after a gust of wind caught its sails and its insufficiently ballasted hull tipped over and went down. It was raised in 1961, and what the conservators found inside the mud was extraordinary: a nearly complete 17th-century warship with its rigging, carved sculptures, cannons, sailors' personal belongings, and the bones of those who went down with it. The museum was built around the ship and it towers over you — seven stories of dark oak, gilded with over 500 carved figures. It is one of the finest museums in Europe. Vasa Museum's admission page confirms current prices.

Skansen Open-Air Museum

285 SEK (≈985 THB) adults peak season; 160–190 SEK (≈550–655 THB) off-season; free under 4 Open in Maps

The world's oldest open-air museum (founded 1891) occupies a hilltop on Djurgården and gathers 150 historic buildings from across Sweden — farmhouses, town quarters, manors, and craft workshops relocated and staffed by people in period dress who bake bread, blow glass, and tan leather. There is also a zoo with Nordic animals including wolves, bears, lynx, and elk. The combination of living history and actual animals makes it a full-day place; come early, bring lunch, and pick up something from the bakery inside. Stockholm Spirit's Skansen review has a current pricing breakdown.

Nordiska Museet

170 SEK (≈585 THB) adults; free for children under 18 on school days during term Open in Maps

The Nordic Museum occupies a vast Neo-Renaissance building on Djurgården right in front of the Vasa Museum. Its permanent collection covers Swedish daily life from the 16th century to the present: furniture, fashion, folk art, Sami culture, and the extraordinary collection of table settings that trace 500 years of Swedish domestic eating habits. The Great Hall — a single cavernous room with a massive oak statue of Gustav Vasa presiding from the end — is one of the most beautiful interior spaces in Stockholm. Nordiska Museet's admission page has current prices.

ABBA The Museum

249–329 SEK (≈860–1,135 THB) adults Open in Maps

Also on Djurgården, the ABBA Museum is exactly what it promises: an interactive celebration of ABBA, with costumes, recording equipment, memorabilia, and booths where you can sing along to the actual backing tracks. It is unabashedly fun and surprisingly well-designed — even if you are not an ABBA devotee, it is difficult not to smile here. The honest framing is: go for the experience, not the information. The museum's own pricing page shows adult tickets at 249–329 SEK.

Fotografiska

195 SEK (≈675 THB); 165 SEK (≈570 THB) seniors/students; open until 11pm daily Open in Maps

Housed in a converted 1906 customs house on Södermalm's Stadsgårdshamnen waterfront, Fotografiska is one of the world's most significant photography museums — it has shown Annie Leibovitz, Sebastião Salgado, and hundreds of contemporary photographers in rotating exhibitions that change several times a year. The building is beautiful, the exhibitions are serious, and it is open until 11pm every night, which means you can visit after dinner when the crowds have thinned. The Fotografiska Stockholm visit page confirms 195 SEK general admission daily.

Free and Near-Free Museums

Moderna Museet — Free Friday Evenings

free 18:00–20:00 every Friday (Feb–Jun and Aug–Oct); otherwise ticketed Open in Maps

On the island of Skeppsholmen, the Moderna Museet holds one of the finest collections of 20th-century art in Europe — Picasso, Dalí, Warhol, Duchamp, and strong Nordic representation. Every Friday evening during the spring and autumn seasons, admission is free from 6pm to 8pm. Visit Stockholm's free Friday events page confirms the dates. Note that the summer period (mid-June to late August) has standard pricing on Fridays; plan accordingly.

Nationalmuseum — Free Thursday Evenings

160 SEK (≈555 THB) adults; free 17:00–21:00 every Thursday (until mid-June) Open in Maps

Sweden's national museum of fine and decorative arts, reopened in 2018 after a massive renovation, occupies an imposing 1866 Venetian Renaissance building on Blasieholmen. The collection covers painting, sculpture, graphic art, design, and decorative arts from the Middle Ages to the present, with particular strength in 17th–19th century Swedish and European work. Every Thursday from 5pm to 9pm, admission is free for all visitors — a genuinely generous offer for one of the best art museums in Scandinavia. Nationalmuseum's free Thursday page has current details.

Medeltidsmuseet (Medieval Museum)

free (always) Open in Maps

Beneath Norrbro bridge, entered through what looks like a gateway into the earth, the Medieval Museum was built around excavation findings from the 1970s — actual medieval streets, city walls, and structures were found when the city dug for a new parliament building. The museum preserves them in place, so you literally walk through 14th and 15th-century Stockholm underground. It is small, it is free, and it is genuinely one of the more unusual museum experiences in the city. Medeltidsmuseet's official site is the primary source.

ArkDes (Swedish Centre for Architecture and Design)

free (permanent collection; some special exhibitions ticketed) Open in Maps

Also on Skeppsholmen, next door to the Moderna Museet, ArkDes holds one of the world's largest architecture collections — over four million drawings, photographs, and models spanning five centuries of Swedish and international building. The permanent exhibition is free, the temporary exhibitions are thoughtfully curated, and the building itself (a former naval drill hall) is worth visiting as architecture. ArkDes's website confirms the free permanent collection.

City Views & Wandering

Stockholm City Hall Tower

100 SEK (≈345 THB) adults; children 0–11 free with adult Open in Maps

The golden spire of Stadshuset (City Hall), topped with the Three Crowns of Sweden, is one of Stockholm's most recognizable silhouettes. The tower itself is climbable: a guided tour takes you up through narrow internal passages to an open viewing platform at 106 meters, with views over Riddarfjärden, Gamla Stan, and the city stretching in every direction. The Nobel Prize banquet is held in the City Hall's Golden Hall and Blue Hall each December. Tower tickets are 100 SEK, purchased at the City Hall shop on Hantverkargatan 1.

Monteliusvägen

On the north edge of Södermalm island, Monteliusvägen is a 500-meter walking path cut into the top of the cliff above the water, with an unobstructed view across Riddarfjärden to Gamla Stan, the City Hall, and Riddarholmen. At sunset, when the light turns everything amber and the church spires across the water turn into silhouettes, it is one of the finest free views in any European capital. The path is named after the archaeologist Oscar Montelius. Visit Stockholm's Monteliusvägen page describes it as especially beautiful at sunrise and sunset.

Södermalm — The Art of Wandering

Södermalm — "Söder" to locals — is Stockholm's south island and its most human-scaled neighborhood. Old wooden buildings survive here that were demolished everywhere else in the city; the streets have proper names like Blecktornsgränd and Bondegatan that feel inherited rather than invented. The area around SoFo (south of Folkungagatan) is full of independent shops, coffee bars, and the kind of secondhand stores that have genuinely good stock. Wander without a map; the island is not large enough to get truly lost on.

The Metro Art Tour

cost of a single metro journey (~44 SEK / ≈150 THB per 75 minutes) Open in Maps

Stockholm's tunnelbana (metro) system has 94 decorated stations across 110 kilometers — it is genuinely the longest art gallery in the world, and your transit card gives you access to all of it. Key stations to seek out:

Djurgården Island Walk

Djurgården is the museum island — Vasa, Skansen, Nordiska Museet, ABBA Museum, and Fotografiska are all here — but it is also a park island, part of Sweden's first National City Park, with forest trails, waterfront paths, and meadows where deer graze. After a long day of museums, walk the perimeter path along the south shore (Djurgårdsbrunnsviken) for a quiet hour. The island is reached on foot from Strandvägen, by tram, or by ferry from Slussen on the Djurgårdslinjen boats.

Archipelago Ferry — Vaxholm or Fjäderholmarna

covered by SL 72-hour pass (~375 SEK / ≈1,295 THB) or 7-day pass Open in Maps

From Strömkajen quay near the Grand Hotel, the public Waxholmsbolaget ferries run into the Stockholm archipelago — 30,000 islands, skerries, and rocks spreading east into the Baltic. With an SL 72-hour pass (~375 SEK) or 7-day pass, ferries to Vaxholm and Grinda are included at no extra cost. Stockholm Spirit's ferry guide makes the important distinction: Waxholmsbolaget public ferries are SL-integrated; Strömma commercial cruises are separate and scenic but not covered. Fjäderholmarna, a cluster of islands 30 minutes from the city center, is the easiest day trip.

Food Halls & Smart Eating

Östermalms Saluhall

free to browse Open in Maps

At Östermalmstorg in the heart of Östermalm, this 1888 red-brick food hall was recently renovated and has been ranked the 7th best food hall in the world. The interior — wrought-iron balconies, tile floors, high-arched windows — houses traders selling everything from reindeer bresaola to aged Swedish cheese to hand-dived scallops from the west coast. The prawn sandwiches (räkmacka) made to order at the fish counters are the real prize. You can eat standing at the counter for much less than the nearby restaurants would charge. Östermalms Saluhall's website has hours (Mon–Fri 9:30–19:00, Sat 9:30–17:00, closed Sundays).

Kungshallen

free entry; meals ~90–150 SEK (≈310–520 THB) Open in Maps

At Kungsgatan 44, Kungshallen is Stockholm's multi-level food court — the basement is casual and informal, with international options running from Thai to Italian to Japanese at prices that are honest for central Stockholm. It is not glamorous, but for a quick, filling meal between museums, it is reliable. Yelp's Kungshallen listing confirms the address and multi-level format.

MAX Burgers — Kungsgatan

burgers ~90–130 SEK (≈310–450 THB) Open in Maps

Stockholm's central MAX is at Kungsgatan 44 — conveniently inside the same building as Kungshallen — and open late. Also worth noting is the Vasagatan 7 location near the central station, open until 2am on most nights. Tripadvisor's listing and MAX's own restaurant finder confirm both addresses.

When You Want to Splurge on a Burger

Stockholm has quietly become one of Europe's most respected burger cities. If you have one meal where you want to spend more and remember it, these are the spots. The price is real, but so is the quality.

Franky's Burger — Vasastan

burgers 130–170 SEK (≈450–585 THB); full meal with fries and drink ~220–260 SEK (≈760–895 THB) Open in Maps

Franky's started in 2014 as a 12-square-meter street grill on Tegnérgatan 16 in Vasastan and has since been named Sweden's best burger restaurant — ranked as one of the country's top burgers and among the highest-rated burger spots in Europe (Enjoy Travel's 25 Best Burgers in Sweden). The foundation is dry-aged Swedish beef, bold sauce work, and a refusal to expand beyond two locations — the original on Tegnérgatan and a second on Blekingegatan 36 in Södermalm. Order the Umami Special (150 SEK / ≈520 THB) for a truffle-mayo, sautéed-mushroom, dry-aged-beef construction that earns the hype, or the Franky's Favourite (130 SEK / ≈450 THB) for the cleanest possible classic cheeseburger. The owner often works the grill himself; the place is small, the line is real, and it is worth the wait (Time for Burgers). Yes, this costs more than MAX — but if you only splurge once, splurge here.

Funky Chicken Food Truck

burgers 125–174 SEK (≈430–600 THB) Open in Maps

At Augustendalstorget in Nacka Strand, a short bus ride from central Stockholm, this unassuming food truck is currently ranked fifth in the world on The World's Best Burgers list and has held the number-one spot in Sweden for five consecutive years (Time for Burgers). The standard 150g patty is 125 SEK; the Triple Cheese with a 300g monster patty is 174 SEK. If you are a serious burger person, the trip out to Nacka is part of the pilgrimage.

Flippin' Burgers — Vasastan

burgers 130–160 SEK (≈450–555 THB); full meal ~230 SEK (≈795 THB) Open in Maps

At Observatoriegatan 8, Flippin' Burgers is Stockholm's longest-running serious burger restaurant and one of the originals of the modern Swedish burger movement. American-diner aesthetic, well-executed smash patties, craft beer on tap, and a wait that is part of the experience (they don't take reservations). Visit Stockholm's burger guide lists it among the city's essential burger stops.

Thai & Chinese in Stockholm

Stockholm's Thai scene is the deepest in Sweden — there's a real Thai community here and the better spots cook for them, not for tourists. The Chinese scene is older and includes some of the city's most historic restaurants.

Thongwiset

weekday lunch ~140 SEK (≈485 THB); à la carte 152–199 SEK (≈525–685 THB) Open in Maps

On Hornsgatan in Södermalm, near Zinkensdamm metro, Thongwiset is the kind of small storefront restaurant where Stockholm's Thai residents go to eat. Thatsup's Södermalm lunch guide describes it exactly that way — a popular choice among Stockholm's Thai residents. The menu leans Isan, with two daily lunch specials and the kind of cooking that doesn't soften the flavors for a Swedish palate (Thatsup Södermalm lunch guide).

Thai Bambu

mains from 139 SEK (≈480 THB); lunch from 139 SEK Open in Maps

Near Skanstull on Södermalm, Thai Bambu is run by chef Nutakan and built around Isan regional dishes — northeastern Thai specialties that rarely show up on other Stockholm menus. Classic pad thai is on offer, but the reason to come is the rest of the menu: laab, som tam, grilled meats with sticky rice. Open every day, which makes it useful when other Thai spots are closed (Thai Bambu).

Formosa

lunch buffet 155 SEK (≈535 THB) Mon–Fri — includes sushi, warm Chinese dishes, and coffee Open in Maps

On Kornhamnstorg square in Gamla Stan, Formosa is Stockholm's oldest Chinese restaurant — trading continuously since the 1960s in one of the most picturesque corners of the old town. The weekday buffet covers sushi alongside warm Chinese mains, and Reddit's r/stockholm flags it as a reliable, honest spot where many Chinese visitors actually eat. Combine it with a morning walk through Gamla Stan and you've handled lunch and sightseeing in one move (Thatsup listing).

Smart Value Moves in Stockholm

Stockholm's single most important value tip: free museum nights. Nationalmuseum on Thursdays (5–9pm) and Moderna Museet on Fridays (6–8pm) are world-class museums offering free entry on specific evenings. Medeltidsmuseet and ArkDes are free every day. The SL 72-hour transit pass (~375 SEK / ≈1,295 THB) covers metro, bus, tram, and Waxholmsbolaget archipelago ferries to Vaxholm — if you use transit seriously, this pays back within two days. Tap water in Stockholm is some of the best in the world: drink it, carry it in a bottle, and avoid paying for still water in restaurants. The Systembolaget (the state-owned alcohol monopoly, open on weekdays) is the only legal place to buy wine and spirits in Sweden; prices there are significantly lower than in bars or restaurants if you want a drink at your accommodation.

04

The Swedish Food Checklist

These are the things to eat before you leave Sweden. Not because they are famous, but because they are genuinely excellent.

Max Burgers

Sweden's own burger chain, founded in Gällivare in 1968, long before global chains arrived, and still the best burger in the country according to most Swedes. The beef is 100% Swedish, the menu is honest, and the Classic MAX with bacon and pickled cucumber is the order. Find them at: Norra Hamngatan 20 in Gothenburg (map), Kungsgatan 44 in Stockholm (map), and in Örebro city center (map). Wikipedia on MAX Hamburgers covers the full chain history.

Kebabpizza

This is Sweden's great contribution to pizza — a thin-crust pizza topped with tomato sauce, mozzarella, doner kebab meat, sliced onion, pepperoncini, and a generous pour of garlic sauce and kebab sauce. It sounds wrong until you taste it, after which it becomes correct. Get it at Pizzeria Pomodoro in Gothenburg (the city's best according to the 2024 Göteborgs-Posten ranking) or Pizzeria Barolo also in Gothenburg.

Svenska Pannkakor (Swedish Pancakes)

Thinner than American pancakes and softer than French crêpes, Swedish pancakes are served with lingonberry jam and whipped cream, often as a Thursday lunch tradition (following the old custom of pea soup on Thursday). Get them at Slingerbulten in Gamla Stan, Stockholm, where they are made the old way with no embellishment needed. Slingerbulten's own site confirms the Gamla Stan address.

Våfflor (Swedish Waffles)

Heart-shaped, crisped on a proper iron, and served with cloudberry jam and a cloud of whipped cream — Swedish waffles are distinct from Belgian ones in their lightness. The Slottsskogens Våffelstuga — Café Bräket in Slottsskogen park is the place for this: a wooden cottage, a garden, and waffles made while you watch. Tripadvisor confirms it is open daily from 11am to 5pm.

Kanelbulle (Cinnamon Bun)

Do not mistake these for the glazed American version. The Swedish kanelbulle uses cardamom in the dough, cinnamon and butter in the filling, and pearl sugar on top. They should be slightly chewy at the center and pull apart in coils. The absolute standard is set by the Hagabullen at Café Husaren in Gothenburg's Haga district — dinner-plate size, shareable, absurd. Gothenburg Tourism confirms Café Husaren at Haga Nygata 28.

Köttbullar (Swedish Meatballs)

The IKEA version is an approximation. The real thing is smaller, made with a mixture of beef and pork, fried in real butter until browned all over, and served with a proper gravy, lingonberry jam, and pickled cucumber on the side. Get them at Slingerbulten in Stockholm's Gamla Stan where they are made from scratch daily.

Korv / Tunnbrödsrulle (Swedish Hot Dog)

The tunnbrödsrulle is street food at its most Swedish: a flatbread spread with mashed potato, then layered with two hot dogs, fried onions, shrimp salad, ketchup, and mustard. It sounds like chaos and tastes like exactly the right thing after a long day. Find one at any gatukök (street kitchen) or hot dog cart in central Stockholm or Gothenburg. Scandinavian Cookbook's tunnbrödsrulle guide has the full composition.

Semla

A cardamom-spiced wheat bun, sliced open and filled with a pure of almond paste and mounds of whipped cream, then capped with the top of the bun. Traditionally eaten on Shrove Tuesday (Fettisdag) in late winter, but now available in konditorier from January through March. Try one at Hälls Konditori in Örebro or Sundbergs Konditori in Gamla Stan if you are visiting in season.

Räkmacka (Shrimp Open Sandwich)

A thick slice of sourdough or white bread, buttered, piled with cold-water shrimp (smaller and sweeter than tropical prawns), a spoonful of mayonnaise, a slice of lemon, and fresh dill. It is the quintessential Swedish lunch. The counters inside Östermalms Saluhall make excellent ones to order. Östermalms Saluhall's site describes the hall as "a tasteful meeting place since 1888."

Salt Licorice

Swedish salty licorice — saltlakris — is not sweet. It is aggressively saline, slightly bitter, and deeply divisive among non-Scandinavians. The ammonium chloride content is high enough that the EU once considered banning it. Try a small piece first from any grocery store; you will either love it immediately or respect it permanently. Career Sweden's guide to Swedish foods covers its strange chemistry.

Kalles Kaviar

A tube of smoked cod roe paste, squeezed onto a crispbread or toast with butter. It is breakfast, it is a snack, it is Swedish in the same way that Vegemite is Australian. Every ICA and Coop supermarket stocks it. Buy a tube, try it on knäckebröd, and understand something that takes seconds to grasp but years to forget.

Falukorv

A thick, mild, deeply pink sausage made from a mixture of pork, beef, and potato flour, originating in the copper-mining town of Falun. It is Sweden's most-consumed sausage — grilled, fried, or baked — and appears on school lunch menus across the country. The easiest version: a supermarket falukorv pan-fried until it crisps on both sides, served with mashed potato and pickled beets.

05

Folklore & Cultural Goodies

Fika

Fika is not just a coffee break. It is a concept — a structured pause in the day to drink coffee (or tea), eat something sweet, and be with other people or yourself without the pressure to be productive. The word functions as both noun and verb in Swedish: you can "have a fika" or "fika with someone." In workplaces it is semi-obligatory and mid-morning; in cafés it is extended and social. The Visit Sweden fika guide describes it as a moment to pause, connect, and recharge. Practicing fika is the fastest way to feel Swedish.

Lagom

Lagom (roughly: "just the right amount," from an old form of the word for "law") is the organizing principle of Swedish moderation. It means not too much, not too little — in how you eat, decorate, speak, and spend. It is sometimes misread as mediocrity; it is better understood as a rejection of performance. Visit Sweden's lagom explainer frames it as mindfulness before mindfulness had a word.

Allemansrätten (The Right of Public Access)

This is Sweden's constitutionally-protected right for every person to roam freely in nature — to walk, cycle, camp, swim, and pick berries on any land regardless of ownership, provided you cause no damage and respect the landowner's private garden (within 70 meters of their house). It is why the nature reserves described in this guide are free and why you can pitch a tent in a forest that belongs to someone else. Visit Sweden's Allemansrätten page has the full details and limits.

Midsummer (Midsommar)

The Friday closest to June 21 is Sweden's most genuinely pagan public holiday: Swedes erect a maypole (midsommarstång) decorated with flowers and birch branches, dance around it to traditional songs, eat pickled herring, new potatoes with dill and sour cream, and drink schnapps. Cities empty as people travel to summer houses and lake cottages. If you are in Sweden around this date, find a public midsummer celebration — many towns and villages hold them openly.

Trolls, Tomtar & Näcken

Sweden's folk mythology is populated with creatures that are neither fully good nor fully evil: the tomte (a small, bearded house spirit that protects the farm in exchange for respect and a bowl of porridge on Christmas Eve), the näcken (a male water spirit who plays the violin in lakes to lure swimmers to their depths), and the forest trolls. These figures appear in Swedish art, literature, and children's books not as whimsy but as genuine cultural inheritance — a way of keeping the wild world legible.

06

Smart Value Moves That Don't Feel Like Cutting Corners

Lunch vs. dinner pricing

The Swedish today lunch (dagens lunch) system is the most important value lever in the country. Most restaurants serving a dinner main at 230–320 SEK (≈795–1,105 THB) offer the same kitchen's cooking as a lunch special for 120–160 SEK (≈415–555 THB), inclusive of salad, bread, and coffee. Eat your main meal at lunch; have something light — a räkmacka, a hot dog, a soup — in the evening.

Systembolaget

Sweden's government-run alcohol monopoly is the only place to buy wine, beer above 3.5%, or spirits at retail. Prices are considerably lower than in bars. Most locations are open Monday–Friday 10am–6pm (some until 8pm) and Saturdays 10am–3pm. Closed Sundays. If you want a bottle of wine for your accommodation, plan around these hours. Systembolaget's Wikipedia entry covers the full background.

Transit day passes and the archipelago

In Stockholm, the SL 72-hour pass (~375 SEK) and 7-day pass cover metro, bus, tram, and Waxholmsbolaget public ferries to destinations including Vaxholm and Grinda — meaning your archipelago day trip costs nothing extra. In Gothenburg, the Västtrafik day pass (~165 SEK) covers trams, buses, and the Saltholmen archipelago ferries to Styrsö and Vrångö. Stockholm Spirit's ferry guide makes the practical distinctions clearly.

Free museum evenings

Nationalmuseum in Stockholm: free every Thursday 5–9pm. Moderna Museet in Stockholm: free every Friday 6–8pm (Feb–Jun, Aug–Oct). Medeltidsmuseet: free every day. ArkDes: free permanent collection. These are world-class institutions; the evening timing also means you visit when the afternoon crowds have thinned. Nationalmuseum's Thursday page and Moderna Museet's Friday page have current schedules.

Tap water

Stockholm, Gothenburg, and Örebro all have excellent municipal tap water — clean, cold, and tasteless in the best way. Carry a reusable bottle and refill it at any café or public tap. Do not pay for still water in restaurants; ask for tap water (kranvatten) without hesitation.

ICA, Coop, and Willys for picnic food

Sweden's three main supermarket chains are everywhere. ICA is typically the best quality, Coop is reliable, and Willys positions itself as the value option. For a picnic — knäckebröd, cheese, sliced deli meat, cherry tomatoes, and a yogurt — you can eat extremely well for 80–100 SEK (≈275–345 THB). Djurgården in Stockholm, Slottsskogen in Gothenburg, and Stadsparken in Örebro are all excellent picnic parks with no shortage of benches and sunshine.