Widely rated among the best-organised Winter Olympics ever held, the 1994 Games left Lillehammer with a set of world-class venues that the town, home to around 28,000 people, still uses and still shows off. The Lysgardsbakkene ski jump towers over the town centre and remains active for competitions and training today, while the bobsleigh and luge track at Hunderfossen keeps running as one of the few in the world open to public rides.
Long before the Olympics arrived, Lillehammer had already built a reputation as a cultural centre through Maihaugen, one of Europe's largest open-air folk museums, and through its associations with Norwegian arts figures including painter Edvard Munch's onetime neighbour, novelist Sigrid Undset, whose home Bjerkebaek is preserved as a museum. Coach demand today runs heavily on winter sports tourism, with a steady secondary flow of heritage and literary groups through the milder months.
Lysgardsbakkene, the twin ski jump towers overlooking Lillehammer, remain in active competitive use decades after hosting the 1994 Winter Olympics' ski jumping events, and a chairlift takes visitors to the top for a view over the town and Lake Mjosa below. The wider Olympic park, including the bobsleigh and luge track at nearby Hunderfossen, still runs public rides, a rare chance to experience genuine Olympic-standard sliding sport facilities rather than just view them from behind a fence.
Maihaugen brings together more than 200 relocated historic buildings across a large open-air site, recreating farmhouses, workshops, and a reconstructed stave church to trace Norwegian rural life from the medieval period through to the 20th century. It ranks among the largest museums of its kind in Europe, and its scale means groups typically need two to three hours to see a meaningful portion of the site.
Bjerkebaek, the home of Nobel Prize-winning novelist Sigrid Undset, best known for her Kristin Lavransdatter trilogy set in medieval Norway, is preserved close to the town centre and now forms part of the wider Maihaugen museum complex. Undset lived and wrote in Lillehammer for decades, and the preserved house gives literary groups a direct link to one of Norway's most significant 20th-century writers.
As a rough guide, a minibus (up to 19 seats) in Lillehammer runs around 4,000 to 7,000 NOK per day, a midi-coach (around 35 seats) around 6,600 to 11,600 NOK per day, and a full-size coach (49 to 55 seats) around 9,800 to 17,600 NOK per day. Lillehammer runs high through the winter sports season given its Olympic-standard venues, easing somewhat outside the ski months. The final figure depends on your route, the date, and how long you need the vehicle. We confirm a fixed price with no hidden charges -- send your details for a free quote.
Tell us where you need to go, how many passengers, and when. We will find you the best bus, coach, or minibus at the best price.


Bus, coach, and minibus hire across 195 countries. Airport transfers, wedding transport, corporate travel, and event shuttles. Get your free quote today.
Contact us for a no-obligation quote for your group transport needs.
Contact Us+44 20 3966 7387
© 2026 Global Bus Hire. All rights reserved.