North Sea oil built modern Stavanger. Since the first major offshore discoveries in the late 1960s, the city has run as Norway's energy capital, and that history is told in unusual detail at the Norwegian Petroleum Museum on the harbourfront. Around 150,000 people live in the city itself, with the wider Stavanger-Sandnes conurbation considerably larger. Stavanger Airport Sola (SVG) sits about 14 kilometres south of the centre, close enough for a short coach transfer.
But Stavanger's biggest single draw for coach groups is not the oil industry at all: it is Preikestolen, the Pulpit Rock, a sheer cliff plateau above Lysefjord that has become one of Norway's most recognised hiking destinations. Coaches ferry hikers to the trailhead through the summer season, while corporate energy-sector traffic keeps the city's hotels and meeting venues busy year-round.
Preikestolen sits around 600 metres above Lysefjord, a flat-topped cliff plateau reached by a marked trail that takes most hikers three to four hours round trip. Coach groups typically travel from Stavanger to the trailhead car park, a journey that includes a ferry crossing, before the walk itself begins. The fjord below is also toured by boat for groups who prefer to see the cliff from the water rather than climb to its edge, and the two experiences are sometimes combined into a single day.
The Norwegian Petroleum Museum, on Stavanger's harbourfront, explains the discovery and development of North Sea oil and gas with a level of technical detail that reflects how central the industry remains to the city's economy. Full-scale rig equipment, simulators, and displays on offshore working life give the museum a hands-on character that works well for both corporate visiting groups and general tourists curious about the industry that transformed the region.
Gamle Stavanger, the old town on the western side of the harbour, holds one of northern Europe's best-preserved collections of wooden houses, around 170 of them, dating mostly from the 18th and early 19th centuries when the town's economy ran on herring and sardine canning. The white-painted streets are narrow and best walked rather than driven, with coach parking available nearby on the harbourfront.
As a rough guide, a minibus (up to 19 seats) in Stavanger runs around 3,900 to 6,700 NOK per day, a midi-coach (around 35 seats) around 6,400 to 11,200 NOK per day, and a full-size coach (49 to 55 seats) around 9,600 to 17,000 NOK per day. Stavanger runs close to Bergen in the Norwegian market, supported by strong energy-sector corporate demand and steady Preikestolen hiking traffic through summer. 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.