Nykoping is a small coastal town about 100 kilometres south of Stockholm. Most travellers meet it first through its airport: Stockholm Skavsta (NYO) sits within the municipality itself, a short run from the town centre, and has grown into one of the busiest budget-airline gateways to the Stockholm region, with Ryanair using it as a base.
Long before any of that, though, Nykoping was already known for something rather darker. Nykopingshus, the castle at the heart of the old town, was the setting for the Nykoping Banquet of 1317, one of the most notorious episodes in medieval Swedish history. King Birger invited his two brothers, Erik and Valdemar, to what was supposed to be a reconciliation feast, then had them thrown into the castle dungeon, where they died. The story is still taught in Swedish schools, and the castle ruins are the reason heritage groups come here at all.
Nykopingshus stands on a small rise above the Nykoping River, and its surviving tower and walls date substantially from the period of the banquet itself. In December 1317, King Birger used the castle to lure his brothers Erik and Valdemar into a trap, imprisoning them after the feast and, according to the traditional account, leaving them to starve in the dungeon below. The episode became one of the defining betrayals of Swedish medieval politics, retold for centuries afterward in verse and popular history. Coach groups touring the ruins today can walk the same walls where the events are said to have unfolded, with information panels setting out the story in detail.
Stockholm Skavsta Airport (NYO) sits inside Nykoping's own municipal boundary, only a short distance from the town centre, despite carrying Stockholm's name. It has become a significant entry point for budget travel to the wider capital region, with Ryanair operating it as one of its Swedish bases. For coach hire purposes, that makes Nykoping an unusually well-connected small town: airport transfer bookings into Stockholm proper, roughly 100 kilometres north, form a steady part of the local coach market alongside the heritage trade.
Beyond the castle and the airport, Nykoping sits on Sweden's Baltic coast in the Sormland region, with its own scatter of coastal islands reaching out from the town. It functions as a quieter, smaller-scale counterpart to the busier coastal towns further north, and groups touring the castle often pair the visit with a short walk along the river through the town centre before moving on.
As a rough guide, a minibus (up to 19 seats) in Nykoping runs around 3,000 to 5,100 SEK per day, a midi-coach (around 35 seats) around 4,900 to 8,700 SEK per day, and a full-size coach (49 to 55 seats) around 7,300 to 12,900 SEK per day. Nykoping pricing runs slightly above comparable small towns because of steady Skavsta airport transfer demand. 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.
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