October in Oslo means 3°C, darkness by 4pm and a beer that costs €9. Bangkok in November is 31°C, reliably dry, and a Singha on the street costs €1.50. Norse Atlantic now flies non-stop between the two. From €411 return.
✈️ The deal
- From: Oslo, Norway
- To: Bangkok, Thailand
- Airline: Norse Atlantic
- Stops: Non-stop
- Price: €411–€499 return
- When: October – November 2026 / March 2027
Example dates:
26/10/2026 – 06/11/2026
26/10/2026 – 07/11/2026
27/10/2026 – 06/11/2026
27/10/2026 – 07/11/2026
29/10/2026 – 06/11/2026
29/10/2026 – 07/11/2026
08/03/2027 – 20/03/2027
Check availability here →
💰 How far does your money go?
A plate of Pad Thai from a street stall costs €1.60. A Singha beer at a 7-Eleven is €1.50. A full sit-down meal at a local restaurant, rice, curry, a drink, comes to around €6. Back in Oslo, that does not cover a pint. The baht goes a long way. A €50 note in Bangkok is a full day's eating and drinking.
☀️ The weather
Oslo in October sits at 3–9°C. By November it is -3–3°C, dark by mid-afternoon, and the cold is here to stay for months. Bangkok in November is 31°C during the day, dropping to 23°C at night. The monsoon ends in October, which means November is Bangkok's sweet spot: warm, bright, with far less rain than the summer months. March is even drier: clear skies, 33°C, and peak-season beach weather across southern Thailand.
🏨 Where to stay
Bangkok has hotels at every price point. These three are consistently well-reviewed.
Compass SkyView Hotel · 8.2/10 · From €55/night Rooftop infinity pool, included breakfast and Sukhumvit location. The strongest value at this price in the city.
Radisson Blu Plaza Bangkok · 8.6/10 · From €85/night Large pool, well-connected location at Asok, and the kind of rooms that feel genuinely mid-range rather than budget-with-pretensions.
Sindhorn Kempinski Hotel Bangkok · 9.2/10 · From €280/night A green, garden-wrapped luxury hotel near Lumphini Park. Infinity pool, spa, and some of the most generous room sizes in the city. The benchmark.
🎯 What to do
Bangkok rewards patience. The more you slow down, the better it gets.
The Grand Palace and Wat Pho. Two of the most impressive temple complexes in Southeast Asia, back to back. Wat Pho alone has over a thousand Buddha images and a reclining gold Buddha that stretches the length of a football pitch.
Chinatown (Yaowarat) at night. Bangkok's most atmospheric neighbourhood after dark. Street vendors grill seafood on the pavement, neon lights the chaos above, and the energy is unlike anywhere else in the city.
Damnoen Saduak floating market. Two hours from central Bangkok by bus. Vendors paddle wooden boats stacked with fruit, noodles and flowers through narrow canals. Go early to avoid the tour-group crowds.
Mahanakhon SkyWalk. The highest observation deck in Thailand, 314 metres above the city. The glass-floor section looks straight down 78 floors to the street below. Either very good or very bad, depending on your nerves.
🗺️ Where to go from here
Bangkok is the hub. The rest of Thailand is the point.
Chiang Mai. One hour by domestic flight. Thailand's second city: night bazaars, hill-tribe trekking, elephant sanctuaries and a pace of life nothing like Bangkok.
Koh Samui. One-and-a-half hours by domestic flight. White-sand beaches, clear water, and more infrastructure than the smaller islands. The easy call for a beach week.
Ayutthaya. One-and-a-half hours north by train. The ancient capital of the Thai kingdom, now a UNESCO site. Crumbling towers, headless Buddhas and temples swallowed by banyan tree roots.
Koh Chang. Five hours by bus and ferry. Largely forested, mostly undeveloped, and the best alternative to the more-visited islands if you want quiet beaches without the crowds.
Non-stop from Oslo. €411. Check dates before they go.

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