Stavanger Airport, Sola (SVG) — Airport Guide 2026
Stavanger is Norway’s oil capital, and its airport at Sola reflects that: Norway’s third-busiest airport, dominated by business travel to the offshore industry and the Oslo shuttle, and one of Europe’s busiest bases for North Sea helicopter operations. It’s also the way into the Lysefjord and the Pulpit Rock hike. The thing to get right before you fly is the border: Norway is in Schengen, so EES now applies here — but it is not in the EU and does not use the euro, so you’ll be spending Norwegian kroner. This guide stays operational: the terminal, the border, the transfer, the lounge, and the honest cost.
Quick Reference
Stavanger Airport, Sola
SVG / ENZV
Stavanger / Sandnes (Sola), Rogaland, Norway
Norway’s 3rd-busiest airport; major North Sea heliport
New terminal (built for 6M passengers) due to open around end of 2025
Avinor
About 14 km (≈25–30 min)
None to the airport — Flybussen connects to Stavanger’s rail station
Flybussen airport bus (NOK 179, ~25–30 min)
North Sea Lounge (Priority Pass), international terminal
SAS (largest), Norwegian; Oslo the busiest route
Norwegian krone (NOK) — NOT euro
Schengen (EES live since 10 Apr 2026; ETIAS expected Q4 2026); NOT EU
🛫 1. What SVG is, and the new terminal
Sola is a working airport more than a tourist one. SAS runs the most departures — around 105 a week — with Norwegian the second carrier and the Stavanger–Oslo route the busiest by far, a genuine air-shuttle for the oil and government business that drives the region. Beyond the fixed-wing terminal, Sola is one of Europe’s busiest offshore-helicopter bases, flying crews out to the North Sea platforms; that industry, not tourism, is the airport’s backbone.
The helicopter side is effectively a separate operation bolted onto the same airfield, with its own facilities and rhythms; unless you work offshore you won’t touch it. But it’s why Sola punches above its passenger weight in aircraft movements, and why the airport runs to an industrial shift pattern as much as a holiday one.
🏗️ The new terminal
Avinor has been building a larger terminal, designed for around 6 million passengers, that was due to open around the end of 2025. By 2026 you should find the expanded facility in use or in final fit-out, so don’t be surprised by changed layouts or active works compared with older descriptions of the airport.
For the passenger this is a steady, well-run Avinor airport rather than a chaotic one — the queues that build are at the early-morning business peak and around the offshore shift changes, not a holiday crush. Time your arrival to miss the early commuter wave if you can.
🛂 2. The border: Schengen yes, euro no
This is the detail people get wrong about Norway. It is not in the EU, but it is a full Schengen and EEA member, so it follows the same border rules as EU Schengen countries — including EES.
The catch is the currency, not the queue. Norway being in Schengen surprises no one; Norway not being in the euro catches people out who arrive with euros in their pocket. Pay by card, which works for everything down to a coffee, and skip airport currency exchange entirely.
Most arrivals at Sola are domestic or from elsewhere in Schengen, so for many travellers there’s no border step at all — the EES registration only applies if you’re arriving from outside the Schengen area.
🚌 3. Getting into Stavanger
The airport is about 14 km from central Stavanger, a 25–30 minute trip. There’s no rail line to the airport itself, so it’s the airport bus or a taxi.
Budget for Norway from the moment you land. A solo traveller paying €43–70 for a 14 km taxi is normal here, not a scam — but it’s exactly why the NOK 179 Flybussen is the sensible call into town. Save the taxi for a late arrival or a group splitting the fare.
Buy the Flybussen ticket online or in the app for the cheaper fare; you can also pay on board. If your hotel is central, the bus’s city-centre stops put you within walking distance of most of it, so you rarely need an onward connection unless you’re heading out into the region.
There is no train to the airport, despite Stavanger having a rail station in the centre; the Flybussen is the connection to it. For onward travel into the region, the bus drops you where the trains and regional buses depart.
🛋️ 4. Lounges
Sola has the North Sea Lounge, airside in the international terminal on the first floor next to Duty-Free, which accepts Priority Pass alongside pay-in and contract access. SAS extended contract-lounge access at Stavanger from autumn 2025, so SAS Business passengers and EuroBonus Gold-and-above members get in on that basis. It’s a solid airport lounge rather than a flagship — worth it on an early-morning business departure or a long wait, less essential on a quick domestic hop.
💷 5. The cost reality, and food
Be blunt about it: Stavanger is one of the most expensive places you’ll fly into, and the airport is no exception. Don’t plan a big meal airside — it’s priced for expense accounts, not value. Eat before you fly or keep it light, and remember Norwegian tap water is excellent and free, so there’s no need to buy bottled.
For carrying things home, Norway isn’t a souvenir-bargain country, but a pack of brunost (the sweet brown cheese) or some good Norwegian chocolate travels fine. If you want alcohol to take away, note that spirits and stronger drink are sold through the state Vinmonopolet shops in town, not freely in supermarkets — and airport duty-free is often the simpler option on the way out.
The practical move is to treat the airport as somewhere to pass through, not spend in: fill a water bottle, eat in town, and do any duty-free shopping deliberately rather than grazing the expensive airside cafés. Norway rewards the traveller who plans their spending and quietly punishes the one who improvises it.
🏔️ 6. Stavanger and the fjords, briefly
Stavanger earns a stop. The compact centre has Gamle Stavanger, a quarter of white wooden 18th- and 19th-century houses, and the Norwegian Petroleum Museum, which is genuinely good on the industry that built the modern city. The bigger draw is out of town: Preikestolen, the Pulpit Rock, a flat clifftop plateau 604 metres above the Lysefjord and one of Norway’s most famous hikes.
Getting to Preikestolen takes planning — typically a ferry from Stavanger toward Tau and a bus to the trailhead, then a 2–4 hour round-trip hike — so it’s a full day, and in summer the trail is busy. If you only have a few hours, the town and the fjord views are the realistic option; the Pulpit Rock is a day you commit to, not a layover stroll.
❓ Frequently asked questions
📊 Stavanger Airport (SVG) at a glance — 2026
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Codes | SVG / ENZV |
| Rank | Norway’s 3rd-busiest; major North Sea heliport |
| Operator | Avinor |
| Recent change | New ~6M-passenger terminal due around end of 2025 |
| Distance to centre | ~14 km (≈25–30 min) |
| Flybussen | NOK 179 (~€15) one way, ~every 20 min |
| Taxi | NOK 500–800 (~€43–70) |
| Rail | None to airport (Flybussen links to Stavanger station) |
| Lounge | North Sea Lounge (Priority Pass), international terminal |
| Dominant carriers | SAS, Norwegian; Oslo the busiest route |
| Currency | Norwegian krone (NOK), not euro |
| Schengen/EES | Yes (EES live 10 Apr 2026; ETIAS expected Q4 2026) |
| EU member | No |
Explore more
- Bergen Airport (BGO) guide: the other western-Norway fjord gateway, for combining a Norway trip.
- Oslo Airport (OSL) guide: the main hub and the busiest connection from Stavanger.
- Cheap flights to Stavanger: current tracked fares into SVG.



