Originfacts
Sweden
country · SE

Sweden

Sweden stretches from the grain fields and beech forests of Skåne in the south to the Arctic tundra and midnight sun of Lapland in the north — a country of long coastlines, tens of thousands of lakes, and a social culture built around consensus and the outdoors.

39
Airports
36
Cities
9
Airlines
0
Stories

Overview

Sweden occupies the eastern portion of the Scandinavian Peninsula in Northern Europe, sharing land borders with Norway to the west and Finland to the northeast, with the Baltic Sea and Kattegat defining much of its coastline. Stockholm, built across fourteen islands where Lake Mälaren meets the Baltic, serves as the capital. Swedish is the official language, the krona (SEK) the currency, and the country's cultural identity balances progressive social policy with deep roots in Lutheran tradition and a reverence for nature encapsulated in the concept of friluftsliv — open-air life.

Visa Requirements

Sweden is a member of the European Union and the Schengen Area, meaning citizens of many countries may enter without a visa for short stays of up to 90 days within any 180-day period. The EU's ETIAS electronic travel authorisation system, when operational, will apply to visa-exempt non-EU nationals. Travellers requiring a visa should apply through Sweden's Migration Agency or the nearest Swedish embassy.

Airports in Sweden

39 airports

Airlines based in Sweden

9 airlines

Famous Attractions in Sweden

The Vasa Museum in Stockholm houses a near-intact seventeenth-century warship recovered from Stockholm harbour. Gamla Stan, the medieval old town of the capital, contains one of the best-preserved historical city centres in Scandinavia. Abisko National Park in northern Lapland is regarded as one of the clearest locations in the world to observe the aurora borealis. The Icehotel in Jukkasjärvi, rebuilt each winter from local river ice, has operated since 1989. The university city of Uppsala holds a twelfth-century cathedral — the tallest in Scandinavia. The High Coast in Västernorrland, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, displays dramatic post-glacial landscape rising sharply from the Gulf of Bothnia.

Weather & Climate

Sweden's climate ranges from temperate in the south to subarctic in the north. Southern summers are mild, typically 20–25 °C, while winters average around 0 to −5 °C. In the far north, winter temperatures regularly fall to −15 °C or below, and summer brings continuous daylight. The most broadly comfortable period to visit is June through August, though autumn offers striking foliage and winter draws visitors specifically for northern lights and snow activities. Layering is advisable year-round, even in summer.

Interesting Facts About Sweden

  • Sweden has over 220,000 islands in its archipelagos.
  • ABBA, IKEA, and Spotify all originated in Sweden.
  • The country pioneered the world's first open-access freedom of information law in 1766.
  • Sweden maintains one of the world's highest rates of coffee consumption per capita.
  • Midsommar is celebrated more widely than Christmas in many rural regions.

Official Resources

  • visitsweden.com — Sweden's national tourism authority
  • migrationsverket.se — Swedish Migration Agency for visa and permit information
  • smhi.se — Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute for weather forecasts
  • sj.se — SJ, Sweden's national rail operator

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Sweden · Originfacts