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Study abroad in Trondheim

Housing, Erasmus groups, universities, costs and student life for exchange students in Trondheim.

Country

Norway

Student Budget

NOK 10,000 – 14,500/month

Transport Card

AtB student season ticket (40% discount, ages up to 34)

Population

218,000 (city) / 285,000 (metro)

Study abroad in Trondheim: student life

Study abroad in Trondheim and you land in Norway's most student-dense city — close to a fifth of residents are students, anchored by NTNU, the country's leading technical university. The result is a city whose rhythm, culture and biggest annual festivals are literally run by students.

Who loves this city?

Students who want one of Europe's most concentrated student cities — almost 1 in 5 residents is a student — built around a top engineering and science university, with a real medieval old town instead of a generic campus park.

What makes it special

Where a fifth of the population is a student, the world's largest international student festival (ISFiT) and Norway's biggest cultural festival (UKA) both happen here — student life isn't a subculture, it's the city's main culture.

Newcomer shocks

  • Winters are genuinely cold (down to -20°C on the coldest nights), not just dark like further south — proper winter gear is not optional.
  • NTNU spans three Trondheim campuses; figuring out which building/campus your courses are in takes real planning the first week.
  • Student culture runs the city: UKA and ISFiT can fill the streets with tens of thousands of people and visibly change the rhythm of the whole town.

Map

Weather in Trondheim & what to pack

Trondheim's weather is colder and snowier than Oslo or Bergen: winters regularly drop below -10°C and snow is the default from December through March, while the brief, mild summer brings near-midnight daylight. Pack for real winter, not just rain.

Month Conditions Note
January 1° / -5° ❄️ Snow Very short days
February 1° / -5° ❄️ Snow Slowly lengthening
March 4° / -3° ❄️ Snow/sleet Noticeably longer
April 8° / 0° 🌤️ Driest month ~14h light
May 13° / 5° 🌧️ Light rain Long evenings
June 17° / 9° 🌧️ Light rain Near-midnight sun
July 20° / 11° 🌤️ Mild showers Peak daylight
August 18° / 11° 🌧️ Light rain Still long days
September 14° / 8° 🌧️ Wettest month Shortening fast
October 8° / 4° 🌧️ Rain/sleet ~9h light
November 4° / -1° ❄️ Snow begins Dark by mid-afternoon
December 1° / -4° ❄️ Snow Shortest days

Packing checklist

  • A real winter coat rated for sub-zero temperatures — Trondheim winters reach -20°C, colder than Oslo or Bergen.
  • Waterproof winter boots with good grip; pavements ice over and the city is hilly around Gløshaugen.
  • Layers for the long, mild summer daylight as much as for winter — the temperature swing across the year is large.

Cost of living for students in Trondheim

Cost of Living Index

87.1 / 100

Expensive · World avg ≈ 44

Numbeo

Cost of living for students in Trondheim is in line with the rest of Norway — high by European standards, but eased significantly by Sit's subsidised student housing. A single room at Moholt or Berg runs NOK 4,300–8,050/month, well below Trondheim's private rental market.

Category Range / mo Notes
Shared Room Rent NOK 4,300 – 8,050 Sit student housing (Moholt/Berg single room) to a 1-bedroom apartment at Moholt.
Monthly Transport Pass NOK 250 – 420 AtB 30-day pass with the 40% student discount applied.
Groceries NOK 3,000 – 4,000 Typical single-student grocery budget; in line with the rest of Norway.

Going out & dining

🍽️ NTNU canteen lunch NOK 60–90
☕ Coffee near Gløshaugen campus NOK 40–50
🍺 Pint of beer (Samfundet or city centre) NOK 90–120
🚌 AtB single bus ticket (before student discount) NOK 42–45
🏋️ NTNUI sports/gym membership NOK 1,050/semester or NOK 1,700/year
Nidaros Cathedral tower climb Paid entry; discounted student rate
Kristiansten Fortress grounds Free
Bymarka cross-country ski trail pass Free (public trail network)

Source: Numbeo · Prices approximate, updated periodically.

Student housing in Trondheim

Student housing in Trondheim starts with NTNU and Sit instructions, especially because Moholt is the main furnished international-student route. Keep Finn.no and Hybel as backups, but check campus location first: Moholt, Berg, Singsaker and the centre create very different winter commutes.

Moholt

Official Sit route; check current room rents instead of relying on old ranges.

Exchange students who want the largest international student village and furnished rooms through Sit/NTNU.

Bus or bike to Gløshaugen/Dragvoll; often about 15-25 minutes depending on campus. Safe and student-heavy; winter ice is a bigger day-to-day risk than crime.

Berg / Gløshaugen

Mid; official availability is limited and private rooms cost more.

Engineering, science and NTNU students who want the shortest campus commute.

Walk or cycle to Gløshaugen; short bus to city centre. Very safe and residential, with busy student movement during term.

Singsaker / Møllenberg

Mid to high private market, depending on room and house condition.

Students who want older wooden-house streets, cafes and a more local feel near campus.

10-20 minutes walking/cycling to Gløshaugen or the centre. Generally safe; use normal late-night awareness around party streets.

Solsiden / city centre

Higher private-market rents.

Students who want nightlife, part-time work and the shortest access to services.

Good bus connections to NTNU campuses; many central errands are walkable. Safe but busier late at night; keep belongings close around bars.

Official contacts

NTNU student housing in Trondheim

Official NTNU page explaining Sit allocation, private-market backup and who is guaranteed housing.

Read NTNU/Sit instructions immediately after admission; guaranteed groups and exchange students receive specific information.
Open

Sit Housing

Official student welfare housing provider for Trondheim, including Moholt, Berg and other student villages.

Check current Sit listings by room type and village.
Apply as soon as NTNU/Sit sends instructions.
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Student residences

Moholt Student Village

NTNU notes most international students placed by Sit are in furnished Moholt rooms; Sit describes Moholt as Trondheim’s largest student village.

Check current Sit room rents.
Follow NTNU/Sit allocation timing after admission.
Open

Berg student housing

Sit student housing close to Gløshaugen; good for NTNU campus access when available.

Apply early through Sit.
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Private platforms

Finn.no rentals

Main Norwegian private rental marketplace for rooms and apartments when official student housing is unavailable.

Open

Hybel.no

Norwegian room and flatshare marketplace; verify contracts and sublet permission carefully.

Open

NTNU private housing guidance

Official advice for students who are not guaranteed or allocated Sit housing.

Open

Student groups

ESN Trondheim

Official international-student network; useful for arrival questions and peer housing reality checks.

Open

International students in Trondheim

Peer group for arrivals, flatmate leads and local questions; verify every listing independently.

Open

Documents to prepare

Passport or national ID plus admission/exchange confirmation.

Official housing application login/details and any guarantee/allocation email.

Deposit and first-rent funds with an international payment method.

Norwegian D-number/national ID details if requested later for contract administration.

Timing

Follow NTNU/Sit housing instructions immediately after admission; do not wait for visa or travel booking to start.

If you are not guaranteed Sit housing, begin Finn/Hybel searches 2-3 months before arrival and book temporary accommodation for the first days.

Confirm campus location before choosing: Dragvoll, Gløshaugen and Øya produce different commute patterns.

Deposit & contract notes

Official student-housing contracts are the lowest-risk first route; compare included utilities, internet, furniture and dates.

For private rentals, insist on a written contract, clear deposit handling and permission for any sublet.

Clarify furnished status, shared-kitchen rules, notice period and whether short exchange stays are accepted before signing.

Red flags

A landlord who refuses a viewing, live video tour, written contract or identity/company check.

Pressure to wire money urgently before admission, contract or keys are verified.

Listings far below normal local rent levels, copied photos, or requests for gift cards, Western Union or crypto.

Sublets that cannot prove permission from the main landlord or housing provider.

Is Trondheim safe for students?

Safety Index

78.1 / 100

Generally safe

Crime Index

21.9 / 100

Low crime

Source: Numbeo · Lower crime = safer. Higher safety = safer.

Is Trondheim safe for students? Very — crime is low even by Norwegian standards, and students make up close to a fifth of the population, so the city centre stays lively and watched late into the night. The main practical risk in winter is icy pavements, not crime.

Very low crime by international standards; students comprise close to a fifth of the population, and the city centre is calm even late at night.

Top risks

  • Petty theft around the busiest nightlife streets (Solsiden, the city centre) on weekend nights.
  • Icy pavements in winter are a bigger practical risk than crime — falls are common without proper footwear.
Emergency: 112 Police 113 Ambulance 110 Fire

Getting around Trondheim

Getting around Trondheim for students means the AtB bus network, which connects Moholt, Berg and NTNU's three campuses, plus city bikes for the flatter central routes in the warmer months. Students under 35 get a flat 40% discount on every AtB ticket.

🚌 AtB buses

NOK 420/month (1 zone, before student discount)

The main public transport network connecting Moholt, Berg and the NTNU campuses.

40% off for students up to age 34

🚲 City bikes (Trondheim Bysykkel)

Low seasonal membership fee

Popular spring-to-autumn; the city centre and NTNU campuses are bike-friendly and largely flat near the river.

🚶 Walking

Free

Central Trondheim, Berg and Singsaker are walkable; Moholt is further out and usually needs the bus.

Things to do in Trondheim as a student

Trondheim is different because students do not just attend events; they build them. ISFiT brings international students into workshops and debates in odd years, UKA turns the city into a student-run culture machine in even years, and Samfundet keeps the calendar alive between both peaks.

ISFiT (International Student Festival in Trondheim) in Trondheim

ISFiT (International Student Festival in Trondheim)

Biennial, odd years, February

Free for accepted participants (includes food + accommodation)

international community culture

The world's largest international student festival, founded in 1990 — around 450 students from across the globe gather for dialogue, workshops and debate on global issues.

UKA in Trondheim

UKA

Biennial, even years, October–November

Varies by event; many low-cost student tickets

culture music volunteering

Norway's largest cultural festival, run entirely by NTNU student volunteers since 1917 — concerts, theatre and events fill the city for weeks.

Nidaros Cathedral tower climb in Trondheim
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Nidaros Cathedral tower climb

Year-round (summer for tower access)

Paid entry; discounted student rate

culture sightseeing

Climbing the 170+ steps of Scandinavia's largest medieval cathedral rewards you with a panoramic view over the whole city.

Kristiansten Fortress in Trondheim

Kristiansten Fortress

Year-round

Free (grounds); museum inside has separate hours

free sightseeing

A short, steep climb above the city centre for a free panoramic view and a look at Trondheim's military history.

Bymarka hiking and cross-country skiing in Trondheim
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Bymarka hiking and cross-country skiing

Year-round (hiking summer, skiing winter)

Free

outdoors free

A huge free trail network starting at Granåsen or Lian, minutes from campus by bus — hiking in summer, cross-country skiing in winter, no gear costs beyond your own skis.

Granåsen Ski Stadium in Trondheim
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Granåsen Ski Stadium

Winter

Free to visit; paid for World Cup event tickets

sport winter

A genuine World Cup ski-jumping and cross-country venue on the edge of the city — students can watch top-level winter sport without travelling.

Bakklandet and Gamle Bybro (Old Town Bridge) walk in Trondheim

Bakklandet and Gamle Bybro (Old Town Bridge) walk

Year-round

Free

free sightseeing

Trondheim's prettiest neighbourhood — colourful wooden warehouses, cafes and the iconic red bridge — is a free walk most students do regularly, not just once.

NTNUI sports and outdoor gear rental in Trondheim
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NTNUI sports and outdoor gear rental

Year-round

NOK 1,050/semester or NOK 1,700/year membership

sport outdoors

60+ sports plus free gear rental (skis, tents, fishing equipment) via NTNUI Bumerang — the cheapest way to try Norwegian outdoor life.

Trondheim Kino (cinema) in Trondheim

Trondheim Kino (cinema)

Year-round

Paid

indoor low-key

Three central screens (Prinsen, Nova) for an easy low-effort night out between exams.

Trondheimsfjord boat trips in Trondheim

Trondheimsfjord boat trips

Spring–autumn

Paid

nature sightseeing

A different angle on the city and an easy half-day trip on the fjord that gives the whole region its name.

Student social life in Trondheim

Samfundet is infrastructure in Trondheim, not just nightlife: bars, concerts, volunteering teams and student politics all pass through the red round house. Around it, NTNU societies, NTNUI sports and Solsiden evenings make the city feel much bigger socially than its population suggests.

What Students Usually Get Wrong

  • Underestimating how much the academic calendar bends around UKA/ISFiT years — these festivals visibly take over the city and student schedules.
Student Associations
  • ESN Trondheim (Erasmus Student Network) — weekly events, trips and the buddy programme for international students
  • Studentersamfundet i Trondhjem (Samfundet) — the historic student society and main social hub
Meeting Places 2
  • Samfundet — Trondheim's century-old student house with bars, concerts and events run by students
  • Solsiden — riverside area with the densest concentration of bars and restaurants
Public Groups 3

ESN Trondheim

Founded in 1993; runs weekly events and the Buddy programme that pairs every incoming international student with a local buddy.

Website Verified international
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International students in Trondheim

Community group for international and exchange students living in Trondheim.

Facebook Verified international
Open

NTNU Study Abroad / International Office

NTNU's own hub for incoming exchange and international students.

Website Verified international
Open

Student discounts & perks in Trondheim

The strongest student perks in Trondheim are built around NTNU daily life: AtB's student transport discount, Sit canteens and services, NTNUI sport/gear access and reduced museum or concert tickets. They matter because winter and high prices make cheap, repeatable routines more valuable than one-off sightseeing discounts.

Museums & Culture

NTNU Vitenskapsmuseet (Science Museum)

Free or reduced admission for students; useful low-cost orientation activity.

Visit

Rockheim (National Museum of Popular Music)

Discounted student tickets at Trondheim's main music museum.

Visit

Food Savings

Sit Kaffebar / NTNU canteens

Subsidised canteen lunches (NOK 60–90) across NTNU campuses — the biggest everyday food saving in Trondheim.

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Too Good To Go

Discounted surplus food from Trondheim bakeries and cafés; widely used by students.

Get app

AtB gives a flat 40% discount on all tickets for students up to age 34 — register your student status in the AtB app after enrolment. Fares & passes

Universities in Trondheim for exchange students

Universities in Trondheim for exchange students centre on NTNU (Norwegian University of Science and Technology), Norway's largest university and its leading institution for engineering, technology and natural sciences, spread across the Gløshaugen and Øya campuses.