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Norway · Troms

Where to Stay in Burfjord, Troms

Burfjord is the administrative centre of Kvænangen Municipality in northern Norway, a village at the head of a fjord in Troms.

Where to stay in Burfjord

Lodging in Burfjord is sparse and clusters close to the village shore, near Burfjord Church and the municipal offices at the head of the fjord. The centre suits travellers who want to be within reach of the quay, the church, and the road that threads along the water through Kvænangen Municipality. Beds here are limited.

A few small guesthouses and roadside rooms make up most of the supply, and they fill through the pale summer weeks when the long northern light pulls walkers and anglers toward the fjord. Further out, scattered cabins and farm rooms line the shore of the fjord and reach toward Sekkemo Church and the wider parish, where the closeness of the village gives way to open water and steep fells. Plan well ahead.

This corner of northern Norway holds only a thin scattering of beds, and the brief summer season strains the few rooms that Burfjord and the surrounding shore of Troms can offer.

About Burfjord

What is Burfjord known for?

Burfjord serves as the seat of Kvænangen Municipality, the place where the municipal council meets and the offices stand. Two churches mark the district: Burfjord Church in the village and the older Sekkemo Church across the parish. The fjord defines the village.

Travellers come for the quiet shore setting, the parish churches, and the long views down the water under the steep fells of northern Norway.

What are the main landmarks in Burfjord?

Burfjord Church is the chief landmark of the village, standing near the shore at the head of the fjord. The parish holds a second church too. Sekkemo Church, the older and protected building of the district, sits across the water in Kvænangen Municipality and remains the heritage landmark of the area.

Their fjord setting is the draw, framed by the steep fells that rise behind the shore in this part of northern Norway.

What is the history of Burfjord?

Burfjord took shape as a shore settlement at the head of its fjord, where the sheltered water and the river mouth gave farms and boats a foothold among the fells of Troms. The village drew together the scattered holdings of the surrounding shore, and in time it became the administrative centre of Kvænangen Municipality, the place where the parish gathered and the council met. The fjord and the sea carried life here.

Fishing, small farming, and the church at Sekkemo bound the district together through the long centuries of life on this northern coast. The churches anchored the parish. Sekkemo Church served the older congregation across the water, and Burfjord Church later rose by the village shore as the settlement grew into the seat of the municipality.

The roads came in time. As Kvænangen Municipality took its modern form, Burfjord kept its place as the centre where the council meets and the offices stand, the small village at the head of the fjord where the public life of this corner of northern Norway still turns.

Where is Burfjord?

Burfjord lies at the head of its fjord, in the north-eastern part of Troms, in northern Norway. Steep fells rise close behind the village, and the water of the fjord runs out to the open sounds of the coast. The fjord shapes the village.

Burfjord sits where the shore narrows toward the river mouth, with the fells of Kvænangen Municipality standing over the water and the wider coast of the county opening to the north.

What is the climate of Burfjord?

Burfjord has a cool coastal climate tempered by its fjord. Winters run long and dark this far north, yet the water of the fjord eases the deepest cold that settles over the high fells and the interior of Troms through the dark months. Summers are brief and bright.

The long polar days bring pale, lit nights to the shore, while wind funnels down the fjord and off the coast across the seasons in this part of northern Norway.

How do you get to Burfjord?

Burfjord sits on the shore road that runs along the fjord, the main link through Kvænangen Municipality. The coastal highway carries traffic past the village between the regional centres of Troms, and local roads branch off toward the surrounding shore and the river valleys behind. The journey runs by road along the water.

Travellers reach this part of northern Norway overland through the county before the final stretch down to the fjord and the village.