From Haugastøl to Flåm
Rallarvegen is widely recognized as one of Norway's most scenic cycling routes, taking you from mountain plateau terrain down to the fjord landscape in Flåm.
Rallarvegen, following the outskirts of the Hardangervidda Plateau, leads you along the Bergen Railway Line from Haugastøl via Finse, Hallingskeid, Myrdal and down to Flåm. It is also possible to continue down to Voss. The road itself is an attraction, and it takes you through a fantastic highland landscape starting at 1,000 meters above sea level (a.s.l.), peaking at 1,350 meters, before descending to the fjords at sea level.
For updated info about Rallarvegen, visit the Rallarvegen Facebook page.
Rallarvegen as a bike route
Rallarvegen was opened for cycling in the summer of 1974. In the first few years, only a couple of hundred cyclists rode the route from Haugastøl to Myrdal. Since then, the numbers have increased rapidly. In recent years, we estimate that around 25,000 cyclists from Norway and abroad ride Rallarvegen each year.
The construction route known as “Rallarvegen” is a more than 100-year-old man-made transport road, built to convey men and materials during the construction of the most mountainous sector of the Oslo–Bergen Railway Line.
The railway workers’ road is a cultural and historic monument. From this road you will always be close to, and often see, the Bergen Line, which was opened in 1909. You will discover painstakingly detailed work in stone and earth, carried out by a workforce that at its peak comprised 2,400 men. You will see line inspectors’ houses of high architectural quality and get an impression of Norway’s loftiest place of employment from 1900 to 1964.
It all started when the Norwegian Parliament decided in 1894 that a railway connection was to be built between Bergen in the west and Christiania (the former name of Oslo) in the east. The railway would cross the mountain range that splits southern Norway in two, and to do so they had to build construction roads leading up onto the plateau from Voss, Flåm and Geilo, and along the route the railway would follow. This soon became one of the most demanding railway projects in Europe. Everything needed—supplies and equipment—had to be transported from the villages up onto the plateau. Every day throughout a hectic summer season, hundreds of horse-drawn carriages transported the materials and gear required for the work to be carried out in the highlands.
“Rallar” was the name of the workforce, which later gave its name to this famous construction road: Rallarvegen. The Bergen Railway Line was officially opened on November 27, 1909. In 2009, the railway celebrated its 100-year jubilee.
In these high mountains there are usually large quantities of snow, and along the Finse–Hallingskeid stretch—where snowfall is heaviest—there is no snow clearance service. Early in the season (i.e., in July, or after a snowy winter), we therefore recommend travelling the Finse–Hallingskeid sector by the Rallar train. Scattered sizeable snowdrifts, up to 100–200 meters in length, can also occur east of Finse and west of Hallingskeid.
Please see our Rallarvegen report for current road conditions.








