Restaurant in Oslo, Norway
Oslo Street Food
100Pearl PointsFlexible, easy-going

About Oslo Street Food
Choose Oslo Street Food for a casual, flexible Oslo meal when variety matters more than a formal restaurant experience. It is strongest for mixed groups, spontaneous plans, central-city timing; choose Arakataka or Bon Lio instead when the occasion calls for a more composed sit-down dinner.
Oslo Street Food is a casual option in Oslo with broad opening hours across the week. Verified practical details are limited, so plan around the confirmed basics: it is in Oslo, the dress code is casual, the posted hours run from late morning on most days, with later closing on Friday and Saturday.
A casual Oslo option with direct planning details
The clearest reason to consider Oslo Street Food is convenience. It is open Monday to Thursday from 11 AM to 11 PM, Friday and Saturday from 11 AM to 3 AM, Sunday from 12 PM to 9 PM. That makes it easier to fit into an Oslo itinerary than venues with narrower hours, though specific menu, seating, booking, service details should be checked directly before you go.
If you are comparing Oslo options, you might also look at Arakataka or Bon Lio. Oslo Street Food is best treated as a casual stop unless you have confirmed the exact experience you want in advance.
Use it when timing matters more than ceremony
Because the verified dress code is casual and the hours are extensive, Oslo Street Food works well as a flexible Oslo choice rather than a high-ceremony meal. It is especially practical when timing is the main constraint, but details such as menu range, seating setup, pricing, reservation policy are not verified here.
For other Oslo dining plans, cross-shop Arakataka, Bon Lio, Bistro Fourrage, Rugantino Oslo, or Koie Ramen, depending on what your group wants to confirm directly.
Use Oslo Street Food as a flexible Oslo option, not as a fully defined headline meal unless you have checked current details directly. If the plan needs more context, compare it with our full Oslo restaurants guide. For a broader trip, also consider Oslo hotels, Oslo bars, Oslo experiences.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I wear to Oslo Street Food?
Keep it casual. The verified dress code for Oslo Street Food in Oslo is casual, so there is no need to dress formally unless your plans before or after require it.
How far ahead should I book Oslo Street Food?
Reservation details are not verified here. The confirmed hours are Monday to Thursday from 11 AM to 11 PM, Friday and Saturday from 11 AM to 3 AM, Sunday from 12 PM to 9 PM, but you should check directly for current booking or walk-in guidance.
Can Oslo Street Food accommodate groups?
Specific group arrangements are not verified here. If you are planning for several people, confirm current seating, booking, service details directly with Oslo Street Food before you go.
Is Oslo Street Food good for a special occasion?
It is verified as casual, so it is better framed as a low-key Oslo option than a formal special-occasion restaurant. If you want to compare it with another Oslo option, consider Arakataka.
Is daytime or evening better at Oslo Street Food?
The verified hours support visits from 11 AM Monday to Saturday and from 12 PM on Sunday, with closing at 11 PM Monday to Thursday, 3 AM Friday and Saturday, 9 PM Sunday. Choose the timing that best fits your plan, check directly for current service details.
What are alternatives to Oslo Street Food in Oslo?
For other Oslo dining plans, consider Arakataka, Koie Ramen, Rugantino Oslo, Bon Lio, or Bistro Fourrage. The better choice depends on whether you want Oslo Street Food's casual positioning or a different Oslo option.
Can I eat at the bar at Oslo Street Food?
Bar seating details are not verified here. Check directly with Oslo Street Food for current seating arrangements before planning around a bar seat or a specific setup.
Location
Torggata 16b, 0181 Oslo, Norway
Compare Oslo Street Food
| Venue | Location | Cuisine | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Oslo Street Food | Oslo | , | , |
| Arakataka | Oslo | Nordic, Norwegian | €€ |
| Koie Ramen | Oslo | Ramen | , |
| Rugantino Oslo | Oslo | , | , |
| Bistro Fourrage | Oslo | , | , |
| Bon Lio | Oslo | Modern Cuisine | €€€ |
How Oslo Street Food compares with similar nearby venues.
Where to go if this is not the right fit
Pick Arakataka if the group wants Nordic and Norwegian cooking in a more restaurant-led setting. Pick Koie Ramen if a focused ramen meal is the point.
How Oslo Street Food compares in Oslo
Oslo Street Food is the easiest choice when flexibility beats formality. Compared with Arakataka, which is the stronger pick for Nordic and Norwegian cooking at €€, Oslo Street Food is better for mixed tastes, looser timing, groups that do not want one fixed restaurant mood.
Koie Ramen is the clearer call when the craving is ramen specifically; Oslo Street Food works better when nobody agrees on one direction. Rugantino Oslo and Bistro Fourrage make more sense for a seated meal where ambiance and pacing matter.
For a higher-spend dinner, Bon Lio is the splurge-leaning alternative in this set, with modern cuisine at €€€. Oslo Street Food is the value-and-convenience play: easier to fit into the day, less ceremonial, better for groups than for a serious occasion.
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