First Hotels have two hotels centrally located in Stockholm - First Hotel Amaranten and First Hotel Reisen, and one hotel in Älvsjö - First Hotel Royal Star.

  • First Hotel Amaranten

    First Hotel Amaranten is a modern hotel located in downtown Stockholm. The hotel restaurant serves prime international cuisine and offers a wide selection of wines. Amenities include a fitness studio and wellness spa complete with sauna and indoor pool. Adjacent conference- and banquet facilities in addition to those at the hotel seat up to 320 participants.

  • First Hotel Reisen

    First Hotel Reisen is a first class hotel in the heart of palatial Stockholm close to the Royal Palace. The hotel is celebrated for its high standards in service and its accomplished marriage of classical interiors and modern design. Several rooms offer harbour views while others feature private saunas, Jacuzzis and balconies. The hotel has an exquisite restaurant and a wellness spa in addition to conference and banquet facilities.

  • First Hotel Royal Star

    First Hotel Royal Star is located adjacent to the Stockholm International Fairs within easy reach of the city’s downtown attractions. The bright and airy hotel features spacious, well-appointed rooms, a restaurant and a conference room seating up to 100 participants in addition to a break-out room seating 15. Hotel amenities include a sauna, a tanning parlour and one of Stockholm’s largest hotel fitness centres, which is open 24-7. The hotel also offers ample parking.

Whether your passion is art, music, fashion, design, food, shopping, nightlife or big-city trends, Stockholm has plenty to offer even the most discerning globetrotter.  Stockholm is an open, clean and welcoming city where you can walk between the various sights and destinations, enjoying pleasant “bonus” experiences along the way. If you’re interested in urban trends, Stockholm has two main districts to visit. The first is the area comprising the vibrant city centre, the entertainment hub of Stureplan, and the exclusive Östermalm district. Here you find most of the large department stores, international brands, luxury shops, museums, galleries, nightclubs and gourmet restaurants. The second is the Södermalm neighbourhood and the area around Götgatan and “SoFo” (South of Folkungagatan), with its diverse blend of youthful, trendy, creative and often more bohemian fashion and design stores, plus a wealth of restaurants, bars, cafés, markets and galleries. Two other areas with their own distinctive style that will appeal to cosmopolitan visitors are Vasastan and Kungsholmen. More than anything else, Stockholm’s character and atmosphere are products of its unique, naturally magnificent location. The city is built on 14 islands where Lake Mälaren flows out into the Baltic Sea and the Stockholm Archipelago – a unique maritime landscape of more than 30,000 islands. In the centre are Gamla Stan (the Old Town) and Riddarholmen, two islands that together make up northern Europe’s largest and best-preserved medieval city, with a history dating back to the 13th century. Gamla Stan is home to the Royal Palace, several beautiful churches, narrow, picturesque streets and an abundance of shops, restaurants and cafés. The districts of Norrmalm, Södermalm and Kungsholmen abound with buildings from the 18th to the early 20th centuries, and further out are the more modern fringes and suburbs. The annual rings of the city are easy to identify, but throughout Stockholm the new blends with the historical, the original and the sophi sticated, creating textures of great character and charm.

Stockholm is one of the world’s ten most popular convention cities, and is also much in demand for business meetings, incentive travel and events. The main attraction is the city itself, but Stockholm also has a rock-solid reputation for organisation, efficiency, security, accessibility and hospitality, making it ideal for international meeting and conference organisers.