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Nærøyfjord electric ferry 2026: 90 minutes from Flåm to Gudvangen on Future of the Fjords

The Fjords DA runs the all-electric catamaran through the narrowest UNESCO fjord in Europe. 17 km, 400 passengers, 665 NOK. Here is the booking reality and where to stand on deck.

The all-electric Future of the Fjords runs Flåm to Gudvangen in roughly 90 minutes. 17 km of UNESCO fjord narrowing to 250 meters at Bakka. 665 NOK one-way in 2026. Operator is The Fjords DA, booked at norwaysbest.com.

Ingrid Solheim
11 min lesetid
naeroyfjordelectric ferryflamgudvangensognefjordvestlandetunescofjord crossing
Future of the Fjords all-electric catamaran arriving at Gudvangen on Nærøyfjord, Norway
Future of the Fjords all-electric catamaran arriving at Gudvangen on Nærøyfjord, Norway

Eleven years of routing tourists through Vestlandet, and the question I still get asked most is which ferry to take for Nærøyfjord. The honest answer is the Flåm to Gudvangen crossing on Future of the Fjords, run by The Fjords DA under the Norway's Best booking brand. It is 90 minutes on an all-electric 400-passenger catamaran through the narrowest UNESCO fjord in Europe. The booking confirmation leaves out most of the useful information. Here is the reality.

Nærøyfjord at its narrowest near Bakka. 250-meter-wide channel with walls rising to 1,400 meters.
Nærøyfjord near Bakka, the narrowest point of the fjord at 250 meters. The walls on either side rise to 1,400 meters. Photo: NorgeTravel

The operator and the booking

The ferry is operated by The Fjords DA (thefjords.no), sold to travellers through the Norway's Best booking platform at norwaysbest.com. It is not Norled. Norled runs car ferries on the Sognefjord main arm (Mannheller to Fodnes, Lavik to Oppedal) but is not the operator on the Nærøyfjord sightseeing route. If you search for your Nærøyfjord ticket on norled.no, you will not find it.

Book through norwaysbest.com, thefjords.no, or as part of a Fjord Tours Norway in a Nutshell package. If you are doing the packaged route Bergen to Myrdal to Flåm to Gudvangen to Voss, the ferry leg is included.

What the route covers

The ferry departs from Flåm harbour, with the terminal directly beside the Flåm Railway station. The route runs south into Aurlandsfjord before turning west into Nærøyfjord, which was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site on 14 July 2005 alongside Geirangerfjord.

Nærøyfjord is 17 km long. At Bakka, roughly midway along the fjord, it narrows to 250 meters. The walls on both sides rise to 1,400 meters. From the open deck, looking straight up, you see a strip of sky about the width of a motorway. The narrows are not a gradual transition. The fjord steps in, opens slightly, and steps in again.

Future of the Fjords entered service in 2018. It is fully electric. In a fjord this narrow, the absence of engine noise is audible in a way that a diesel ferry prevents. You hear the waterfalls before you see them. The ferry also operates Vision of the Fjords (hybrid) and Legacy of the Fjords on the route. All three are catamarans with 400-passenger capacity and full-length open observation decks.

Nærøyfjord overview. The 17 km UNESCO fjord narrowing to 250 meters at Bakka, photographed from above.
Nærøyfjord from above. The route from Flåm narrows to 250 meters at Bakka before opening into Gudvangen at the far end. Photo: NorgeTravel

What works

  • The electric motor. The absence of engine noise lets you hear the waterfalls from several hundred meters away. Nærøyfjord has more than a dozen named waterfalls visible from the water. On a diesel ferry, you see them. On Future of the Fjords, you hear them too.
  • The open deck. The full-length observation deck runs bow to stern. The interior lounge is heated. You want the deck, even in September. Bring a windproof layer.
  • The narrowing at Bakka. The midpoint of the route is where the geometry tightens most. Move to the bow for the approach. The walls close in from both sides within ten minutes of deck time.
  • The Flåm to Gudvangen direction. The morning light is behind you, which keeps the western wall lit for photography. The reverse direction is better in the afternoon.

What does not work

  • Booking at the dock. In July and August, ferries sell out by mid-morning for the day. Book online at least 48 hours ahead through norwaysbest.com. Do not show up and expect a seat.
  • Expecting wildlife. Harbour porpoise and white-tailed sea eagle are occasionally visible. Neither is reliable. Plan for fjord walls, not wildlife encounters.
  • The Gudvangen arrival without onward transport. Gudvangen is a small village with limited services. If you are not on a Norway in a Nutshell package with a connecting bus, check your onward transport before you leave Flåm. The Rv13 over Stalheimskleiva is a major road but not walkable, and taxis are not on standby.

Practical information (2026)

  • Operator: The Fjords DA. Booking via norwaysbest.com, thefjords.no, or Fjord Tours.
  • Vessels: Future of the Fjords (all-electric, 2018), Vision of the Fjords (hybrid), Legacy of the Fjords
  • Capacity: 400 passengers per vessel
  • Price: 665 NOK per adult, one-way (2026)
  • Duration: Approximately 90 minutes Flåm to Gudvangen
  • Frequency (summer): Multiple daily departures from Flåm
  • Season: Year-round, reduced winter schedule (typically 2 daily round trips November to March), weather cancellations possible
  • Accessibility: Wheelchair accessible on main deck
  • Fjord length: 17 km
  • Narrowest point: 250 m at Bakka
  • Maximum wall height: 1,400 m

The Flåm to Gudvangen crossing is the correct choice for Nærøyfjord. Future of the Fjords made it a genuinely different experience from the diesel era, and the 2005 UNESCO listing is the reason this particular branch of Sognefjord is worth the logistics of getting there. Book ahead. Take the deck. Stand at the bow through Bakka.