Tucked away in a chic 20th-century residence, Ett Hem offers an intimate boutique experience with stylish rooms, an inviting kitchen, and a serene garden oasis.
"A unique hotel that feels like a home, offering an intimate and comfortable experience, making it difficult for guests to leave." - The MICHELIN Guide Nordic Editorial Team
"Since taking over two neighboring townhouses in 2022, the world's most intimate luxury hotel, in my opinion, has grown up without sacrificing its philosophy of making guests feel truly at home. With the expansion, owner Jeanette Mix’s vision now feels complete. A former parking lot has been transformed into a lush English garden that connects the buildings. An eat-in kitchen serves top-class tasting menus. Plus there’s an in-house sourdough bakery, a wood paneled gym, and more social spaces packed with modern art and Scandinavian design classics. The upgraded Ett Hem is not just a great starting point for experiencing Stockholm. It's a destination in its own right. From $545. —Viola Gad" - CNT Editors
"Set inside the Ett Hem hotel — which translates to “a home,” giving you a hint about the exclusive boutique hotel’s cozy ambitions — this rustic yet upscale, country-style kitchen aims to erase the line between chefs and guests. Ask for a seat in the kitchen so you can watch the chefs at work. The daily menu features vegetables and herbs from the kitchen garden and seasonal produce from a network of artisanal farmers." - Per Styregård
"Feels like staying in someone's home, with a lobby like a living room designed by Elsa Crawford." - Kevin Chau
"Even if Ett Hem’s aesthetic isn’t strictly homegrown — designer Ilse Crawford is London-born, to a Danish mother — the fact is, it’s probably the finest example anywhere of the current tendency in Scandinavian boutique hotel design: away from the kind of modernism that’s synonymous with “Scandinavian” design and toward something much warmer, a luxe, stylish sort of coziness, and an eclectic approach which makes use of mid-century modernism as just one element among many historical references." - Mark Fedeli