Stockholm
Helsinki
Tallinn
Northern Europe · Multi-city itinerary
Nordic–Baltic itinerary — February 2027
By Tripsapien Research · Updated May 20, 2026
February 2027 is a shoulder-season time for the Nordic–Baltic trip (Stockholm, Helsinki & Tallinn). Daytime highs run from about -1°C / 30°F to 1°C / 34°F across the stops. Plan around 7–9 days for the full Stockholm, Helsinki & Tallinn loop. Tripsapien checks every place on your list against your exact dates — hours, closures and booking pressure at each stop.
The route
About 7–9 days · 3 cities
The Baltic Sea capitals, linked by ferry: Stockholm spread across fourteen islands, Helsinki with its design district and harbour saunas, and the medieval old town of Tallinn. An overnight boat connects Stockholm to Helsinki, and Helsinki to Tallinn is about two hours across the gulf.
Stockholm
Stockholm in February
Temperature
34°F / 23°F
1.3°C / -5.1°C
Precipitation
6d
1.2in · 30mm
Daylight
8.9h
Sea
31.5°F
-0.3°C
February stays wintry and brightens slowly, with icy sidewalks around Gamla Stan and Djurgarden.
February stays wintry and brightens slowly, with icy sidewalks around Gamla Stan and Djurgarden.
City overview
Stockholm is the Swedish capital spread over 14 islands where Lake Malaren meets the Baltic, so bridges, ferries, metro art, and waterfront walks are part of the city rather than side trips. Gamla Stan, Norrmalm, Sodermalm, Ostermalm, Djurgarden, and Vasastan give the city its range from medieval lanes to design shops, museums, food halls, and long Nordic light.
Food & drink
Stockholm food is fika, seafood, and husmanskost: meatballs come with lingonberries and potatoes, gravlax cures salmon with dill, pickled herring anchors smorgasbord tables, toast Skagen piles shrimp salad onto toast, and Jansson's temptation bakes potatoes with sprats or anchovy-style fish. Ostermalms Saluhall, Hotorgshallen, Sodermalm bakeries, Gamla Stan cellars, and waterfront Djurgarden cafes add cardamom buns, princess cake, and strong coffee for fika.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Stockholm City Hall
- 2Vasa Museum
- 3Royal Palace
- 4Skansen
- 5ABBA The Museum
- 6Stockholm Public Library
- 7Fotografiska
- 8Moderna Museet
- 9Nobel Prize Museum
- 10Gamla Stan
1Stockholm City Hall
4.7★ · 4,054outdoorOpen dailyRagnar Ostberg built City Hall from 1911 to 1923 with a brick tower, Blue Hall, Golden Hall mosaics, and waterfront courtyards. Nobel Prize banquet ceremonies make it one of the city's most symbolic buildings.
Wikipedia
2Vasa Museum
4.8★ · 67,564indoorOpen dailyThe warship Vasa sank on its maiden voyage in 1628, was raised in 1961, and now fills a purpose-built museum that opened in 1990. The preserved ship, carved stern, recovery story, and maritime exhibits sit on Djurgarden.
WikipediaReserve extra time because the ship gallery is larger and darker than a normal museum visit.
3
Royal Palace
4.5★ · 44,175indoorOpen dailyThe present palace was built after the 1697 Tre Kronor fire and completed in the 18th century under Nicodemus Tessin the Younger's Baroque plan. State Apartments, the Treasury, Royal Armoury, and changing guards sit at the north edge of Gamla Stan.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4Skansen
- 5ABBA The Museum
- 6Stockholm Public Library
- 7Fotografiska
- 8Moderna Museet
- 9Nobel Prize Museum
- 10Gamla Stan
Neighborhoods
1Gamla Stan and Riddarholmen
The old town is tight and historic, with Stortorget, Royal Palace, churches, cellar restaurants, souvenir lanes, and waterfront edges.
2Norrmalm and City
Norrmalm is central and commercial, with Sergels torg, Stockholm Central, Drottninggatan, Kulturhuset, department stores, and quick transit links.
3
Sodermalm
Sodermalm is creative and hilly, with SoFo shops, Fotografiska, Monteliusvagen views, bars, vintage stores, and Slussen construction routes.
4Ostermalm
Ostermalm is refined and food-focused, with Strandvagen, Ostermalms Saluhall, design stores, embassies, and access toward Djurgarden.
5Djurgarden
Djurgarden is museum-heavy and green, with Vasa, Skansen, ABBA, Grona Lund, Nordiska museet, park paths, and ferry docks.
6Vasastan and Kungsholmen
These residential districts are calmer, with Odenplan, Stockholm Public Library, cafes, parks, City Hall, Norr Malarstrand, and local dinner spots.
Getting around
SL runs metro, commuter rail, trams, buses, and local ferries with contactless payment, app tickets, and travelcards. The metro is fastest across the city, while ferries and walking are often better for Gamla Stan, Djurgarden, Skeppsholmen, and waterfront routes.
Helsinki
Helsinki in February
Temperature
29°F / 19°F
-1.5°C / -7.1°C
Precipitation
9d
1.8in · 45mm
Daylight
8.8h
Aurora season
Sea
31.6°F
-0.2°C
February still has limited daylight near 9 hours, with frozen-shore walks and museum days safer than long island plans.
February still has limited daylight near 9 hours, with frozen-shore walks and museum days safer than long island plans.
City overview
Helsinki sits on the Gulf of Finland, with Kruununhaka, Katajanokka, Kamppi, Punavuori, Kallio, Eira, and Kalasatama organizing neoclassical squares, ferries, design shops, saunas, rock churches, islands, and tram routes. Senate Square, Market Square, Suomenlinna, Töölönlahti, and the Esplanadi keep the trip anchored between Baltic water, Finnish design, and compact public transit.
Food & drink
Helsinki food is market-hall and coffee-break driven: salmon soup folds fish, potato, dill, and cream into a cold-weather bowl, karjalanpiirakka is a rye pastry filled with rice porridge and egg butter, ruisleipa anchors open sandwiches, and korvapuusti is the Finnish cinnamon bun. Old Market Hall, Hakaniemi Market Hall, Hietalahti Market Hall, Kallio, Punavuori, and the Esplanadi cafe route add salmiakki, fried vendace, reindeer dishes, cloudberry desserts, and coffee stops.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Suomenlinna Sea Fortress
- 2Helsinki Cathedral and Senate Square
- 3Oodi Central Library and Töölönlahti
- 4Uspenski Cathedral
- 5Ateneum Art Museum
- 6Market Square and Old Market Hall
- 7Temppeliaukio Church
- 8Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art
- 9Löyly and Allas Sea Pool
- 10Design Museum and Design District
1Suomenlinna Sea Fortress
4.6★ · 26,779outdoorSweden began building the island fortress in 1748, and the UNESCO site now holds walls, tunnels, museums, dry docks, cafes, and residential lanes. HSL ferries run from Market Square in about 15-20 minutes.
Use the public ferry ticket and check winter museum hours before planning a full island day.
2Helsinki Cathedral and Senate Square
4.5★ · 21,448outdoorOpen dailyCarl Ludvig Engel designed the neoclassical square after Helsinki became Finland's capital, and the Lutheran cathedral was completed in 1852 above the steps. The square sits in Kruununhaka near the university, tram stops, and the National Library.
3Oodi Central Library and Töölönlahti
4.8★ · 5,177indoorOpen dailyALA Architects completed Oodi in 2018 with reading rooms, studios, terraces, maker spaces, and civic rooms opposite Parliament. Töölönlahti, Finlandia Hall, Kiasma, and the Music Centre sit around the same walk.
Show 7 more sights
- 4Uspenski Cathedral
- 5Ateneum Art Museum
- 6Market Square and Old Market Hall
- 7Temppeliaukio Church
- 8Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art
- 9Löyly and Allas Sea Pool
- 10Design Museum and Design District
Neighborhoods
1Kruununhaka and Katajanokka
Kruununhaka and Katajanokka feel formal and maritime, with Senate Square, Helsinki Cathedral, Uspenski Cathedral, Market Square, ferries, Art Nouveau blocks, and harbor views.
2Kamppi and Töölö
Kamppi and Töölö are transit-and-museum heavy, with Helsinki Central Station, Kamppi Chapel, Oodi, Kiasma, Temppeliaukio Church, Finlandia Hall, and Töölönlahti.
3Punavuori and Design District
Punavuori is design-led and compact, with the Design Museum, Fredrikinkatu shops, galleries, coffee bars, small restaurants, and routes toward Eira.
4Kallio and Hakaniemi
Kallio and Hakaniemi are social and local, with market halls, bars, Kotiharju Sauna, tram lines, student streets, and easy metro access.
5Eira and Ullanlinna
Eira and Ullanlinna are coastal and residential, with embassies, Jugendstil villas, Kaivopuisto, seaside walks, cafes, and summer picnic spots.
6Kalasatama and Kruunuvuorenranta
Kalasatama and Kruunuvuorenranta show newer waterfront Helsinki, with metro towers, Redi, harbor paths, bridges, sea views, and routes toward eastern islands.
Getting around
HSL runs trams, metro, buses, commuter trains, and the Suomenlinna ferry with zone tickets through the HSL app, ticket machines, and contactless options. Walk the central peninsula, use trams for Töölö and Eira, metro for Kallio and Kalasatama, and trains for the airport or Espoo links.
Tallinn
Tallinn in February
Temperature
30°F / 21°F
-1°C / -6.2°C
Precipitation
10d
1.4in · 35mm
Daylight
8.9h
Sea
35.8°F
2.1°C
February is the coldest month, with better odds for snow photos around Raekoja plats than long Pirita beach walks.
February is the coldest month, with better odds for snow photos around Raekoja plats than long Pirita beach walks.
City overview
Tallinn sits on the Gulf of Finland, where the UNESCO Vanalinn rises above ferry terminals, Soviet-era waterfront remnants, and newer glass towers in Kesklinn. First-time visitors usually split time between Toompea and the Lower Town, Kalamaja and Telliskivi north of the railway, and Kadriorg or Pirita along the eastern coast.
Food & drink
Tallinn food is Baltic and Nordic-Estonian: black rye bread anchors meals, kiluvoileib layers sprats on bread with egg or herbs, mulgipuder mixes potato and barley, kama blends roasted grains into yogurt or kefir, and verivorst is blood sausage for colder months. Balti Jaama Turg beside the railway station, Old Town cellars around Raekoja plats, and Telliskivi restaurants make it easy to compare smoked fish, kohuke, traditional plates, and newer Nordic-Baltic cooking.
Top sights
Ranked for February suitability using weather, setting, ratings, and review volume.
- 1Tallinn Town Hall and Town Hall Square
- 2Viru Gate and City Wall
- 3Toompea Castle
- 4Seaplane Harbour
- 5Kumu Art Museum
- 6Alexander Nevsky Cathedral
- 7St Olaf Church
- 8Kiek in de Kok and the Bastion Passages
- 9Kadriorg Palace
- 10Telliskivi Creative City
1Tallinn Town Hall and Town Hall Square
4.7★ · 10,605outdoorTallinn Town Hall is the only surviving Gothic town hall in Northern Europe, with its present form from the early 15th century. Raekoja plats remains the Lower Town market square and the winter Christmas-market anchor.
2Viru Gate and City Wall
4.7★ · 11,914outdoorOpen dailyThe paired Viru Gate towers mark the eastern entrance into the Old Town from modern shopping streets. Wall sections, towers, and lanes nearby make the medieval city plan legible in a short walk.
3Toompea Castle
4.6★ · 818outdoorToompea Castle grew from the medieval fortress on the limestone hill and now holds the Riigikogu, Estonia parliament, behind its pink Baroque facade. It sits above the Lower Town, a few minutes from Alexander Nevsky Cathedral and the Patkuli viewpoint.
Wikipedia
Show 7 more sights
- 4Seaplane Harbour
- 5Kumu Art Museum
- 6Alexander Nevsky Cathedral
- 7St Olaf Church
- 8Kiek in de Kok and the Bastion Passages
- 9Kadriorg Palace
- 10Telliskivi Creative City
Neighborhoods
1Vanalinn and Lower Town
The Lower Town is compact and medieval, with Raekoja plats, Viru Gate, St Olaf Church, guild houses, and cobbled lanes inside the old walls.
2Toompea
Toompea feels ceremonial and elevated, with the castle, Alexander Nevsky Cathedral, St Mary Cathedral, and Patkuli and Kohtuotsa viewpoints above the red roofs.
3
Rotermann and Kesklinn
Rotermann and central Kesklinn mix brick warehouses, malls, hotels, offices, Viru Keskus, and the practical route between Old Town and the port.
4Kalamaja and Telliskivi
Kalamaja is the wooden-house and creative district, anchored by Telliskivi, Balti Jaam Market, Seaplane Harbour, and Patarei prison walls.
5
Kadriorg
Kadriorg is leafy and museum-focused, with Kadriorg Palace, Kumu, the presidential palace, Japanese Garden, and tram links back to the center.
6Pirita
Pirita is the seaside and forest edge, with Pirita Beach, the convent ruins, the TV Tower, botanical gardens, and yachting history from the 1980 Olympics.
Getting around
Tallinn old town is best on foot, while trams, trolleybuses, buses, and the Uhiskaart fare card cover Kadriorg, Pirita, Kalamaja, and the airport. Tram 4 links the airport with the center, and ferries leave from terminals just east of the Old Town.
Best time to do the Nordic–Baltic trip
In February, the Nordic–Baltic trip runs daytime highs from -1°C / 30°F to 1°C / 34°F, with nights down to about -7°C / 19°F at the coolest stop. It is one of the wetter months, with up to 10 rainy days at the wettest stop. Weighed across all 3 stops, February is a shoulder-season time to travel.
The most comfortable months across Stockholm, Helsinki & Tallinn are July, June and August, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at every stop. February 2027 is a quieter shoulder season to go.
Check this route against your dates
Tripsapien starts with the sights on this page or places you paste, then checks hours, closures, booking pressure and neighborhoods for your exact February dates — across every city on the Nordic–Baltic trip.
Plan this Nordic–Baltic tripCommon questions about the Nordic–Baltic trip
- When is the best time to do the Nordic–Baltic trip?
- The most comfortable months across Stockholm, Helsinki, Tallinn are July, June and August, based on average daytime temperatures and rainfall at each stop. February is a shoulder-season time — see the per-stop weather below for the exact picture in February 2027.
- How many days do you need for the Nordic–Baltic trip?
- A comfortable Nordic–Baltic trip runs about 7–9 days, allowing roughly Stockholm 3, Helsinki 2, Tallinn 2 nights plus travel between stops. Add a day if you want a slower pace or extra day trips.
- What's the route for the Nordic–Baltic trip?
- The classic order is Stockholm, Helsinki & Tallinn. Each city below has its own February weather, events and top-sights list.
- Will the sights be open during my February Nordic–Baltic trip?
- Opening days and hours vary by weekday, season and public holiday, and they differ from city to city on a multi-stop trip. Paste your Nordic–Baltic list into Tripsapien and it checks every place in Stockholm, Helsinki, Tallinn against your exact dates, flagging closures and what needs booking ahead before you go.