Sweden Road Map

Plan your driving adventure through Sweden

Driving in Sweden

Major Highways

E4: Main north-south highway along the east coast from Helsingborg to Haparanda (1,590 km). E6: West coast from Malmö to Norway. E45: Interior route from Gothenburg to Finnish border.

Speed Limits

Motorways: 110-120 km/h. Rural roads: 70-90 km/h. Urban areas: 30-50 km/h. Speed cameras are common and fines are steep.

Toll Roads

Sweden has toll bridges (Öresund Bridge, Svinesund Bridge) and congestion charges in Stockholm and Gothenburg. Most are automated with camera detection.

Winter Driving

Winter tires are mandatory December 1 to March 31 when conditions require. Studded tires allowed October 1 to April 15. Headlights required 24/7.

Sweden Road Map Guide

Swedish Road Network

Sweden has an excellent road network with over 98,000 km of public roads. The motorway (motorväg) system connects major cities, while riksvägar (national roads) and länsvägar (county roads) provide access to smaller towns and rural areas.

Popular Driving Routes

The Coastal Route (E4): Sweden's main highway runs along the east coast, passing through Stockholm, Uppsala, Sundsvall, and Umeå. Inlandsvägen (Route 45/E45): A scenic alternative through Sweden's interior forests and mountains. Kungsleden by Car: While the hiking trail isn't drivable, roads parallel much of it through Swedish Lapland.

Road Trip Tips

Sweden is a large country - it's 1,600 km from Malmö to Kiruna. Plan for rest stops at the numerous service areas. Fuel stations are plentiful in the south but can be sparse in northern Sweden, so fill up when you can. Many stations are unmanned and require card payment.

International Connections

Sweden connects to Denmark via the Öresund Bridge (toll applies), to Norway at multiple border crossings (E6, E18, E14, E10, E45), and to Finland via the Haparanda-Tornio crossing or car ferries.