Gotland, Sweden’s largest island, sits in the Baltic Sea and feels like a world of its own. Its main town, Visby, is a UNESCO World Heritage site and one of the best-preserved medieval towns in Northern Europe. Surrounded by a 3.5-kilometer stone wall with original towers still intact, Visby once served as a key Hanseatic trading hub. Visitors can walk along cobbled streets lined with rose-covered cottages, explore Gothic church ruins, and climb up the city wall for views over the harbor. Each August, Visby hosts Medieval Week, where locals and visitors dress in period clothing, reenact tournaments, and attend outdoor plays and markets.
The landscape of Gotland shifts from limestone cliffs to flat meadows, windswept beaches, and ancient forests. One of the island’s most unusual natural features is its sea stacks, called “raukar.” These stone pillars were carved by the sea during the Ice Age and now stand like sculptures along the coast, especially around places like Fårö and Langhammars. Fårö, just north of Gotland, was the home of Swedish filmmaker Ingmar Bergman, who used the island’s stark beauty as a backdrop for many of his films. His house has since been turned into a center for film study and cultural events, and the island remains quiet and largely untouched.
Gotland’s local traditions are deeply tied to the land and sea. Many farms offer self-service stands where visitors can pick up eggs, potatoes, honey, and seasonal berries by leaving coins in a tin box. In summer, pop-up cafés serve saffron pancakes with dewberry jam, a local specialty that’s often hard to find elsewhere in Sweden. Freshly caught flounder, smoked lamb, and locally brewed beer from small craft producers are also easy to find across the island. In autumn, truffle season draws chefs and food travelers to the forests near Hablingbo, where Gotland’s native black truffles grow wild beneath the soil.