U 180 This runestone is possibly in
style Pr4 and it is located at the church of Össeby-Garn. It was made by the
runemaster Visäte. The stone commemorates a man who either died in
Viborg,
Jutland, or in
Vyborg,
Karelia. Part of the inscription's text "he died in Véborg" is written on the design's cross, which may have indicated to those at home that Sigsteinn, while dying abroad, had received proper Christian burial treatment.
U 214 This runestone from c. 1100 is in the
style RAK. It is in the wall of the porch of the church of Vallentuna. The U 215 contains the first part of the message. The stones were carved in memory of a man who drowned in Holmr's sea, but runologists are divided on the meaning of the expression. One interpretation proposed by Jansson is that it means the "Novgorodian sea" and refers to the
Gulf of Finland. The runestone provides the earliest Swedish attestation of an
end rhyme, Swedish translation: : ""
U 346 This runestone has disappeared but it was located at the church of Frösunda. It was made by the
runemaster Åsmund Kåresson in
style Pr3-Pr4, and it was raised in memory of a man who died in
Virland. It contains the same message as
U 356.
U 356 This runestone in
style Pr3 is located in Ängby. It was made by the
runemaster Åsmund Kåresson for a lady in memory of her son who died in
Virland. It contains the same message as
U 346.
U 439 , before the stone disappeared.This runestone in
style Fp is one of the
Ingvar Runestones and due to uncertainties as to the decipherment also one of the
Serkland Runestones. It was located at
Steninge Palace, but it is lost.
Johan Bureus, one of the first prominent Swedish runologists, visited Steninge on May 8, 1595, and made a drawing of the runestone which stood by the jetty. Only 50 years later it had disappeared and in a letter written in 1645 it was explained that the stone had been used in the construction of a new stone jetty.
U 533 This runestone is in the wall inside the porch of the
church of Roslags-Bro. It is in
style Pr1, and it was raised in memory of a man who died in
Virland (in
Estonia). The style shows that it was made by the
runemaster Torbjörn Skald.
U 582 This runestone has disappeared but it was located at the church of
Söderby-Karl. It was possibly in
style Pr1 and it commemorated a son who died in what is called
Finland. At this time,
Finland referred to the south-western part of what today is
Finland.
U 698 This runestone has disappeared but it was located at the church of Veckholm. It was in
style Pr2-Pr3. The inscription was considered difficult to read, but it refers to a man who fell in
Livonia, and possibly in an expedition led by
Freygeirr. {{fs interlinear |lang=non |spacing=0.5 |class1=bold |number=P ==Södermanland==