Work in Europe
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Norway · Norge Northern Europe · Non-EU · Schengen · NO

Working in Norway

The oil-rich northern overachiever where fjords, fisheries, shipping, and tidy public systems all somehow coexist with eye-watering prices. Think offshore energy, seafood, electric cars, and winter darkness with excellent payroll compliance.

Last reviewed

2026-05-07

Official sources checked

16

Maintained by

Alex Duggleby

Permit routes
6
Official sources
16
Applicant scenarios
4 of 7
Typical processing
4–8 weeks for a complete EEA application; longer for third-country nationals or complex cases

01

Overview

Norway's non-EU work system is centered on UDI residence permits rather than one single umbrella visa. The main route is the skilled-worker permit for people with a concrete Norwegian offer, while narrower alternatives cover self-employed specialists, seasonal workers, researchers funded outside a Norwegian employment contract, and a limited in-country job-seeker bridge for recent Norway graduates and certain researchers. 1Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Work immigration2Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Skilled workers3Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Seasonal workers4Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Job seekers5Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Vocational training and research

Maintenance figures for job-seeker and researcher-with-own-funds permits are indexed to support levels UDI updates over time, so the quoted NOK amounts should be re-checked on the live UDI pages at filing time. 4Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Job seekers5Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) — Want to apply: Vocational training and research

02

Permit routes

6 routes currently recognised

Skilled worker with an employer in Norway

★ PEOPLE WITH A CONCRETE NORWEGIAN OFFER THAT REQUIRES HIGHER EDUCATION, VOCATIONAL TRAINING, OR ACCEPTED SPECIAL QUALIFICATIONS

This is Norway's main long-stay work route. You need a specific Norwegian employer, a role that actually requires skilled-worker qualifications, pay and conditions that are not poorer than normal in Norway, and route-fitting education, vocational training, or documented special qualifications.

Min salary
No single nationwide salary threshold is published for the standard route; pay and conditions must not be poorer than normal in Norway.
Timeline
Permit length depends on the role: up to three years at a time for many university-level jobs, but only up to one year at a time for vocational roles or cases UDI wants to re-check more often.

Self-employed person with a company in Norway

★ SKILLED SPECIALISTS WHO NEED TO LIVE IN NORWAY TO RUN THEIR OWN SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP THERE

Norway allows a narrow skilled-worker variant for self-employed people running their own Norwegian sole proprietorship. The business must require your qualifications, normally be a sole proprietorship rather than a limited company, and be likely to generate at least the published profit floor.

Min salary
Expected business income of at least NOK 325,400 per year pre-tax.
Timeline
Granted for one year at a time and can count toward permanent residence after three years if the route remains valid.

Self-employed person with a company abroad

★ INDEPENDENT SPECIALISTS WITH AN ESTABLISHED FOREIGN BUSINESS AND A CONTRACT FOR ONE SPECIFIC NORWEGIAN CLIENT

This route is for self-employed people who remain based in a foreign business but come to Norway to perform a defined assignment. UDI expects an established business abroad, a contract for a Norwegian enterprise with a registered address, and pay that is not poorer than normal in Norway.

Min salary
No single fixed salary floor is published; remuneration must not be poorer than normal in Norway.
Timeline
Can be granted for up to two years at a time, for a maximum of six years, and does not count toward permanent residence.

Seasonal Worker Permit

★ TEMPORARY FULL-TIME WORK TIED TO A SEASON OR HOLIDAY STAND-IN NEED

Seasonal permits are limited to genuine seasonal work or holiday stand-in roles, with full-time offers and normal Norwegian pay conditions. Outside agriculture and forestry, the employer must also get NAV confirmation that it could not recruit enough workers from Norway or the EEA.

Min salary
No fixed national seasonal salary is published, but the worker must be guaranteed at least the applicable minimum hourly wage and normal Norwegian conditions.
Timeline
You cannot stay in Norway as a seasonal worker for more than six months out of twelve months, and a full six-month stay triggers a six-month period outside Norway before another seasonal permit.

Researcher with own funds

★ RESEARCHERS WITH AT LEAST A MASTER'S DEGREE WHO WILL CONDUCT RESEARCH IN NORWAY WITHOUT A NORWEGIAN EMPLOYER

This permit is for researchers hosted by a Norwegian university, university college, institute, or similar body when the funding does not come through a Norwegian employment contract. The applicant must show a master's-level profile, enough funds for the academic year, and housing in Norway.

Min salary
At least NOK 15,169 per month or NOK 166,859 per academic year, based on the 2025/2026 support level UDI cites.
Timeline
UDI presents this as a temporary route tied to the research stay and separately allows only part-time work up to 20 hours per week in addition to the research activity.

Job seeker after Norwegian studies or research

★ PEOPLE ALREADY IN NORWAY WHO RECENTLY COMPLETED ELIGIBLE STUDIES THERE OR HELD THE LISTED RESEARCHER PERMITS

This is a bridge permit for people already in Norway, not a general first-entry search visa. You must apply before the current permit expires, fit one of UDI's listed student or researcher backgrounds, and show funds for the period you want while searching for skilled work.

Min salary
Maintenance funds of at least NOK 27,116 per month or NOK 325,400 per year, with a lower NOK 81,350 figure for certain former PhD candidates.
Timeline
Can be granted for a maximum of one year and does not count toward permanent residence.

03

Eligibility (common baseline)

04

Documents checklist

Passport and core identity records

UDI's work routes all start with the standard application package, so expect to prove identity and lawful filing status before the permit-specific evidence is assessed.

Employment contract or concrete job offer

Employer-backed routes need a specific Norwegian offer, and Norwegian labour rules separately require a written employment contract for all employees.

UDI job or assignment confirmation code

If you apply on your own from abroad for the covered work routes, the employer or client usually has to confirm the job or assignment offer with UDI first and send you the four-word code for the application form.

Qualification evidence and, if needed, professional recognition

UDI expects diplomas, vocational credentials, or detailed work certificates, and regulated professions need the relevant Norwegian recognition or authorisation before the permit can be approved.

Business or assignment documents for self-employed routes

Self-employed applicants need evidence of the business structure, the Norwegian client or sole proprietorship setup, and any public permits the business activity requires.

Funds and housing evidence for researcher or job-seeker cases

Researcher-with-own-funds and job-seeker filings need proof of maintenance funds, and researcher-with-own-funds applicants must also show somewhere to live in Norway.

05

Application steps

1

Choose the exact UDI route before preparing paperwork

2

Confirm where the first filing must happen

Most people applying from abroad use the embassy or another external submission channel, but some qualified skilled workers with legal stay in Norway can file with the police in Norway and remain there while the application is pending.

3

Get the employer or client confirmation in place if you apply from abroad

For the affected work routes, the employer or client must first send UDI the confirmation of the job or assignment offer, then pass the four-word code to the applicant for the online form.

4

Assemble route-specific evidence

Build the file around the job contract or assignment terms, qualification proof, any regulated-profession approval, and route-only evidence such as NAV seasonal confirmation, business documents, or maintenance funds for job-seeker and researcher cases.

5

Pay the fee and submit through the correct channel

Most adult work-permit applicants pay UDI's standard work-permit fee, while researcher-with-own-funds uses a lower fee category and some researchers entering Schengen for scientific research can request a refund at the embassy stage.

6

Follow Norwegian employment rules after approval

Once approved, keep the role, employer, and working conditions aligned with the permit terms, because Norway distinguishes between changing employer in the same type of position and moving into a new kind of job that needs a fresh permit.

06

Timelines & fees

Typical timeline

Fees

Residence permits for work for applicants over 18 NOK 6,300

UDI's standard adult work-permit fee, including renewals.

Group permit for employers NOK 6,300 per worker

Published on the same UDI fee table for employer-filed group permits.

Researcher with own funds permit NOK 5,400 for applicants over 18

UDI lists a separate fee row for this category.

07

Community tips

Anecdotal · Not verified · Treat with appropriate skepticism

Anecdotal — not official

No community tips logged for this country yet.

08

Warnings and uncertainty

Warning

Norway does not offer a broad first-entry job-search visa

The published job-seeker route is only for people already in Norway on the listed student or researcher permits. It should not be presented as a general overseas route for searching after arrival.

Warning

Standard skilled-worker pay is benchmarked, not fixed

UDI does not publish one universal salary floor for the ordinary skilled-worker route, so readers need to validate that the contract is normal for Norway and, where relevant, for the sector and role.

Warning

Experience-only qualification cases face a real evidence risk

UDI explicitly says many special-qualification applications are rejected, so applicants relying on work experience rather than formal education should expect a heavier documentation burden.

The English Immigration Act page on regjeringen.no is explicitly described as a non-continuously updated translation from 1 April 2014, so operational filing guidance should be taken from current UDI pages rather than that translation alone.

09

Immigration agencies

Vetted agencies for individuals and employers navigating work permits

Digital platforms for job seekers

Tech-first platforms and tools that digitise the visa process

www.jobbatical.com/countries-we-relocate-to/norway

AI-enabled immigration and relocation SaaS platform covering Norwegian UDI work permits, family permits, and settling-in coordination. HR teams get real-time case tracking, automated renewal alerts ahead of UDI deadlines, and HRIS integrations with Workday, BambooHR, and Greenhouse.

Why we list this agency: Tallinn-based immigration tech company with €11.6 million raised (September 2022). Maintains a dedicated Norway country page on jobbatical.com and publishes Norway employer permit guides updated through 2025–2026. Clients include N26, Pipedrive, and Personio. Rated 4.5+ on G2 with verified employer reviews.

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gonomadic.com

Short-term business travel compliance platform launched in Norway in September 2025. Delivers instant immigration assessments from a 170+ country database, manages Posted Worker Notifications, A1 Certificates, and business visa compliance for employees on short-term trips to Norway.

Why we list this agency: Fragomen expanded Nomadic to Denmark, Sweden, and Norway on 10 September 2025 (fragomen.com press release), citing the Nordic region's high volume of intra-European project work and short-term cross-border assignments. Fragomen is ranked Band 1 in Chambers Global immigration continuously since 2006.

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www.deel.com/hr-services/employee-immigration

Global HR platform with managed immigration support for Norway, offering 48-hour UDI eligibility assessments, in-app case tracking, document collection, and mobility specialists who handle the full permit process for employers hiring non-EU talent into Norway.

Why we list this agency: Deel publishes a dedicated Norway work permit guide on deel.com/blog (updated 2026 edition) and explicitly lists Norway in its immigration service coverage. Deel's in-house mobility team handles the entire Norwegian visa process from eligibility check to permit decision. Widely used by tech companies as a combined EOR and immigration solution for Norway.

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withelva.com

Nordic startup that digitises the entire international hire journey — work permits, appointment booking, housing coordination, local registrations, and bank setup — in one platform. Serves fast-growing European tech companies moving talent to Norway and other Nordic markets.

Why we list this agency: Founded by a Helsinki-based team and raised €1.3 million pre-seed from Lifeline Ventures (backers of Oura, Supercell, Wolt) with Slack co-founder Cal Henderson as angel investor. Coverage confirmed for Nordic markets. Reported by urbangeekz.com (March 2026) and pääomasijoittajat.fi (Finnish VC association).

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remote.com/blog/relocation/work-permits-visas-norway

Global EOR and HR platform that includes managed immigration support for Norwegian UDI permit applications. Remote's Mobility team handles the full visa process from work eligibility checks to documentation filing, and publishes a detailed Norway employer guide updated through 2025–2026.

Why we list this agency: Remote's Norway immigration blog explicitly states that Remote's Mobility team can handle the whole visa process for Norway. The platform integrates EOR, payroll, and immigration, making it a single-vendor solution. Published Norway employer guide covers the UDI skilled-worker route, seasonal permits, and salary requirements.

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www.topia.com

Enterprise global mobility SaaS platform covering immigration tracking, tax compliance, cost modelling, and destination guides for Norway. Topia Go includes Oslo as a covered city; the move management suite flags UDI immigration, tax, and labour law issues before they become problems.

Why we list this agency: Topia lists Norway in its Topia Go Cities coverage. Used by Global 2000 enterprises managing Nordic assignment programmes. Topia partnered with Jobbatical for immigration delivery (press release on jobbatical.com). In 2025 Topia launched Horizon, an agentic AI platform for global mobility with real-time compliance intelligence including Norway.

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Agencies for job seekers

Services that help individuals through the immigration process

selfservice.udi.no

Official UDI application portal where individual applicants register permit applications, pay fees, upload supporting documents, track case status, and book biometric appointments — the mandatory first step for all work routes.

Why we list this agency: Operated directly by the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI), the government authority responsible for all residence and work permit decisions in Norway. Using this portal is required by law for the standard application submission process.

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www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/work-immigration

Government-run online guide and wizard for individuals who want to work in Norway, covering job hunting, work-life information, permit routes, and links to the relevant official portals for each step.

Why we list this agency: A formal collaboration between five Norwegian government bodies: the Labour and Welfare Administration (NAV), the Norwegian Tax Administration, UDI, the Labour Inspection Authority, and the Police. Endorsed as the primary orientation resource for foreign job seekers by all five agencies.

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braekhus.no/en

Oslo law firm with a dedicated global mobility and immigration team covering skilled worker permits, self-employment routes, family reunification, and work permit compliance for both individual applicants and companies.

Why we list this agency: Recognised as a leading firm in Legal 500 EMEA and ranked in Chambers Europe 2025. Immigration and tax specialist Ann Michelle Larsen leads the individual immigration practice. The firm is a member of Meritas, an international network of independent law firms, and is recommended in World Tax and ICLG guides.

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www.littler.com/locations/norway

Norway's largest employment law boutique. Advises individual employees and employers on inbound work immigration, skilled worker permits, posting of workers, and cross-border employment arrangements through a dedicated international employment law team.

Why we list this agency: Ranked Band 3 in Employment, Norway in Chambers Europe 2025 and Tier 3 in Employment, Norway in Legal 500 EMEA. Named one of Norway's top two employment law firms in the Finansavisen and Kapital Annual Lawyer Survey in 2021, 2022, and 2023. Part of Littler, the world's largest employment and labour law firm.

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www.fragomen.com/services/practices/private-client-services

Dedicated private client practice within Fragomen helping high-net-worth individuals, their families, and their advisors navigate Norwegian and international residence permits, citizenship, and long-term immigration strategy.

Why we list this agency: Fragomen is ranked Band 1 in Immigration: High Net Worth Individuals in Chambers High Net Worth 2025 — the only firm at that level. Also ranked Band 1 for Immigration: Business and Global Multi-Jurisdictional immigration in Chambers Global 2026, a position held every year since 2022 and 2006 respectively.

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reinholdt.no/immigration-lawyer-norway

Oslo law firm specialising in Norwegian immigration law, assisting individual applicants with skilled worker permits, self-employment routes, business setup in Norway, and appeals before UDI and the Immigration Appeals Board.

Why we list this agency: Member of the Norwegian Bar Association and exclusive Norwegian member for immigration law of IR Global, an international network of independent specialist law firms. Contributing author to the ICLG Corporate Immigration Guide for Norway 2024. Client testimonials highlight deep labour-law expertise and a thorough, realistic case strategy.

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www.lawyernorway.no/services/employment-and-immigration-law

Oslo-based law firm guiding individual applicants and businesses through Norwegian work and residence permits, skilled worker applications, self-employment routes, family reunification, and employment contract compliance.

Why we list this agency: Offers a free 30-minute consultation and publishes detailed guides on Norwegian immigration routes used regularly by the expat community. Referenced in the Lawzana directory of top immigration lawyers in Norway 2026 and cited across Norwegian expat forums for accessible, English-language explanations of UDI permit processes.

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www.elden.no/en/disciplines/immigration-law

One of Norway's largest litigation firms — established 1963, nearly 150 professionals — with a dedicated immigration law team handling residence permits, skilled worker cases, asylum, deportation, and citizenship for individual applicants across all Norwegian regions.

Why we list this agency: Listed in Lawzana's top immigration lawyers in Norway 2026 and Advokatguiden's top 10 immigration lawyers in Oslo. Immigration lawyers at the firm hold verified 5.0 scores on Advokatguiden from client reviews. Elden's scale and litigation experience makes it suitable for individual applicants facing complex or contested UDI decisions.

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braekhus.no/en

Oslo law firm with a dedicated global mobility and immigration team advising individual applicants on skilled worker permits, self-employment routes, family reunification, work permit compliance, and cross-border employment arrangements.

Why we list this agency: Recognised in Legal 500 EMEA and ranked in Chambers Europe 2025. Ann Michelle Larsen leads the individual immigration practice. Member of Meritas, an international network of independent law firms covering 170+ locations worldwide. Recommended in World Tax and ICLG guides for Norway.

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www.littler.com/locations/norway

Norway's largest specialist employment law firm, advising individual employees and inbound workers on work immigration, skilled worker permits, posting of workers, and cross-border employment arrangements through an internationally connected team.

Why we list this agency: Ranked Band 3 in Employment, Norway in Chambers Europe 2025 and Tier 3 in Legal 500 EMEA Norway Employment. Clients note 'unique international competence.' Part of Littler, the world's largest employment and labour law firm. Practice head Ole Kristian Olsby is recognised for active international employment matters.

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Agencies for employers

Corporate immigration services to bring international talent

www.fragomen.com/countries/norway.html

Global immigration law firm with a dedicated Norway service covering skilled worker and service-provider residence permits, business visitor guidance, group employer filings, and citizenship consultation, coordinated from their Frankfurt RCC.

Why we list this agency: Ranked Band 1 for Immigration: Business in Chambers Global 2026, a position held every year since 2006, and Band 1 for Immigration: Global Multi-Jurisdictional in Chambers Global 2026, held every year since 2022. The only firm at Band 1 in both global immigration categories simultaneously.

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www.deloitte.com/no/no/services/tax/services/global-employer-services-immigration.html

One of Norway's largest law firms, self-described as the top provider of immigration solutions in Norway. Its Global Employer Services team handles permit applications, business traveller compliance, permit tracking technology, and strategic advisory for employers managing international workforces.

Why we list this agency: Ranked in Legal 500 EMEA for Employment, Norway, with noted strength in international employment work. Recognised by International Tax Review as Tax Firm of the Year, Norway. The GES immigration team operates within Deloitte's worldwide Global Employer Services network, providing coordinated multi-jurisdiction support.

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kpmg.com/no/en/home/services/tax/global-mobility-services.html

Oslo-based law firm of over 160 legal professionals offering employer-focused global mobility services including immigration compliance, work and residence permit management, social security planning, and business traveller risk assessment for companies with internationally mobile staff.

Why we list this agency: Ranked in Chambers Europe 2025 and Legal 500 EMEA. Head of Global Mobility Services Cathrine Bjerke Dalheim has over 19 years of cross-border employment experience. Connected to KPMG's global immigration network spanning more than 100 jurisdictions, with over 5,000 global mobility professionals worldwide.

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expatrelocation.no

Oslo-based relocation company operating since 1998, assisting employers with Norwegian work and residence permits, offshore work permits, group UDI filings, business visas, and document legalisation across all stages of the permit process.

Why we list this agency: Holder of the EuRA Global Quality Seal since March 2012 — the relocation industry's foremost ISO 9001-based quality management certification. Member of the UDI Directorate of Immigration Brukerråd (User Council) since 2005, providing ongoing regulatory input to UDI on behalf of corporate clients. Verified EuRA Full Member listed in the EuRA member directory.

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pytheas.no

Norwegian relocation company founded in 2013, covering Oslo, Bergen, Stavanger, Trondheim, and other major cities. Handles skilled worker visa applications, UDI residence permits, EEA registrations, family reunification, and post-arrival settling-in for internationally assigned employees.

Why we list this agency: Confirmed full member of EuRA (European Relocation Association), holding the EuRA Full Member badge and committed to EuRA's code of conduct and quality accreditation framework. Described by EuRA as one of Norway's leading relocation companies. Accredited through the EuRA Global Quality Seal programme.

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www.ecovis.no/services/global-mobility

Oslo-based accounting, tax, and legal firm offering employers a one-stop immigration and global mobility service covering UDI work permit applications, EEA registrations, employer-of-record arrangements, fast-track police pre-registration, and payroll compliance for inbound non-EU talent.

Why we list this agency: Part of the international Ecovis network (over 900 offices, 80+ countries). Operates a dedicated Global Mobility and Relocation Department with pre-registration capability at UDI to reduce unnecessary correspondence and speed up processing. Published detailed Norwegian work permit guides used by corporate HR teams navigating UDI employer obligations.

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www.onboardnorway.com

Trondheim-based relocation and immigration company providing employers with UDI permit applications, housing, onboarding, and settling-in services for internationally assigned employees across all major Norwegian cities.

Why we list this agency: Verified EuRA Full Member listed at eura-relocation.com/members/onboard-norway. Serves corporate clients relocating staff to Oslo, Bergen, Stavanger, Trondheim, and other centres. Described by EuRA as committed to the relocation industry's code of conduct and quality standards, with a focus on seamless employer-managed employee transitions.

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kpmg.com/no/en/home/services/tax/global-mobility-services.html

Oslo law firm of over 160 legal professionals providing employer-focused immigration compliance, work and residence permit management, social security planning, and business traveller risk assessment for companies with internationally mobile staff in Norway.

Why we list this agency: Ranked in Chambers Europe 2025 and Legal 500 EMEA. Head of Global Mobility Services Cathrine Bjerke Dalheim has over 19 years of cross-border employment experience. Part of KPMG's global immigration network spanning over 100 jurisdictions with 5,000+ global mobility professionals worldwide.

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littler.no/en/areas-of-practice/item/international-employment-law

Norway's largest employment law boutique, advising employers on inbound work immigration, skilled worker permit sponsorship, ICT and posted-worker compliance, and Norwegian labour law requirements for internationally mobile employees.

Why we list this agency: Ranked Band 3 in Employment, Norway in Chambers Europe 2025 and Tier 3 in Employment Norway in Legal 500 EMEA. Clients note 'unique international competence' in international employment matters. Part of Littler, the world's largest employment and labour law firm, enabling coordinated multi-jurisdiction employer-immigration advice.

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nlsnorwayrelocation.no

Norwegian relocation and immigration firm founded by experienced expatriates, providing employers with end-to-end UDI permit management, family reunification filings, and settling-in services for international hires across Norway.

Why we list this agency: HR manager testimonials on the NLS website credit the firm with comprehensive corporate packages that reduce administrative burden and allow new international hires to arrive settled and work-ready. Publishes detailed Norwegian employer work permit guides covering UDI eligibility, salary benchmarks, and the 2025 application process, cited in expat community forums.

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10

Official sources

Government portals and legislation this page cites

1

Want to apply: Work immigration

www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/work-immigration/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

2

Want to apply: Skilled workers

www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/work-immigration/skilled-workers/?c=per

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

3

Want to apply: Seasonal workers

www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/work-immigration/seasonal-workers/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

4

Want to apply: Job seekers

www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/work-immigration/job-seekers/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

5

Want to apply: Vocational training and research

www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/work-immigration/vocational-training-and-research/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

6

Skilled workers who can hand in their application for residence permit in Norway

www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/legal-stay/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

7

Confirmation of a job or assignment offer

www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/confirmation-of-a-job-offer/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

8

Fees

www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/fees

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

9

Employers: Employing someone who is not an EU/EEA national

www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/employers-employing-someone-who-is-not-an-eueea-national-/

official · Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) · checked 2026-04-23

10

Working in Norway: Your rights and obligations

www.arbeidstilsynet.no/en/working-hours-and-organisation-of-work/knowyourrights/

official · Norwegian Labour Inspection Authority · checked 2026-04-23

11

Contract of employment

www.arbeidstilsynet.no/en/pay-and-engagement-of-employees/contract-of-employment/

official · Norwegian Labour Inspection Authority · checked 2026-04-23

12

Pay

www.arbeidstilsynet.no/en/pay-and-engagement-of-employees/pay-and-minimum-rates-of-pay?nav-veiviser=14895

official · Norwegian Labour Inspection Authority · checked 2026-04-23

13

Immigration Act

www.regjeringen.no/en/documents/immigration-act/id585772/

legislation · Government of Norway · checked 2026-04-23

14

Cooperation on Schengen and Justice and Home affairs

www.norway.no/en/missions/eu/areas-of-cooperation/schengen/

official · Royal Norwegian Mission to the EU · checked 2026-04-23

15

Norway and the EU

www.eu-norway.org/eu/norway-and-the-eu/

official · Mission of Norway to the EU · checked 2026-04-23

16

Engelsk

sprakradet.no/spraklova/andre-sprak/engelsk/

official · Language Council of Norway · checked 2026-04-23