Can a British traveller work in Norway?

You need a visa.

There's no visa-free travel between British passport holders and Norway for work. British citizens apply at the Norway embassy or visa application centre before travelling. Plan ahead — appointments and processing both take time.

Visa required· 1 year

See all destinations for British travellers

Cost
NOK 6,000
Time to get it
30–90 days
Difficulty
8/10Difficult
Max stay
1 year
Recent change · Oct 2025

Schengen EES (Entry/Exit System) is now operational

All non-EU travellers entering the Schengen area now have biometrics (fingerprints + facial photo) registered at the border on first entry. Adds 5–15 minutes to your border crossing on first arrival; subsequent crossings within 3 years use the stored data.

Work visas have major life consequences.

Long-stay visa decisions affect your right to live, work, study, or remain with family. Always verify with a qualified immigration adviser or the destination's embassy before making travel, employment, or relocation decisions.

Your visa options

4 routes available

Do this next

application timeline

What you'll need

Work visa for Norway

Specific to British passport holders.

Start ~0–13 weeks before your intended travel date.

Order these first — they have the longest lead time

  • Employer sponsorship / CoS

    Purpose evidence2–13 weeks

    A Certificate of Sponsorship (UK), Labour Market Impact Assessment (Canada), Form I-129 (US H-1B), or equivalent. The sponsor obtains this; you receive a reference number.

    How: Your employer applies to the destination's immigration authority. You can't start without their reference number.

  • Education credentials evaluation

    Credentials4–12 weeks

    WES (Canada/US), ECE, IQAS, UK ENIC, or the destination's local equivalent — converts your foreign degree to the local framework.

    How: Order online; allow 4–10 weeks. Request your university to send transcripts directly to the assessor.

  • English- / language-proficiency test

    Credentials3–9 weeks

    IELTS, TOEFL, PTE, DELE, TestDaF, JLPT — depending on the destination. Most have minimum scores per visa class.

    How: Book on the test provider's site. Test slots typically 2–4 weeks out; results 5–15 days after the test.

  • Medical examination

    Medical1–4 weeks

    Conducted by a panel physician approved by the destination's immigration authority. Includes chest X-ray, blood tests, and an interview.

    How: Book directly with a panel physician — find them on the destination's immigration website.

  • Valid passport

    Identity1–3 weeks

    Most countries require your passport to be valid for at least six months beyond your departure date, with two or more blank pages.

    How: Renew at gov.uk/renew-adult-passport — 3 weeks standard, 1 week premium (£177).

  • Police certificate

    Background0–2 weeks

    A criminal-record clearance from every country you've lived in for 6+ months in the past 10 years. Universally required for work, study, family and PR routes.

    How: ACRO Police Certificate — apply at acro.police.uk. 10 working days standard, 2 working days premium (£105).

  • Apostille / certified document copies

    Credentials1–5 days

    Hague Apostille on civil documents (birth, marriage, education certificates) for countries that recognise the convention. Other countries require consular legalisation instead.

    How: FCDO Legalisation Office at gov.uk/get-document-legalised — standard 2 working days, premium same-day in person.

Then gather these

  • Biometrics (fingerprints + photo)

    Background1–4 weeks

    Captured at a Visa Application Centre (VFS, BLS, TLScontact). Walk-in is rarely possible — appointment slots fill up.

    How: Book on the VAC website after submitting your online application.

  • CV / résumé and work history

    Purpose evidence1–3 weeks

    Up-to-date résumé covering at least your last 10 years of employment. Some routes (Canada Express Entry, Australia points) require reference letters with hours per week.

    How: Self-prepared. Get reference letters from past employers on letterhead, signed.

  • Signed job offer

    Purpose evidence0–2 weeks

    A signed contract or offer letter from a sponsoring employer. Required for every work-route visa worldwide.

    How: Issued by the sponsoring employer once you've accepted.

  • Certified translation of documents

    Credentials1–2 weeks

    If your documents are not in the destination's official language, you may need a sworn or certified translator.

    How: ATA-certified (US) / ITI-qualified (UK) translators, or a sworn translator registered with the destination's consulate.

  • Proof of funds (long-stay)

    Financial1–2 weeks

    Country-specific minimum savings — e.g. ~CAD 14,000 (Canada study/work permits, single applicant), ~£1,334/month + £8,000 reserve (UK family), proof of income for digital-nomad routes.

    How: Bank statements stamped and signed by the bank, plus HMRC SA302 or P60 for proof of income. Some destinations also accept the gov.uk Tax Summary download.

  • Passport-style photograph

    Identity1–3 days

    A recent biometric photo to the destination's specifications. Most consulates require their own dimensions, not your home country's.

    How: Any high-street photo studio, or app-based services that meet ICAO 9303 spec.

  • Online visa application form

    Application1–3 days

    The destination's online form (DS-160 for US, gov.uk for UK, IRCC portal for Canada, ImmiAccount for Australia, e-Visa portal for most others).

    How: Apply directly on the destination government website — never via a third-party paid service.

  • Application fee payment

    Application1 day

    Payable to the destination government directly. Fees range from ~$25 (e-Visas) to $2,500+ (US EB-1).

    How: Card payment on the destination's portal. Receipt required for the application.

Lead times are global averages. Country-specific channels can be faster (FBI Channeler in days vs FBI Mail in months) — always check the destination's embassy or visa portal for current timelines.

What carries weight in the application

route-specific

Norway caseworkers weight 5 things heavily for british work-visa applicants. Get these right and you almost certainly get the visa; get any one wrong and you waste money on a refused application that haunts every future Norway attempt.

Genuine job offer + employer sponsor compliance

The sponsor's track record matters as much as your CV. Caseworkers cross-check: is the company actually trading? Does the salary match Companies House / equivalent filings? Has the sponsor had prior refusals for similar roles? A blue-chip sponsor letterhead is worth more than a perfect personal statement.

Salary at or above the role's threshold

Like family routes, this is the binary first filter. Every skilled-worker visa publishes a minimum salary (or a 'prevailing wage' for that occupation) — Norway's figure is in the visa details above. Genuine offers below threshold get refused before merit review, no matter how strong the rest of the application.

Qualifications matching the role

Caseworkers cross-reference the SOC / ANZSCO / NOC occupation code against your degree + work history. A computer science degree applying for an accountant role triggers genuineness questions. If you're switching fields, evidence the transferable skills carefully.

Maintenance funds + dependents

If the employer doesn't certify your living costs, you need to show Norway's required maintenance savings in your own account — typically held for 28+ consecutive days before you apply. The exact amount varies by destination and family size; check the visa details above.

Police certificates + medicals (long-stay only)

Long-lead documents — always start these first. Some destinations (Australia, Canada) require medical from designated physicians, often booked 4-6 weeks out.

How to save money

5 tips
01

Don't pay for priority processing unless you have a contract start date you genuinely can't move. Standard service is usually 2-6 weeks; priority gets you 1-2 weeks for a few hundred extra. Negotiate a flexible start with the employer instead.

02

Many countries charge a separate health-system levy on work visas (UK Immigration Health Surcharge, AU Health Care Levy, etc.) that compounds annually — long-term planners get out faster by pursuing settlement / naturalisation when eligible rather than visa-stacking.

03

For sponsor-paid fee schemes (most countries' employer-sponsored routes), the employer should pay all government fees. Accepting any reimbursement clawback is usually a refusal trigger AND a labour-law violation in Norway.

04

Sponsorship certificate fees are non-refundable. Get the offer in writing AND check the sponsor's licence is in good standing with Norway's immigration authority before paying anything.

05

If Norway uses a points-based system, getting language test scores 1 band higher could be worth more than 10 points — IELTS 8.0 vs 7.0 changes invitation rounds materially. Re-take if it's tight.

Personal-statement skeleton

4 sections

Fill each section with your own facts, dates and circumstances. The structure mirrors what Norway caseworkers expect to find — copying the order makes their decision faster, which is good for you.

  1. 01

    1. Your role in plain English

    What is the job? What does the company do? What will YOUR specific responsibilities be? Use everyday language — a caseworker isn't going to know what 'iOS infrastructure engineer' means without context. 'I'll lead the team that maintains the company's iPhone app, used by 12 million customers' lands better.

  2. 02

    2. Why YOU specifically

    What does your CV say about your fit? Three years of relevant experience + a relevant degree + a recommendation from a prior senior beats five years of unrelated experience. Match your background to the occupation code.

  3. 03

    3. Why this employer

    How did you find them? Recruiter? Direct application? Were you headhunted? Are they in their industry's top 10? The 'genuine vacancy' test is the single most-failed item — a recruiter trail or competitive-application story signals legitimacy.

  4. 04

    4. Your settlement plans

    Are you bringing dependents? Where will you live (rented short-term, then own / company-provided)? Brief mention of your destination integration plans (kids' schools, healthcare, etc.) for Skilled Worker visas where settled status is the long-term goal.

When to DIY · when to hire a lawyer

honest triage
You can DIY this
  • Standard skilled-worker route at a major sponsor (FAANG, Big 4, NHS, etc.) with clean immigration history
  • Salary clearly above threshold, occupation clearly on the shortage / eligible list
  • Single applicant, no dependents
Get a lawyer if…
  • Multi-country tax residency or split-payroll arrangements
  • Sponsor compliance issues — recent license action, recent refusals on related roles
  • Switching visa categories from inside Norway (e.g. student → skilled-worker switch-in-country)
  • Treaty Trader / Investor visas — investment-based routes have layered technicality and Norway's rules change often
  • Recent refusal in your or your sponsor's history
  • Director / shareholder of the sponsoring company (genuineness test is harder)

This guidance is general — not legal advice. For high-stakes routes (refusal history, criminal record, complex finances), spend the money on a qualified immigration adviser regulated by your destination (UK: OISC / SRA; AU: MARA; US: bar-admitted attorney).

Save £500–£3,000 on lawyer fees

Write your work-visa letter of intent yourself — we'll show you how.

Six-section skeleton caseworkers actually want, copy-paste AI prompt for Claude / ChatGPT to neaten your draft, the exact legal phrases each authority looks for, and a clear list of when you SHOULD pay a lawyer instead.

Open the DIY guide

Where to apply in person

Find a Norway embassy or VAC near you

Most long-stay applications need an in-person appointment. We can't book it for you — but we can point you to the right physical place in one click.

Need a curated provider list instead? See our biometrics directory, medical-check panel physicians, or passport-photo services.

For United Kingdom applicants specifically

Your documentation process at a glance.

What the generic requirements above actually mean for you in United Kingdom — the exact agency, fee, and processing time for each.

Police / background check

ACRO Police Certificate

ACRO Criminal Records Office

Fee: £59 (Standard, 10-day)

Processing: 10 working days standard; 2 working days premium (£99)

Covers Police National Computer + force records. Required for most Schengen long-stay, Australian PR, Canadian Express Entry, NZ residence, US adjustment of status.

Official site

Apostille / legalisation

Hague Apostille (single-step)

FCDO Legalisation Office (Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office)

Fee: £45 (Standard, 2-day) / £75 (Premium same-day)

Processing: 2 working days standard; same-day premium at Milton Keynes office

UK joined Hague Apostille 1965. Documents must be notarised by a UK solicitor / notary public FIRST, then sent to FCDO. Online tracking + courier return available.

Official site

Tax records / income proof

SA302 Tax Calculation + Tax Year Overview

HMRC

SA302s download free from HMRC online portal. Most consulates accept the SA302 + Tax Year Overview pair as proof of self-employment income for the last 3 years.

Official site

Certified translation

ITI / CIOL Member or sworn translator for the destination's legal system

Sworn / certified translator

For Spanish NLV, Italian Elective, Portuguese D7, French long-stay: use a translator on the destination consulate's approved list (consulado.uk / it.esteri.it / lisbon.gov.uk). For US: ATA-certified translator OR certified statement of accuracy.

Standard civil documents you'll often need: Full UK passport (not provisional) — issued within 10 years for Schengen entry; UK driving licence or BRP (Biometric Residence Permit) for non-UK-born residents; Council tax bill / utility bill in your name (address proof, within 3 months); Bank statements (UK high-street bank, certified copy if asked); Original birth certificate (long-form, with parents' details — for citizenship-by-descent applications); …

Fees on the destination's visa page are typically quoted in the destination currency. Your preferred currency for budgeting: GBP. Where to apply: Most embassies in London (Belgravia / Mayfair). Spanish + Italian + Portuguese have additional consulates in Edinburgh + Manchester. Australian + NZ + Canadian use VFS Global / TLScontact centres.

Post-Brexit British applicants are 'third-country nationals' for EU long-stay routes — no preferential treatment vs Americans, Australians etc. Some EU member states still offer streamlined processing for British applicants (Spain, Portugal, France in particular).

Email me if Norway's policy changes

ONE email when the rules change for British travellers. No account, no marketing.

Alternative routes

If this visa doesn't work for you — adjacent passports, related destinations, second-best routes.

Other visa types for this route

We also have data on these visa categories between GB and NO.

More for British travellers

Other places to go and other reasons to go to Norway.

Sources & verification

Every claim above traced to an official government source.

Sources & references

Every link below is a primary government source. We aggregate; the source is the authority. If anything on this page disagrees with a link below, the link wins.

While you're here

Practical next steps

Useful links for travel to Norway

Official government and authority links only. Commercial provider slots (travel insurance, international health insurance, passport photos, registered immigration advisers) are coming soon — we're shortlisting the first cohort. Get featured here →

Travel insuranceInternational health insurancePassport photo servicesImmigration lawyers & accountants

Required vaccinations & shots

All providers →

Up-to-date guidance from the CDC, NHS Fit for Travel, and other national health bodies on required and recommended vaccinations for your destination. Yellow Fever certificates are mandatory for entry from some routes.

NHS Fit for Travel (UK)

Official

UK National Travel Health Network's country-by-country vaccination + malaria advice. Authoritative for UK residents; covers routine, recommended, and certificate-mandatory shots.

Information

Australian Smartraveller

Official

DFAT travel health guidance for Australians, with country pages covering required and recommended vaccinations plus health-system risk levels.

Information

CDC Yellow Book (US)

Official

Authoritative US CDC guidance: required + recommended vaccinations and prophylaxis by destination, plus advisories on outbreaks, food/water safety, and traveller's diarrhoea.

Information

Informational only. A valid visa permits entry subject to officer discretion at the border. Always verify with the destination's embassy or official source before travel, employment, or relocation.