- Minimum income
- €2,453/mo
- Proof required
- Initial duration
- 1 year
- Renewable
- Health insurance
- Required in practice
- Full visa period
- Tax treatment
- Standard resident taxation
- Path to residence
- Yes
- Family can join
- Government fee
- ≈ €570
- Plus processing time
All requirements in detail
- Official name
- Residence permit for self-employed persons (sole proprietor), Immigration Regulations §6-18 — Norway has no dedicated digital-nomad visa for the mainland; Svalbard is visa-free under the 1920 Svalbard Treaty
- Visa type
- Freelance / self-employed visa
- Status
- Active
- Income requirement (original currency)
- 27,117 NOK / month
- Income basis
- Freelance income
- Legal basis
- Self-employed permit: the business must be likely to generate at least NOK 325,400/year before tax (the UDI subsistence level 'as of May 2025', tied to ~2.5x the National Insurance basic amount G; figure re-stated each May). NOK 325,400/12 = NOK 27,117/month. Converted at the current rate ~NOK 11.06 = EUR 1 (0.09045 EUR/NOK, 15 Jun 2026): ~EUR 2,453/month, ~EUR 29,433/year. This is required *future business profit*, not a foreign-salary threshold. The Svalbard route has no published numeric income figure — only a general 'sufficient means to support yourself plus secured housing' test — so it is left null at program level.
- Family surcharges
- No separate published self-employed-permit income surcharge for family; family members apply under family-immigration rules with their own (higher) sponsor-income requirement, set separately by UDI. (Distinct figure from the permanent-residence self-support amount, which UDI lists at NOK 341,373 before tax over the last 12 months.)
- Working for local clients
- Allowed
- Path to citizenship
- Via permanent residence
- Where to apply
- Embassy / consulate, In country, Online
- Processing time
- 8–24 weeks
- Tax residency trigger
- 183 days
Insurance requirement, verbatim intent: Norway does not publish a private-insurance coverage minimum for the self-employed permit because residents are enrolled in the public National Insurance Scheme (Folketrygden). Membership is compulsory for anyone intending to reside in Norway for more than 12 months, giving access to public healthcare; for the gap before registration, or for stays under a year, private/international health insurance is advisable. On Svalbard there is no folketrygden-equivalent public health-insurance scheme and the local hospital handles acute/emergency care only, so private international health insurance (with medevac) is strongly recommended there, but it is not a formal visa condition.
Tax notes: No special expat or digital-nomad tax regime. Per Skatteetaten you become tax-resident if you stay in Norway more than 183 days in any 12-month period, or more than 270 days in any 36-month period; once resident you are in principle liable to Norwegian tax on worldwide capital and income (subject to tax treaties). General income is taxed at a flat 22%, plus a progressive bracket tax (trinnskatt, 2026 brackets from NOK 226,100, rising to 17.8% at the top) on personal income and National Insurance contributions (trygdeavgift), so effective marginal rates on labour/business income are considerably higher than 22%. Self-employed persons pay a higher National Insurance rate on business income. Tax residency only ends once you take up permanent residence abroad, do not stay in Norway more than 61 days in the income year, and have no available dwelling here (and, after 10+ years of residence, only after three consecutive such years).
Insurance requirement
Insurance that meets the Norway Self-employed permit (+ Svalbard route) requirements
Required in practice, for: full visa period. These plans match the published requirement:
Cigna Global Health Options – International Health Plans (Silver / Gold / Platinum)
Likely qualifyingCigna Healthcare (Cigna Global Insurance Company Limited) · International health insurance
Cigna Global is a true worldwide international health plan (Silver $1M / Gold $2M / Platinum unlimited) with no upper age limit, matching Norway's accepted 'international_health' type and easily covering the registration gap before Folketrygden enrolment or a sub-year stay; no published Norwegian minimum to fail.
- Three core tiers with annual maximums of $1M/€800k (Silver), $2M/€1.6M (Gold) and paid-in-full with no overall cap (Platinum)
- No upper enrollment age (18+); insurer states it does not terminate policies based on age
- Modular design: outpatient, evacuation & crisis assistance, health & wellbeing, vision & dental can be added; deductibles ($0-$10,000) and cost shares (0-30%) reduce the premium
from — /mo
View plans (opens in a new tab)Foyer Global Health S.A. (Foyer Group, Luxembourg) · International health insurance
Foyer Global Health offers worldwide full international medical cover with unlimited inpatient (Region 1 includes Europe) and is buyable by someone relocating to Norway, satisfying the 'international_health' route while a resident waits to enrol in the National Insurance Scheme.
- No overall annual or lifetime limit on core medical cover in all three plans; unlimited inpatient benefits confirmed on the official plan comparison
- Insurer FAQ explicitly confirms cover in the home country as well as the country of expatriation; worldwide or worldwide-ex-USA regions
- Luxembourg-regulated insurer (Foyer Group); 24/7 medical assistance, evacuation, teleconsultation and second medical opinion included in all plans
from €80 /mo
View plans (opens in a new tab)APRIL International Care France (health risk insured by Groupama Gan Vie; assistance/personal liability by CHUBB European Group SE) · International health insurance
APRIL MyHealth International is a worldwide full-health plan ($500k–unlimited, hospitalisation and evacuation at 100%) with max enrolment age 74 (Norway is not on the reduced-age-60 list), fitting Norway's 'international_health' acceptance for the pre-registration gap or sub-year stays.
- Four plan tiers with annual limits from EUR/USD 500,000 (Explore) up to unlimited (Extensive/Elite; capped at EUR/USD 2M-4M for treatment in China, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, USA)
- Enrollment from age 10 up to 74 in most countries; one-year contract with automatic renewal
- Hospitalisation, medical evacuation and cancer treatment at 100% on all tiers, with hospital direct billing and free unlimited 24/7 telehealth (Teladoc)
from €52 /mo
View plans (opens in a new tab)Beyond the visa
Norway — the rest of the move
The visa is step one. Here is the rest of what it takes to live here — each researched and sourced.
Sources
- Government Want to apply: Work immigration — UDI (Norwegian Directorate of Immigration) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Fees — UDI (work residence permit for applicants over 18: NOK 6,300, incl. renewals) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Svalbard — visa and residence requirements — UDI (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Visas and immigration — Governor of Svalbard (Sysselmesteren) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Requirement to financially support yourself for permanent residence (NOK 341,373) — UDI (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government Tax residence in Norway when moving to or from Norway (183/270-day rule) — Norwegian Tax Administration (Skatteetaten) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Law firm Norway — Individual — Residence — PwC Worldwide Tax Summaries (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Law firm How to Obtain a Visa as a Self-Employed in Norway (NOK 325,400/yr, May 2025; own-business-only) — Reinholdt Advokatfirma AS (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Law firm Residence permits for self-employed persons in Norway — Sterk Law Firm (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Law firm Update of the Norwegian National Insurance basic amount (G) — NOK 130,160 → 136,549 from 1 May 2026 — DLA Piper (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- International organisation Moving or travelling to Svalbard — Info Norden (Nordic Council of Ministers) (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Government The Norwegian welfare system — healthcare and welfare — City of Oslo (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15
- Law firm Norway — Individual — Taxes on personal income (22% general + trinnskatt brackets) — PwC (opens in a new tab) accessed 2026-06-15