Frequently asked questions about residence permits for skilled workers
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I want to apply for a residence permit as a skilled worker
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I want to come to Norway to work. What type of residence permit can I apply for?
You need a residence permit to be allowed to work in Norway. Normally you will need to find a job first. The type of residence permit you should apply for depends on your expertise and the type of work you will be doing. You can read more about the different types of work permits here: Want to apply: Work immigration - UDI.
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I have an education and want to work in Norway. What type of residence permit can I apply for?
If you have completed vocational training or a degree in higher education, you can apply for a residence permit as a skilled worker. You must normally either have been offered a job in advance or run your own business.
To obtain a residence permit as a skilled worker, you must meet a number of requirements. For one thing, the work you are going to do must require qualifications as a skilled worker; you must be qualified to do the work required of you.
You can find more information about the different residence permits for skilled workers and the requirements for obtaining a relevant residence permit here: Want to apply: Skilled workers - UDI. -
I want to start my own company in Norway. What type of residence permit can I apply for?
If you have completed higher education or vocational training, you can apply for a residence permit as a sole proprietor with a company in Norway.
The company must normally be your own sole proprietorship. You can read more about the requirements for an appropriate residence permit here: Want to apply: Skilled workers - UDI.
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Can my employer hand in an application on my behalf?
Yes, an employer may apply for residence permit for skilled workers on the worker's behalf. The employer must have received written authorisation from the employee. More information is available on our pages about applying for work immigration.
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How does an employer submit an application on behalf of a skilled worker?
For applications for a residence permit for skilled workers, an employer may apply on the worker's behalf. The employer must have received written authorisation from the employee.
When submitting the application, the employer may submit the relevant documents electronically.
The following procedure is for employers, clients and persons granted power of attorney to represent an employer, applying on behalf of an employee:
- Fill in and submit the application online.
- After you have submitted the application, send an email to the Service centre for foreign workers (SUA) (external website) or to your local police district.
- The police will send you an email via the address you provided in the application form. The email contains a DUF number and also serves to confirm that the application has been received. You need to wait until you receive the email before you upload the required documentation.
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What do I need to submit in terms of documentation when applying for a residence permit for work?
After you submit an application online, you will receive a list of the documents you need to hand in.
You can also find checklists here: Checklists for required documentation for applications.
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I want to apply for a residence permit as a skilled worker. I have completed higher education, but I am still waiting for my diploma. Can I still apply?
If you have not yet received a diploma for your education, you can still apply for a residence permit as a skilled worker. You must attach a confirmation from your university or university college that you have completed your programme. You must also attach transcripts.
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I want to apply for a residence permit as self-employed. Does my company need to be registered with the Brønnøysund Register Centre before I apply?
You do not need to register your company with the Brønnøysund Register Centre until after your application for a first-time residence permit as a sole proprietor has been approved.
If you already live in Norway, you can register the company before you apply, but you cannot start working while self-employed unless you have a residence permit that allows you to work as self-employed. It is not sufficient that you have registered a company – you also need the right residence permit.
I have applied for a residence permit as a skilled worker
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Am I allowed to start working before I have been notified of the outcome of my application?
Normally, work immigrants from countries outside the EU/EEA cannot start working until they have been granted a residence permit. However, it is permitted to start working if you have received confirmation from the police (early employment start). Information about Early employment start - UDI.
The service centres for foreign workers (SUA) in Bergen, Oslo, Stavanger and Trondheim will not provide confirmation of early employment start.
Please contact the police (external website) if you have any questions about how long you will have to wait for the police to confirm your early employment start or about how they administer the early employment start scheme.
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How long do I have to wait for the outcome of my work permit application?
You can find waiting times on our website: Waiting time – UDI.
Our waiting times are estimates that are updated once a month. Your waiting time may change while your application is in with UDI. If so, the new waiting time we indicated will override any waiting time you were informed of previously.
The UDI employees responding to phone and chat enquiries have no further information about waiting times than what is already available on our waiting time page. Consequently, there is no need to contact us if your question is about the waiting time for your case.
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Can my application be given priority?
Very few applications are given priority. To request priority, send us both a detailed explanation as to why you want priority and supporting documentation, such as a doctor’s certificate.
Further information is available on our Can I request priority? – UDI page.
Priority will not be given if the only reason you state is that you need to start work urgently or travel abroad for work.
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What do I do if I move before my application is processed?
You are registered in the National Population Register
You have to report your new address to the National Population Register (external website) as soon as you know you will be moving. UDI automatically receives your new address from the register.
You are in Norway, but not registered in the National Population Register
If you are in Norway, and you move before your application has been processed, you must notify the police of your move no later than one week after you have moved. You can notify the police where you are moving to, or where you lived before.
You are abroad
If you are abroad, and you move before UDI has processed your application, you must notify the embassy or consulate where you submitted your application. If you fail to do this, you risk not receiving the answer to your application.
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Can I get an entry visa for skilled workers?
Skilled workers who need a visa to visit Norway can in some cases be issued an entry visa, so that they can travel to Norway in order to hand in their application for a residence permit to the police, or wait for an answer to their application for a residence permit.
Such a visa does not entitle you to work in Norway, but it does entitle you to stay in Norway while you wait for UDI to process your application for a residence permit.
To be granted such a visa, it must be probable that your application for a residence permit for skilled workers will be granted.
Please note! If you already have been granted a residence permit for work, you should not apply for an entry visa for skilled workers.
Requirements for entry visas
- You must have applied for, or are going to apply for, a residence permit for skilled workers with an employer in Norway or a residence permit for athletes or coaches.
- You must have received a concrete job offer from one specific employer in Norway.
- The job must normally be full-time.
- You must have qualifications as a skilled worker.
- The job you are offered must require qualifications as a skilled worker. You must have the qualifications that the job requires.
- If you are going to work in an occupation for which approval or authorisation is required (external website), you must have such approval or authorisation. Health personnel, for example, must enclose an authorisation or licence from the Norwegian Directorate of Health (external website).
How to apply for an entry visa
- You must apply at a Norwegian embassy. If you live in a country where a Swedish or Danish embassy represents Norwegian authorities, you must contact a Norwegian embassy in a country where Norwegian authorities are not represented by a Swedish or Danish embassy. Please see our overview of embassies in order to check if the embassy is Norwegian or not.
- Submit an application for a visitor visa, but write in the application that you wish to be granted an entry visa (D visa).
- If you haven't already submitted your application for a residence permit, you must now submit all the documents on the checklist for skilled workers.
- The embassy will consider your application for an entry visa. If your application is rejected, you can submit a written appeal to the embassy. The embassy will consider your application again. If they do not grant it, they will send it to UDI. UDI will consider the application again, and either reject it or grant it.
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Am I allowed to enter Norway before I have received an answer to my application?
Rules for seasonal workers
- If you do not need a visa to visit Norway, you can enter Norway before you have received an answer to you application.
- If you need a visa, you must wait until you have received an answer to your application before you can enter Norway.
Rules for skilled workers
Please check whether you qualify as a skilled worker.
- If you do not need a visa to visit Norway or if you have a valid visa, you can enter Norway and stay here until your application has been decided, even if your visa or the visa-free period expires in the meantime.
- If you need a visa to visit Norway and the police have given your employer confirmation that you can start working before you application has been processed (early employment start scheme), a Norwegian embassy or consulate will issue you an entry visa. You can then stay in Norway until you have received an answer to your application.
- If you do need a visa to visit Norway and your employer has not been given confirmation of early employment start, you must apply for an entry visa for skilled workers. If you are granted an entry visa, you can enter Norway and stay here until you have received an answer to your application
Rules for others applicants
All other employees must wait to enter Norway until they have received an answer to their application.
I have been granted a residence permit as a skilled worker
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Can I travel to Norway?
If you are not already in Norway when your application is granted, you may now travel to Norway.
First, you must check whether you need a visa to enter Norway. Please check whether you need a visa.
If you do not need a visa
You can travel to Norway at any time within the deadline stated in your decision (normally six months).
If you need a visa
- The visa you need is called an entry visa
- UDI will ask the embassy which is responsible for your case to issue you this visa; you do not need to apply for one.
- The Visa Application Centre where you handed in the application or the embassy will contact you to agree on a time for you to come and collect your visa. It will take up to a week for them to contact you. You will collect your visa at the same place as you handed in the application.
- The visa will state the latest date on which you can travel to Norway. You must therefore notify the embassy about when you plan to go, so that the visa is valid when you need it.
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Can I extend my entry deadline to Norway?
When you receive a decision letter from UDI that you have been granted a residence permit for work, the letter also stipulates a deadline for you to enter Norway.
You may extend the entry deadline if there are extenuating circumstances preventing you from travelling to Norway by the deadline, and provided that the same job offer for which you were granted the residence still stands. The entry deadline will usually be extended by up to six months.
If you no longer have the same job offer, you will have to apply for a new residence permit for your most recent job offer.
How to request an extended entry deadline
When applying to extend your entry deadline, you must explain why you cannot enter Norway by the originally stipulated deadline.
In many cases, UDI will ask you to provide documentation for the circumstances behind your delay. For example, if you cannot meet the entry deadline due to the corona situation you will be required to provide documentation to attest for illness or for travel restrictions affecting you.
You must contact UDI by phone to apply for an extended entry deadline. Based on your explanation, we will assess whether you are eligible for an entry deadline extension, and we will advise you as to which documentation you should provide.
If you are granted an extended entry deadline, the embassy will contact you for you to obtain a new entry visa with a new entry deadline.
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Do I need to be tested for tuberculosis?
Some people must be tested for tuberculosis when they come to Norway.
You must get tested if
- you come from a country with a high incidence of tuberculosis. This means that your country is on The Norwegian Institute of Public Health's list of countries with high and very high incidence of tuberculosis (external website), and
- you are going to stay in Norway for more than three months
What should you do to test yourself?
If you are required to be tested for tuberculosis, you must contact the municipality where you will live. The municipality carries out the testing. You must test yourself as soon as possible after arrival to Norway.
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I recently arrived in Norway, but I have not received a residence card yet. May I start working?
If you have been granted a residence permit that gives you the right to work, you can start working when you have met with the police, and the police have ordered a residence card for you.
There can be long waiting times with the police to order a residence card. Even if you have not yet received a residence card, you can start studying or working now if you have been granted a residence permit that gives you the right to study or work, and you have booked an appointment with the police to order a residence card. This will not have any consequences for you.
If it is impossible to book an appointment with the police, you must contact UDI by phone or email to report that you are in Norway and starting to study or work. You must still meet with the police to order a residence card when possible.
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How do I register my address in Norway, get a national identity number or a D number and a tax deduction card?
Register your address
- If you are a new postal recipient in Norway: fill in this form (external website) and hand it in at a post office or in-store post office. Remember to bring identification.
- If you are already a registered postal recipient, check that your correct postal address is registered with Posten (external website). The site requires login with BankID or MinID.
- Make sure you have your name on your letterbox.
If you have changed your address in Norway since you applied for a residence permit, you must inform the police of this when you meet with them, so that your correct address of residence is registered in the National Population Register (Folkeregister).
National identity number or D number
When you meet at the police station to order a residence card, we notify the Tax Administration that you have been granted a residence permit. The Tax Administration decides whether you will be given a D number or a national identity number.
About two weeks after you met with the police, you will receive a letter from the Tax Administration with your national identity number or your D number.
If you received a D number when you should have received a national identity number, you must contact the National Population Register (external website).
Tax deduction card
If you have questions about tax deduction cards because you are going to work in Norway, you will find information on the Norwegian Tax Administration's website about how foreign citizens apply for tax deduction cards (external website).
I have a residence permit as a skilled worker – questions about rights and obligations
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What type of work can I do and for what employer can I work?
Your decision letter from UDI states what type of work you can do and, if relevant, the employer you will be working for.
If you start working for a new employer but work in the same type of position, you do not need to apply for a new residence permit.
If you are going to start a new type of position, you must apply for a new residence permit, regardless of whether it is with the same employer or a new employer. You cannot start working in a new kind of position until you receive a new residence permit.
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I have a residence permit as a skilled worker with an employer in Norway. Can I start my own company?
No, if you have a residence permit as a skilled worker with an employer in Norway you are not allowed to start your own company.
With a residence permit as a skilled worker with an employer in Norway, you are not allowed to:
- conduct business activity / run a business
- work as a freelancer
- carry out assignments for clients
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I have a residence permit as a skilled worker and have an employer in Norway. Can I work on a freelance basis?
No, if you have a residence permit as a skilled worker with an employer in Norway you cannot take work as a freelancer.
With a residence permit as a skilled worker who is employed in Norway, you are not allowed to:
- conduct business activity / run a business
- work as a freelancer
- carry out assignments for clients
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I have a residence permit as a skilled worker with an employer in Norway. Can I study?
You are allowed to study if you work in accordance with, and continue to meet, all conditions for your residence permit as a skilled worker.
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Can my family come to Norway?
To find out which family members can apply to come and live with you in Norway, see family immigration.
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Will this residence permit be included if I later want to apply for a permanent residence permit?
- The decision letter from UDI will tell you whether the time you have this residence permit may be included if you later apply for a permanent residence permit.
- See information regarding the requirements for permanent residence permit.
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I have a residence permit as a skilled worker with an employer in Norway, but and I have lost my job. Can I stay in Norway?
If you lose your job, you need to notify the police where you live within seven days. You can then stay in Norway for up to six months to look for a new job. Your residence permit must still be valid for the duration of this period.
- If you get a new job and will be working in the same type of position as before, you do not need to apply for a new residence permit. However, you must notify the police where you live within seven days of starting the new job.
- If you get a new job but are going to have a different type of position than before, you must apply for a new residence permit. You cannot start in the new position until you have been granted a new residence permit.
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What kind of healthcare am I entitled to?
You are entitled to different types of healthcare (external website) depending on your situation.
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What should I do if I am going to move from Norway before my residence permit expires?
If you move from Norway before your residence permit has expired, you can notify us. UDI can revoke (cancel) you permit from the date you leave Norway. This may be in your interest, because you then will be able to document to other Schengen-countries that you no longer have a residence permit in Norway. If you apply for a visitor’s visa to another Schengen country while you still hold a valid residence permit in Norway, you can risk not being granted a visitor’s visa.
How to notify us:
1. Write a letter and explain that you have moved from Norway. Ask UDI to revoke the rest of your residence permit. Write the date you left Norway and your postal address abroad.
2. Remember to write your full name, and your DUF-number or your Norwegian national identity number.
3. Sign the letter.
4. Send the signed letter by mail or upload the letter to UDI through the form for sending additional documents to UDI.
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Can I lose my residence permit?
In some cases, you may lose your residence permit.
Losing a permit means that UDI has decided that the residence permit is no longer valid. It may mean that you are no longer allowed to live in Norway or that you will be granted a new residence permit, and your residence period in Norway will restart.
There may be different reasons why you lose your residence permit, for example, if you:
- do not receive the payment stated in your job offer
- live outside of Norway for more than a total of six months in one year
- work more than what is stated in your employment contract, or work less than what is stated in your employment contract
Here you will find more information about revoking a residence permit.