Received an answer Have been granted a family immigration permit
Не всё содержание этой страницы имеется на русском.
Questions and answers
-
How do I travel into 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.
Support for travel costs
It is unfortunately not possible to get support from UDI to pay for the travel to Norway, even if you are a family member of a refugee.
The organisation IOM can help organising the travel. (external website)
-
How do I get a residence card if I applied before 16 April 2021
What is a residence card?
A residence card is a credit-card-sized plastic card that proves that you have been granted a residence permit in Norway. The police will order your residence card.
How do I obtain a residence card?
- You must pre-book an appointment to be issued a residence card. You must normally do this via udi.no.
- You can make the booking before you travel to Norway.
- The appointment date must be either within seven days of when you arrive in Norway or the first available appointment you can find.
- You must show up at the appointed time at the local police office for where you are going to live.
If you are under 18 years of age, your parents or guardian must accompany you to the police station.
Booking an appointment
If you filled in and sent the application electronically, you can now log in to book an appointment (external website).
Booking an appointment over the phone
If you did not fill out an online application form when you applied for a residence permit, you must instead call your local police district to book an appointment. You cannot call UDI to book an appointment.
What happens when I go to the police?
The police will take your fingerprints and photo, and will then order your residence card.
How long will it take to get the card?
It will take at least 20 working days from the date of your appointment with the police until you receive the card in the post.
Please check that you are registered with the correct postal address and that your name is on your letterbox to ensure the card reaches you. If your card is lost in the mail, it will take another 10 working days to get a new one.
If you are planning any trips abroad, you should make sure there is plenty of time between your appointment with the police and your planned departure date.
If you have not received your residence card by mail or if you have any questions about residence cards, you must contact the local police office where you applied for a residence card (external website).
-
How do I obtain a residence card if I applied on 16 April 2021 or later
What is a residence card?
A residence card is a credit-card-sized plastic card that proves that you have been granted a residence permit in Norway. The police will order a residence card for you.
If you have applied while in Norway, you might receive your residence card without meeting at the police station again. If this applies to you, the police will send you the residence card by post. This means that you do not have to book an appointment. Read below to find out when you must book an appointment.
What do I need to do to receive the card in the mail?
- If you are a new postal recipient in Norway: fill in this form (external website, opens in new window) 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, otherwise you will not receive the card. If the card gets lost in the post, it will take some time to get a new one.
- You should not book trips abroad until you have received your new residence card.
How long will it take to get the card?
It will take at least 20 working days from your appointment with the police until you receive the card in the post.
You must book an appointment to get a residence card:
- If you have applied from abroad.
- If you have an expired Norwegian alien's passport or refugee travel document which you have not already given to the police.
- If your application was submitted by another person with a power of attorney (i.e. you must book an appointment with the police yourself to get a residence card).
- If you have applied for a residence permit in accordance with the Brexit regulations (you will be notified to book an appointment after your application has been processed).
- If you have applied for protection for the first time with the police, the police will summon you to class. You do not have to book an appointment yourself.
At the police station, the police will take a photo of you and register your fingerprints.
How do I book an appointment?
Booking an appointment online
If you filled out and submitted the application online, you can now log in to book the appointment.
Booking an appointment by phone
If you did not fill in an online application form when you applied for a residence permit, you must instead call your local police district to book an appointment. UDI cannot help you to book an appointment.
-
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).
-
How do family members of EU/EEA citizens get a Norwegian identification number (D number or national identification number) and a tax deduction card?
If you are a family member of an EU/EEA citizen, you must contact the Norwegian Tax Administration to be assigned a Norwegian identification number (either a D number or a national identity number (fødselsnummer)).
You will be assigned a Norwegian identification number from the Norwegian Tax Administration by reporting your move to Norway (external website) after being granted a residence card as a family member to an EU/EEA citizen.
A D number (external website) is a temporary identifying number. A national identity number (external website) is a permanent indentifying number.
Suppose you want to start working before you have been granted a residence card as a family member to an EU/EEA citizen. In that case, you must apply to the Norwegian Tax Administration for a tax deduction card (external website). Before you start working, you must provide documentation showing that your family member has the right of residency in Norway. Having a right of residency means that the EU/EEA citizen is either an employee, self-employed, a student, has their own funds, or is employed by a foreign enterprise. Students residing in Norway on their own funds must have insurance.
-
Can I travel to other countries while I am living in Norway?
- After you have arrived in Norway and been issued your residence card, you can travel into and out of Norway for as long as your residence permit is valid.
- You must bring your passport and residence card when you travel.
- You can visit other Schengen countries for up to 90 days.
- You must live in Norway at least half of the time you have a residence permit for. If you have been given a residence permit for one year, you cannot stay abroad for more than six months in total during that year. If you have been given a residence permit for several years, you cannot stay abroad for more than a total of 182 days in any 365 day period. If you do so, you can lose your residence permit, and you will have to apply for a new residence permit.
- If you are later going to apply for a permanent residence permit, you can normally not have stayed outside Norway for more than a total of seven months in the past three years.
-
How long is a residence permit valid?
- The letter you receive from UDI states how long your residence permit is valid, normally one year.
- You must apply for renewal three months before your permit expires.
-
What kind of healthcare am I entitled to?
You are entitled to different types of healthcare (external website) depending on your situation.
-
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.
-
Can I work?
- If you are over the age of 18, you can work. You do not need to apply for a separate work permit. You have to apply for a tax deduction card (external website).
- If you are under the age of 18, you can work, but special rules apply in Norway to young people and work (external website).
- If you have been granted a residence permit to visit children in Norway for up to nine months, you cannot work.
-
Where can I find more information about living in Norway?
- "Ny i Norge": Useful information for those who have newly arrived in Norway (external website).
- Contact the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Service (NAV) if you have any questions about work or public benefits (external website).
- Contact the municipality you live in if you have any questions about language courses.
- Contact the Norwegian Tax Administration to notify a change of address and to receive answers to questions about taxation (external website).
-
Can I be granted refugee status and a travel document for refugees?
If the family member you were granted family immigration with has been granted refugee status in Norway, you can also apply for refugee status. This is also called 'derived' status.
If you are granted refugee status, you can also be issued a travel document for refugees, like your family member.
You must submit an application for refugee status and for a travel document for refugees.
-
What do I have to do if have been granted a residence permit to get married (fiance permit)?
This residence permit is valid for a maximum of six months. You must hand in the application for a residence permit with your spouse at least one month before the residence permit for getting married expires.
This means that you have less than five months to get married. On the Tax Administration's website you get an overview of what you have to do to get married (external website). There is a lot you need to do during these five months, therefore it is important that you start the formal processes surrounding the marriage as early as possible.
Rights and obligations
- You cannot get an extension or renewal of this residence permit if you for example postpone the wedding.
- You can work in Norway.
- You do not have the right to free training in the Norwegian language and social studies.
- You can travel in and out of Norway while the residence permit is valid.
- If you hand in the new application for a residence permit with your spouse at least one month before the old one expires, you still have the right to work while you wait for an answer to your application for the new residence permit.
- The time you have this residence permit does not count towards your residence period if you later apply for a permanent residence permit or Norwegian citizenship.
- While you have this type of residence permit your family members (for example your children) cannot apply for family immigration to move to you in Norway.
-
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 have provided incorrect or incomplete information
- the reason why you were granted residence in Norway no longer applies
- you have received a new type of residence permit
Here you will find more information about revoking a residence permit.