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how to make redundancies in Norway 2026

How to Lawfully Make Redundancies in Norway (2026): Employer Obligations Under the Updated Working Environment Act

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 days ago

Understanding how to make redundancies in Norway 2026 is now more demanding than at any point in the past decade. Amendments to the Working Environment Act (Arbeidsmiljøloven) that took effect on 1 January 2026, combined with the 2025–2029 main agreement (Hovedavtalen) between the Confederation of Norwegian Enterprise (NHO) and the Norwegian Confederation of Trade Unions (LO), have expanded employer consultation duties, tightened documentation requirements, and strengthened protections for vulnerable employee groups. This guide provides a step-by-step compliance framework, from the first board-level restructuring decision through to final notice delivery and recordkeeping, so that HR directors, in-house counsel and SME owners can execute restructuring in Norway 2026 lawfully and with minimal litigation exposure.

Executive Summary, Key Employer Obligations for Redundancies in Norway 2026

Before diving into the detail, here are the immediate actions every employer planning a workforce reduction must address:

  • Confirm statutory basis. Redundancy must rest on genuine operational, financial or organisational grounds under Section 15-7 of the Working Environment Act. Personal performance alone is not sufficient.
  • Complete the consultation duty before any decision is final. Under the 2026 amendments and the 2025–2029 main agreement, employers must engage employee representatives at the earliest possible stage, including sharing written documentation of the business rationale, proposed scope and timeline.
  • Notify NAV (Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration) at least 30 days before any collective redundancy takes effect. For mass lay-offs meeting statutory thresholds, failure to notify triggers administrative sanctions and may void individual terminations.
  • Apply objective, documented selection criteria. The updated non-discrimination and age-limit provisions mean that any weighting of seniority, competence, social factors or age must be recorded and defensible.
  • Monitor psychosocial working environment obligations. The 2026 changes reinforce the employer’s duty to assess and mitigate the psychological impact of restructuring on remaining and departing employees alike.

Quick action: If your organisation is contemplating redundancies in the coming weeks, begin with the consultation and documentation steps outlined in Sections 4 and 5 below, these are the areas where employers most frequently face legal challenge.

What Changed in the Working Environment Act (2026) and the 2025–2029 Main Agreement

The legislative landscape for restructuring Norway 2026 differs from prior years in several material ways. The amendments to the Working Environment Act, confirmed by the Ministry of Labour and Social Inclusion and published via Lovdata, target three core areas: enhanced consultation and information duties, updated rules on age discrimination and company-specific retirement ages, and expanded psychosocial working environment requirements. In parallel, the 2025–2029 main agreement between NHO and LO introduces stricter procedural expectations for employers bound by collective agreements.

Date Legal Change Employer Obligation
1 January 2026 Working Environment Act amendments, expanded consultation and information duties (Sections 8-1 to 8-3) Provide written documentation of business rationale, scope and alternatives to employee representatives before any restructuring decision is finalised.
1 January 2026 Updated age-discrimination and retirement-age provisions (Section 15-13a) Review and, where necessary, remove or justify any company-specific retirement age below the statutory upper limit. Document objective justification.
1 January 2026 Strengthened psychosocial working environment obligations (Section 4-3) Conduct a risk assessment of the psychosocial impact of planned redundancies; implement mitigation measures for both departing and remaining staff.
2025–2029 main agreement cycle NHO/LO Hovedavtalen, enhanced procedural requirements for restructuring consultations For unionised workplaces: engage union representatives earlier, provide more detailed written information, and allow adequate time for meaningful consultation before decisions are made.

Age, Retirement and Discriminatory Grounds, Practical Impact of the 2026 Changes

A frequently asked question is whether employers can keep company-specific retirement ages after 1 January 2026. The short answer is: only with a clear objective justification. The updated Section 15-13a narrows the scope for setting a mandatory retirement age below the general statutory limit. Employers who previously relied on internal retirement policies at, for example, age 67 must now demonstrate that the age limit is proportionate, non-discriminatory and justified by the nature of the role. Industry observers expect this to trigger a wave of policy reviews, particularly in sectors such as offshore energy, transport and healthcare, as companies reassess whether existing age limits survive scrutiny under the 2026 framework.

Does Norwegian Law Require Severance? Voluntary Settlements and Negotiated Exit Agreements

Norway has no general statutory right to severance pay for redundant employees. The Working Environment Act entitles dismissed workers only to their notice period and accrued holiday pay. However, negotiated termination agreements (sluttavtaler) are extremely common, particularly where the employer wants to avoid litigation risk or where the affected employee has long tenure.

A typical exit package in Norway may include:

  • Salary continuation beyond the notice period, often three to twelve months, depending on seniority and the strength of the employer’s legal position.
  • Outplacement support, career coaching, retraining programmes or job-search assistance.
  • Pension and insurance bridging, maintaining the employee’s membership in the company pension or health-insurance scheme for a transitional period.
  • A full and final settlement clause, waiving the employee’s right to challenge the termination before the courts.

Risk note: Tax treatment of settlement payments can be complex. Salary continuation is taxed as ordinary income, while certain lump-sum payments may qualify for favourable treatment if structured correctly. Employers should always take tax and legal advice before finalising severance terms. The Norwegian Labour Inspection Authority (Arbeidstilsynet) publishes guidance on employer duties in connection with termination and lay-off.

Step-by-Step: How to Make Redundancies in Norway (2026), Individual Dismissal Procedure and Documentation

Where an employer needs to reduce headcount on an individual (non-collective) basis, the dismissal procedure Norway requires is rigorous. Each step must be documented. Failure at any stage can result in a court declaring the dismissal invalid and ordering reinstatement, a remedy that remains available under Norwegian law.

Preparing the File

  1. Document the business rationale. Record the financial, operational or organisational reasons that make redundancy necessary. Minutes from board or management meetings are essential.
  2. Assess alternatives. The employer must demonstrate that it considered all reasonable alternatives, redeployment within the company, retraining, reduced hours, temporary lay-off, before selecting termination.
  3. Define objective selection criteria. Criteria such as competence, seniority, social circumstances and the employer’s operational needs must be weighted and applied consistently across the affected pool.

Conducting Consultation Meetings

  1. Invite the employee to a pre-dismissal meeting (drøftingsmøte). Under Section 15-1 of the Working Environment Act, the employer must hold an individual consultation meeting before any final decision. The employee may bring a representative (trade-union delegate or adviser).
  2. Present the rationale and selection criteria. Explain why this role, and this individual, has been selected. Give the employee a genuine opportunity to respond, present personal circumstances, and propose alternatives.
  3. Record minutes. Document the meeting content, any objections raised and the employer’s response. These minutes become critical evidence if the dismissal is later challenged.

Giving Notice, Content and Delivery Requirements

Formal notice must be delivered in writing and must contain the information prescribed by Section 15-4 of the Working Environment Act, as further detailed by Altinn’s employer guidance on redundancy. The notice must state:

  • The employee’s right to demand negotiations (forhandlinger) within two weeks of receiving notice.
  • The employee’s right to bring legal proceedings, including applicable deadlines.
  • The employee’s right to remain in the position during any legal dispute (unless the court orders otherwise).
  • The identity of the correct employer entity and the applicable notice period.

Checklist, redundancy notice contents:

  • ☐ Employee name, position and department
  • ☐ Grounds for redundancy (operational/financial/organisational)
  • ☐ Date of pre-dismissal meeting and summary of outcome
  • ☐ Notice period (statutory minimum or contractual, whichever is longer)
  • ☐ Right to demand negotiations, 2-week deadline
  • ☐ Right to bring legal proceedings and applicable time limits
  • ☐ Right to remain in position during dispute
  • ☐ Employer’s name, organisation number and signatory

Statutory notice periods depend on tenure and age. The minimum is one month where the employee has been employed for less than five years, increasing with length of service and age. Employer obligations Norway 2026 require strict compliance with these periods, any error in calculation or delivery can invalidate the notice.

Collective Redundancies in Norway: Step-by-Step Timeline, Notifications and NAV/Union Engagement

When restructuring affects a larger number of employees, additional obligations apply. The collective redundancies Norway framework implements EU Directive 98/59/EC and is codified in Chapter 15 of the Working Environment Act and supplemented by the NAV employer guidance.

When Is a Redundancy “Collective”?

A redundancy is classified as collective when an employer contemplates dismissing at least 10 employees within a 30-day period. This threshold includes terminations that are not strictly labelled “redundancy” but result from the same restructuring decision, for example, mutual termination agreements that form part of a wider workforce reduction. Industry observers note that the 2026 consultation requirements Norway must satisfy make early identification of this threshold essential.

Notification to NAV: What to Send and When

The employer must notify NAV at least 30 days before collective redundancies take effect. The notification, sent to the local NAV office, must include:

  • The reasons for the planned redundancies.
  • The number of employees to be dismissed and their occupational categories.
  • The total workforce at the establishment.
  • The proposed timeline for redundancies.
  • The selection criteria to be applied.
  • Confirmation that consultation with employee representatives has commenced.

No individual dismissal in a collective redundancy may take effect before the 30-day notification period has elapsed. The employer must also send a copy of the NAV notification to the employee representatives.

Union and Employee Representative Meetings: Agenda and Minutes

Consultation with employee representatives must begin as soon as collective redundancies are contemplated, and in any event before the NAV notification is sent. Under the 2025–2029 main agreement, the consultation requirements for unionised workplaces are more detailed, requiring the employer to provide written documentation of:

  • The business rationale and financial position.
  • Alternatives to redundancy that have been considered and why they were rejected.
  • Proposed selection criteria and their weighting.
  • Measures to mitigate the consequences of the redundancies (outplacement, retraining, extended notice).

Minutes must be taken at every consultation meeting. Failure to consult meaningfully, or to engage representatives at an early enough stage, is one of the most common grounds for successful legal challenge.

Action Responsible Party Deadline
Board/management decision to explore restructuring Employer (board/CEO) Week 1
Initial consultation with employee representatives, share written documentation Employer + HR Week 1–2
Representatives respond with written comments and alternative proposals Employee representatives / union Week 2–3
Further consultation meetings; employer considers alternatives Employer + representatives Week 3–4
Notify NAV (minimum 30 days before first dismissal takes effect) Employer Week 4
Individual pre-dismissal meetings (drøftingsmøter) Employer + affected employees Week 5–6
Issue individual redundancy notices Employer Week 6–7 (earliest: 30 days after NAV notification)
Psychosocial follow-up and outplacement support commences Employer / HR Week 7–8 and ongoing

Selection Criteria and Non-Discrimination: Employer Obligations Norway 2026

One of the highest-risk areas for employers making redundancies is the selection of which employees will be dismissed. Norwegian courts apply close scrutiny to the criteria used and the consistency with which they are applied. The 2026 changes reinforce the prohibition on discrimination based on age, disability, gender, pregnancy, parental leave status and trade-union membership.

The following scoring matrix is widely used in Norwegian practice. Each criterion is weighted according to the employer’s operational needs, and the weighting must be documented and applied consistently:

Criterion How to Score Documentation Required
Competence and qualifications Formal qualifications, certifications, performance reviews, relevant experience HR records, appraisals, training certificates
Seniority (length of service) Total years of continuous service; may be adjusted for sector-specific norms Employment contracts, payroll records
Social circumstances Age, family dependents, health, re-employability, financial hardship Self-declaration by employee (offered at consultation meeting), HR notes
Operational need for specific skills Essential competences the business must retain to continue operations Organisational charts, project plans, role specifications

Protected employees: Pregnant employees and those on parental leave enjoy heightened protection, redundancy of such individuals carries an extremely high litigation risk. Trade-union representatives and safety delegates also have enhanced protection. Early indications suggest that the 2026 amendments, combined with existing case law, make it practically necessary for employers to demonstrate that no viable alternative to terminating a protected employee exists.

Psychosocial Working Environment and Redeployment Obligations, 2026 Changes

The psychosocial working environment 2026 obligations are among the most significant practical changes for employers. Section 4-3 of the Working Environment Act, as strengthened from 1 January 2026, requires employers to systematically assess and address the psychological and social impact of organisational change, including redundancy programmes, on both departing and remaining employees.

In practice, employers should:

  • Conduct a psychosocial risk assessment before announcing any redundancy programme. Identify groups likely to experience heightened stress, for example, employees with long tenure, those in isolated roles, or individuals with known health vulnerabilities.
  • Offer redeployment wherever reasonably possible. The duty to consider suitable alternative positions extends to the entire organisation, including other departments, locations and subsidiaries.
  • Provide structured support measures. Outplacement programmes, retraining budgets, psychological counselling and extended notice periods are all tools that mitigate both psychosocial harm and litigation risk.
  • Communicate transparently and frequently. Keeping affected and remaining employees informed, including about the timeline, the support available and the reasoning behind decisions, reduces uncertainty and its associated harm.

The Arbeidstilsynet provides detailed guidance on psychosocial obligations, and the 2026 updates emphasise that restructuring is a specific trigger event that requires documented assessment and response.

Practical Documentation Pack, Templates, Checklists and Recordkeeping

Robust documentation is the single most effective defence against a successful legal challenge. The following templates and records should form the employer’s restructuring file:

📄 Downloadable templates (recommended):

  • Consultation notice to employee representatives, a template letter initiating the consultation process, including the information required by Section 8-2 of the Working Environment Act and the 2025–2029 main agreement.
  • Collective redundancy notification to NAV, a template form meeting the requirements of Chapter 15 and NAV employer guidance.
  • Individual redundancy notice, a template letter complying with Section 15-4, including all mandatory information set out in the checklist above.
  • Selection scoring sheet, a template matrix applying competence, seniority, social circumstances and operational need, with space for documentation references.

Minimum records to retain:

Document What It Contains Recommended Retention Period
Board/management minutes Decision to restructure, rationale, scope 10 years
Consultation meeting minutes Dates, attendees, points discussed, employee objections, employer responses 10 years
NAV notification (copy) Content of notification, date sent, proof of delivery 10 years
Individual drøftingsmøte minutes Date, attendees, rationale presented, employee response, alternatives discussed 5 years after termination
Selection scoring sheets Criteria, weighting, individual scores, reasons for selection/non-selection 5 years after termination
Redundancy notices (signed copies) Full notice text, date of delivery, method of delivery 5 years after termination

Litigation and Dispute Risk, Common Employer Mistakes When Making Redundancies in Norway 2026

Norwegian courts have a long track record of scrutinising employer conduct during restructuring. The most common litigation triggers are:

  • Insufficient or late consultation. Courts have repeatedly held that a pro-forma meeting held after the decision has already been taken does not satisfy the statutory duty. The consultation must be genuine and timely.
  • Poor selection documentation. Where an employer cannot produce contemporaneous records showing how selection criteria were applied, courts draw adverse inferences.
  • Discriminatory selection. Selecting employees on the basis of age, pregnancy, parental leave or trade-union membership, whether directly or indirectly, will almost certainly result in invalidity.
  • Failure to consider alternatives. If the employer did not explore redeployment, reduced hours, temporary lay-off or other alternatives, the dismissal is vulnerable to challenge.
  • Defective notice content or delivery. A notice that omits any of the mandatory information (rights to negotiate, litigate or remain in position) is formally invalid.

Likely remedies if a redundancy is found unlawful: The court may order reinstatement (the default remedy under Norwegian law) and/or compensation. Compensation awards typically cover lost wages and may include a discretionary amount for non-economic loss. The practical effect of a reinstatement order can be highly disruptive, industry observers report that many employers prefer to settle rather than face this outcome, which underscores the value of getting the process right from the outset.

Practical Checklist and 8-Week Employer Timeline for a Collective Redundancy

The following condensed timeline summarises the key steps for a lawful collective redundancy in Norway in 2026. It should be read alongside the detailed guidance above.

  • Week 1: ☐ Board decision to explore restructuring. ☐ Identify affected pool and preliminary selection criteria. ☐ Prepare written documentation for employee representatives.
  • Week 1–2: ☐ Initiate consultation with employee representatives. ☐ Share written documentation of rationale, scope and alternatives.
  • Week 2–3: ☐ Receive and consider representative responses and alternative proposals.
  • Week 3–4: ☐ Further consultation meetings. ☐ Finalise selection criteria and apply scoring matrix. ☐ Prepare NAV notification.
  • Week 4: ☐ Submit collective redundancy notification to NAV (30-day clock starts). ☐ Send copy to employee representatives.
  • Week 5–6: ☐ Conduct individual pre-dismissal meetings (drøftingsmøter). ☐ Document each meeting.
  • Week 6–7: ☐ Issue individual redundancy notices (not before 30-day NAV period has elapsed). ☐ Ensure notice contains all mandatory information.
  • Week 7–8: ☐ Commence outplacement support. ☐ Conduct psychosocial risk assessment for remaining staff. ☐ File all documentation.

Conclusion, Next Steps for Employers Planning Redundancies in Norway 2026

The 2026 framework for how to make redundancies in Norway demands rigorous process, early consultation, objective selection and comprehensive documentation. Employers who invest time in getting each step right, from the initial board decision through to psychosocial follow-up, will substantially reduce their litigation exposure and protect the integrity of the restructuring. Those who treat the consultation duty as a formality, or who fail to document selection decisions, face the real prospect of reinstatement orders and compensation awards.

Whether you are an HR director managing your first Norwegian restructuring or an experienced in-house counsel navigating the 2026 amendments, the most effective risk-mitigation step is to engage specialist employment law advice at the earliest possible stage. Global Law Experts’ lawyer directory connects employers with experienced labour law specialists across Norway who can guide every phase of the process.

Last reviewed: 30 April 2026

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kristoffer Dalvang at Verito, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Lovdata, Working Environment Act (Arbeidsmiljøloven) consolidated text (2026)
  2. Arbeidstilsynet (Norwegian Labour Inspection Authority), guidance on redundancies and lay-offs
  3. Altinn, Termination of employment / redundancy guidance for employers
  4. Regjeringen / Ministry of Labour, announcements on 2026 Working Environment Act changes
  5. NAV (Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration), guidance for employers on collective redundancies
  6. NHO, guidance on collective agreements and the 2025–2029 main agreement
  7. DLA Piper, Nordic employment law bulletin
  8. L&E Global, employment law overview (Norway)
  9. Advokatfirmaet Lippestad, practical guidance on downsizing in Norway

FAQs

1. What changes to the Working Environment Act took effect 1 January 2026?
The 2026 amendments expanded employer consultation and information duties (Sections 8-1 to 8-3), tightened rules on company-specific retirement ages (Section 15-13a), and strengthened psychosocial working environment obligations (Section 4-3). Employers must now provide written documentation to employee representatives before finalising any restructuring decision.
Employers face stricter procedural requirements: earlier and more detailed consultation, documented consideration of alternatives, enhanced non-discrimination duties, and formal psychosocial risk assessments. The 2025–2029 main agreement adds further requirements for unionised workplaces.
The employer must consult employee representatives, notify NAV at least 30 days before dismissals take effect, hold individual pre-dismissal meetings, apply objective and documented selection criteria, and deliver written notices containing all mandatory information prescribed by the Working Environment Act.
There is no general statutory right to severance pay. However, negotiated termination agreements are common and may include salary continuation, outplacement support and pension bridging. The terms depend on individual circumstances, tenure and the employer’s litigation risk profile.
Only with objective justification. The 2026 amendments narrow the scope for mandatory retirement ages below the general statutory limit. Employers must demonstrate that any company-specific age limit is proportionate, non-discriminatory and justified by the nature of the role.
Board and consultation minutes, NAV notifications and selection scoring sheets should be retained for a minimum of five to ten years. Longer retention is advisable where litigation risk remains, particularly for high-value or disputed terminations.
The most frequent grounds are: inadequate or late consultation, lack of documented selection criteria, discriminatory selection (age, pregnancy, union membership), failure to consider alternatives such as redeployment, and defective notice content or delivery.
Ideally before the first consultation meeting. Early legal advice ensures that the business rationale, selection criteria, documentation and notice letters are legally compliant from the outset, significantly reducing the risk of challenge and the cost of any subsequent dispute.

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How to Lawfully Make Redundancies in Norway (2026): Employer Obligations Under the Updated Working Environment Act

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