Our Expert in Norway
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Understanding how to start a business in Norway is the first step toward accessing one of Europe’s most stable, transparent and digitally advanced economies. Norway’s government portal Altinn was updated on 22 March 2026, and the Brønnøysund Register Centre (Brønnøysundregistrene) refreshed its fee schedule on 9 April 2026, giving founders a clearer registration pathway than ever before. Foreigners can own 100 % of a Norwegian company, corporate tax is competitive, and the entire incorporation process, from entity selection through VAT registration and first payroll, can be completed digitally.
This guide walks through every stage: choosing the right business structure, registering through Altinn, depositing share capital, meeting tax and VAT obligations, and hiring your first employee in full compliance with Norwegian labour law.
Selecting the correct entity type is the single most consequential decision a founder makes before filing any paperwork. Norway offers several legal forms, each with distinct implications for liability, taxation, governance and credibility with Norwegian counterparts.
The aksjeselskap (AS) is by far the most common vehicle for commercial operations in Norway. It is a separate legal entity, meaning shareholders’ liability is limited to the amount of their subscribed share capital. The minimum share capital for an AS is NOK 30,000, which must be fully paid up before registration. This capital can be contributed in cash or as a contribution in kind (apport), provided an independent valuation is obtained for non-cash contributions.
An AS must have a board of directors. Where the share capital is below NOK 3 million, a single board member is sufficient. Companies exceeding that threshold, or employing more than 30 people, face additional board-composition requirements. An AS is required to file annual accounts with the Brønnøysund Register Centre and may be subject to statutory audit depending on its size.
A sole proprietorship (ENK) suits freelancers, consultants and very small operators. There is no minimum share capital requirement, but the trade-off is significant: the owner is personally and unlimitedly liable for all business debts. ENK income is taxed as the owner’s personal income, which means progressive rates apply once earnings exceed standard thresholds. An ENK is quick to set up, registration through Altinn is free for the Enhetsregisteret entry, but the structure offers no liability shield and limited ability to bring in co-owners.
Foreign companies that want a presence in Norway without creating a separate Norwegian entity can register a NUF (Norskregistrert utenlandsk foretak), a Norwegian-registered foreign enterprise (branch). The branch is not a separate legal person; the parent company remains fully liable. A NUF is particularly useful for project-based work or market-testing phases. For groups planning multiple Nordic subsidiaries or substantial Norwegian investments, a Norwegian holding company (AS structure) may be advantageous due to the participation exemption regime, which can exempt qualifying share dividends and capital gains from tax.
One of the most common questions founders ask is how much it costs to register a company in Norway. The Brønnøysund Register Centre publishes its fee schedule, which was most recently updated on 9 April 2026. Below is a summary of the key registration costs.
| Cost item | Approximate amount (NOK) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Brønnøysundregistrene, digital registration (Foretaksregisteret) | NOK 5,570 | Electronic filing via Altinn; most common route |
| Brønnøysundregistrene, postal registration | NOK 6,797 | Paper-based filing; slower processing |
| Enhetsregisteret (Entity Register) entry | Free | Automatically included when filing Samordnet registermelding |
| Share capital deposit (AS) | NOK 30,000 minimum | Deposited into a dedicated bank account before registration |
| Legal / accounting set-up fees (typical) | NOK 5,000–25,000 | Varies by complexity; shareholder agreements, articles of association drafting |
| Bank account opening | Free–NOK 500 | Bank-dependent; some require in-person ID verification for foreign founders |
A straightforward digital registration of an AS through Altinn is typically processed within one to five business days after submission. Processing may take longer if attachments are incomplete, if the company name conflicts with an existing registered name, or if Brønnøysundregistrene requests supplementary documentation. Postal registrations can take several weeks. Once approved, the company receives its unique nine-digit organisation number (organisasjonsnummer), which is required for all subsequent filings, tax registration, VAT, bank accounts and employer reporting.
The Altinn company registration process is the backbone of setting up any Norwegian entity. Altinn serves as the unified digital gateway between businesses and government agencies, and its guidance for registering a private limited company (AS) was updated on 22 March 2026. Below is the full step-by-step walkthrough.
Before logging in to Altinn, ensure the following documents and decisions are ready:
The Samordnet registermelding (Coordinated Register Notification) is the central form used to register a company in Norway. It simultaneously notifies the Enhetsregisteret (Entity Register), the Foretaksregisteret (Register of Business Enterprises) and, where applicable, the VAT Register and the Employer/Employee Register. The form is completed and submitted electronically through Altinn.
Key fields that require particular attention include:
Once Brønnøysundregistrene approves the filing, the company appears in the Norway company registry (Enhetsregisteret) and receives its organisation number. This number is the company’s identity for all government interactions. Within the first weeks after registration, founders should:
The share capital requirement for a Norwegian AS is a minimum of NOK 30,000. While this threshold is low by European standards, the method of capitalisation and the governance framework around it carry practical consequences that founders should not underestimate.
There are three principal methods for paying up share capital in Norway:
| Method | Time to confirm | Documents needed |
|---|---|---|
| Cash deposit to Norwegian bank / blocked account | 1–5 business days (bank dependent) | Bank statement/confirmation; shareholder resolution; proof of identity |
| Contribution in kind (apport) | 2–6 weeks (valuation & registration) | Valuation report; minutes; auditor report (if required) |
| Escrow / capital guarantee | Variable (1–3 weeks) | Escrow agreement; bank/attorney confirmation; shareholder minutes |
Cash deposits are by far the most common and fastest route. The founding capital must be deposited into a dedicated bank account opened specifically for the incorporation; the bank then issues a confirmation letter that is attached to the Samordnet registermelding. Contributions in kind, such as equipment, intellectual property or receivables, require an independent valuation, which adds time and cost.
While not legally required, a shareholder agreement is strongly recommended for any AS with more than one owner. It typically covers pre-emption rights, drag-along and tag-along clauses, dividend policy, deadlock mechanisms and restrictions on share transfer. Industry observers note that disputes arising from the absence of a shareholder agreement are among the most common and costly issues facing Norwegian startups.
As the company grows, founders may need to raise additional equity. Norwegian company law permits share capital increases through new share issues (cash or apport) as well as through debt-to-equity conversions. The mechanics of converting debt into share capital, including the required resolutions, valuation and reporting, are governed by the Norwegian Private Limited Companies Act (aksjeloven). For a deeper analysis of this mechanism, see our guide on share capital increases by converting debt.
Tax compliance is one of the most scrutinised areas for newly formed Norwegian businesses. Getting VAT registration in Norway right from the outset avoids penalties and protects input-VAT recovery rights.
A business must register for VAT with the Norwegian Tax Administration (Skatteetaten) once its taxable turnover exceeds NOK 50,000 within a twelve-month period. Registration can be done through the Samordnet registermelding at the time of company registration or separately afterwards via Altinn. Once registered, the company is assigned to a VAT reporting period, typically bi-monthly (every two months), and must charge 25 % standard VAT (or reduced rates of 15 % or 12 % for certain goods and services) on all taxable supplies.
Voluntary registration is possible even before the threshold is reached, which can be beneficial for companies with significant start-up costs, as it allows recovery of input VAT on purchases from day one.
Norway’s standard corporate income tax rate is 22 %. Companies must file an annual tax return (skattemelding for næringsdrivende) with Skatteetaten, typically due by the end of May for the prior fiscal year. Advance tax payments are made in quarterly instalments during the income year. Proper tax planning, particularly around the participation exemption for holding structures and transfer pricing for cross-border groups, is essential for founders structuring international operations from Norway.
All Norwegian limited companies must maintain accounts in accordance with the Norwegian Accounting Act (regnskapsloven) and the Bookkeeping Act (bokføringsloven). Annual financial statements must be filed with the Brønnøysund Register Centre. Small companies that fall below certain thresholds (turnover, balance sheet total and number of employees) may be exempt from statutory audit, though they must still prepare and file annual accounts. For founders unfamiliar with what corporate services providers offer, engaging a Norwegian-qualified accountant (autorisert regnskapsfører) from the outset is strongly recommended.
Norway’s labour market is highly regulated, with strong employee protections. Employer obligations in Norway begin the moment a company enters into its first employment relationship, and several reporting duties must be satisfied on an ongoing monthly basis.
Norwegian law requires a written employment contract for every employee, issued no later than one month after the start of employment (or immediately if the engagement is shorter than one month). The contract must specify the job description, working hours, salary, notice period, holiday entitlements and any applicable collective agreements. A probationary period of up to six months is permitted, during which slightly shorter notice periods and modified dismissal grounds may apply.
Collective agreements (tariffavtaler) play a significant role in many industries. Even where a company is not formally bound by a collective agreement, it is common practice to align contract terms with industry-standard agreements to remain competitive in recruitment.
Every employer in Norway must submit a monthly A-melding (income report) to the Tax Administration, NAV and Statistics Norway. The A-melding contains information on salaries paid, tax deducted at source (PAYE / forskuddstrekk), employer social security contributions (arbeidsgiveravgift) and pension contributions. It is due by the 5th of the month following the pay period.
Employer social security contributions vary by geographical zone (ranging from 0 % in the northernmost zones to 14.1 % in central urban areas). These contributions are a significant payroll cost and must be factored into budgets when planning to hire. Companies must also withhold tax from employees’ salaries according to each employee’s tax card (skattekort), which is electronically available through Altinn.
All employers with employees are required to establish an occupational pension scheme (obligatorisk tjenestepensjon, OTP). The minimum contribution rate is 2 % of the employee’s salary between 1 G and 12 G (where G is the National Insurance base amount). Failing to set up an OTP scheme is a compliance violation that can result in sanctions. Setting up OTP typically involves entering into an agreement with a pension provider (bank, insurance company or pension fund) within the first few months of the first hire.
EEA/EU nationals can work in Norway without a work permit, though they must register with the police within three months. Non-EEA nationals require a residence permit for work purposes, which is typically applied for through UDI (the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration). Employers sponsoring foreign workers should factor in processing times of several weeks to months and ensure the employment contract is in place before the permit application is filed.
Norway places no restrictions on foreign ownership of private limited companies. A non-resident individual or foreign company can hold 100 % of an AS. However, there are important governance and practical considerations that foreign founders must navigate.
At least half of the board members, and the chairperson, must be resident in Norway or in an EEA country. If the company has only one board member, that person must be resident in the EEA. For non-EEA founders, this means appointing at least one EEA-resident director or applying for an exemption from the Norwegian authorities.
Foreign individuals who need to register as board members or signatories must obtain a D-number from the Norwegian Tax Administration. A D-number is a temporary identification number issued to persons who are not permanently resident in Norway but who have a need for identification in dealings with Norwegian authorities. The application can be submitted through a Norwegian embassy or consulate, or in some cases directly to a tax office in Norway.
Practical tips for non-resident founders:
Even straightforward incorporations can encounter problems when compliance steps are missed or delayed. The following checklist highlights the most frequent risks when setting up and running a business in Norway:
Founders who encounter uncertainty on any of these points should seek qualified legal advice early, rectifying compliance failures after the fact is invariably more costly than getting the structure right from the start. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects businesses with practitioners experienced in Norwegian corporate and commercial law.
Launching a company in Norway in 2026 is a structured, digitally streamlined process, but one that demands careful attention to corporate governance, tax compliance and employment law from day one. Understanding how to start a business in Norway means not only navigating the Altinn registration portal, but also making informed decisions about entity structure, capitalisation, VAT timing and workforce obligations.
A practical five-step action plan for founders:
For founders considering launching an investment fund from Norway, or exploring the broader range of corporate services available to businesses, specialist guidance is equally important. Whatever your structure, Norway rewards founders who plan carefully and comply diligently.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sigurd Knudtzon at Wahl-Larsen Advokatfirma AS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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