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Key FindingsRoad Safety DataTheory Test FormatLicence ProcessFeesLicence CategoriesSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesRoad HazardsCountiesEmergency NumbersMisconceptionsRecent ChangesGlobal ComparisonSourcesFAQ
🇳🇴Complete Guide 2026Updated March 2026

Norwegian Driving Licence 2026
The Complete Guide

Everything you need to know about getting your førerkort in Norway — theory test (45 MCQ, 84% pass mark), total cost (NOK 25,000–50,000), 0.02% BAC limit, speed limits, traffic fines, winter driving rules, and the mandatory trafikalt grunnkurs.

15
Counties (Fylker)
45
Test Questions
87
Road Deaths (2024)
NOK 25–50K
Total Cost
15 CountiesFee BreakdownSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesLicence Categories
Copy

87

Road deaths in Norway (2024)

~1.6 per 100K — among the world's safest — SSB/SVV

Copy

~1.6

Deaths per 100,000 population

Sweden ~2.2, Germany ~3.4, UK 2.5, USA 12.2 — Norway is among the safest

Copy

NOK 25–50K

Total cost for Category B licence

~$2,300–4,600 USD — includes driving school, tests, and fees

Click any card to copy the stat with source attribution

Download Infographic

Key Findings

Theory TestStatens vegvesen

45 multiple-choice questions, 90 minutes, 84% pass mark (38/45 correct answers). Fee: NOK 480. Computer-based at Statens vegvesen test centres. Available in Norwegian (Bokmål/Nynorsk), English, Arabic, Northern Sami, Kurdish, and Turkish. Dictionary permitted. Covers traffic rules, road signs, speed limits, first aid, and environmental driving.

Total CostStatens vegvesen / Driving Schools

NOK 25,000–50,000 (~$2,300–4,600 USD) total: driving school tuition NOK 20,000–45,000 (varies by school and region), mandatory trafikalt grunnkurs (~NOK 3,500), theory test NOK 480, practical driving test NOK 1,540, licence issuance NOK 270, photo NOK 100. Oslo is typically the most expensive region.

Road DeathsSSB / Statens vegvesen / WHO

87 fatalities in 2024 (~1.6 per 100K, pop. ~5.5M) — the lowest on record and among the safest in the world. Down from 108 in 2019 (a 19% reduction). Norway's Vision Zero policy, strict enforcement, and high-quality infrastructure have driven continuous improvement.

BAC LimitVegtrafikkloven / ETSC

0.02% BAC (0.2 per mille) — one of the strictest in Europe. Novice drivers (<2 years) and professional drivers: zero tolerance. Penalties: 0.2–0.5‰ = fine (typically 1.5× monthly salary) + possible suspension. 0.5–0.8‰ = fine + 12–18 month licence loss. >0.8‰ = court case, possible imprisonment. >1.2‰ = unconditional imprisonment.

Penalty PointsStatens vegvesen / Vegtrafikkloven

Norway uses a demerit point system (prikksystem): 8 points in 3 years = 6-month licence suspension. Points per offence: phone use 3 pts, red light 3 pts, speeding 16–20 km/h over 2 pts, speeding 21+ km/h over 3 pts. Points are recorded on your driving record and reset after 3 years from each offence.

Global ContextWHO / SSB / IRTAD

Death rate ~1.6/100K vs Sweden ~2.2, Germany ~3.4, UK 2.5, USA 12.2. Drives on the right. 0.02% BAC (strictest tier in Europe alongside Sweden). 900+ road tunnels (most in the world per capita). AutoPASS electronic toll with 400+ toll points. Mandatory winter driving training and dark-driving sessions.

Norway Road Safety: 6-Year Trend (2019–2024)

According to Statistisk sentralbyrå (SSB) and Statens vegvesen, Norway recorded just {deaths} in 2024 — the lowest figure on record. Road fatalities have decreased from 108 in 2019 to 87 in 2024, a 19% reduction. Norway consistently ranks among the safest countries in the world for road safety, alongside Sweden and Switzerland. The country's Vision Zero policy, strict enforcement, extensive use of speed cameras, and high-quality road infrastructure continue to drive improvement.

2019
108
2020
95
(COVID-19 restrictions)
2021
98
2022
116
2023
87
2024
93

2019→2020

-12.0%

2020→2021

+3.2%

2021→2022

+18.4%

2022→2023

-25.0%

2023→2024

+6.9%

Deaths per 100,000 Population

🇺🇸USA
12.2
🇩🇪Germany
3.4
🇬🇧UK
2.5
🇸🇪Sweden
2.2
🇳🇴Norway
1.6

Source: SSB, Statens vegvesen, WHO Global Status Report on Road Safety, IRTAD. Per-capita rates are estimates and may vary by methodology.

Table of Contents

Road Safety DataTheory Test FormatLicence ProcessFeesLicence CategoriesSpeed LimitsTraffic FinesImportant RulesRoad HazardsCountiesEmergency NumbersMisconceptionsRecent ChangesGlobal ComparisonFAQSourcesCite This Page
SVV Exam

Norway Theory Test Format#

The theory test is administered by Statens vegvesen at official test centres

The Norwegian driving theory test (teoriprøve) consists of 45 multiple-choice questions to be completed within 90 minutes. To pass, you must answer at least 38 questions correctly (84% pass mark). The test fee is NOK 480. It is computer-based at Statens vegvesen test centres and available in Norwegian (Bokmål and Nynorsk), English, Arabic, Northern Sami, Kurdish, and Turkish. A dictionary is permitted. You can navigate back and forth between questions. Topics include traffic rules and regulations, road signs and signals, speed limits, right-of-way rules, first aid, environmental driving, and driving in different conditions (winter, tunnels, darkness). Extra time is available upon request.

Questions

45

Multiple-choice format

Duration

90 Min

~2 min per question

Pass Mark

84%

38 out of 45 correct

Test Fee

NOK 480

Theory test fee

What the Theory Test Covers

Traffic Rules & Signs
  • Traffic signals, road signs, and road markings
  • Right-of-way rules and the høyreregel (right-hand priority)
  • Speed limits by road type and conditions
  • Parking and stopping regulations
  • Pedestrian crossings and school zones
Vehicle & Safety
  • Seatbelt and child restraint regulations
  • Vehicle maintenance and safety equipment requirements
  • Warning triangle and reflective vest requirements
  • Winter tyre requirements and tread depth rules
  • First aid and accident scene procedures
Advanced Situations
  • Alcohol limits (0.02% BAC) and drug-driving laws
  • Motorway and expressway driving rules
  • Tunnel driving safety (900+ tunnels in Norway)
  • Winter driving, darkness, and adverse weather
  • Environmental driving and fuel economy (ECO driving)
vegvesen.noPractice Theory Questions Free
Step by Step

How to Get Your Norwegian Driving Licence#

From trafikalt grunnkurs to full licence — the complete step-by-step process

1

Complete Trafikalt Grunnkurs (Basic Traffic Course)

Mandatory first step — available from age 15

The trafikalt grunnkurs is a mandatory basic traffic course (17 hours for those under 25, reduced for 25+). It covers traffic rules, first aid, risk awareness, and driving in darkness. This must be completed at an approved driving school before you can begin practice driving. Cost: approximately NOK 3,000–4,500.

2

Practice Driving with Supervisor

Private practice driving from age 16 with an approved supervisor

From age 16, you can practice driving with a private supervisor (parent or guardian) who is at least 25 years old and has held a valid Category B licence for at least 5 years. No minimum hours required by law, but driving schools recommend extensive practice. Log your practice hours in a kjøreopplæringsbok (driving log).

3

Complete Mandatory Driving School Training

Professional driving instruction covering all mandatory stages

Mandatory stages include: basic vehicle operation, road driving in traffic, motorway driving, night/darkness driving session, and driving on slippery surfaces (sikkerhetskurs på bane). Driving schools typically recommend 20–40 hours of professional instruction depending on skill level. Cost: NOK 700–1,200 per lesson.

4

Pass the Theory Test

Take and pass the 45-question multiple-choice theory test

45 MCQ questions, 90 minutes, 84% pass mark (38/45). Fee: NOK 480. Computer-based at Statens vegvesen centres. Can be taken from age 17.5 (6 months before turning 18). Dictionary permitted. You can retake the test with no waiting period.

5

Complete Mandatory Safety Course on Track

Sikkerhetskurs på bane — mandatory practical safety training

This course is conducted at an approved training track and covers emergency braking, skid control, and driving on slippery surfaces. Typically takes one full day. Must be completed before the practical driving test. Cost included in driving school package or NOK 3,000–5,000 separately.

6

Pass the Practical Driving Test and Receive Licence

Pass the on-road practical test at a Statens vegvesen centre

Fee: NOK 1,540 (at DVLO) or NOK 1,490 (online booking). Approximately 65 minutes including vehicle check, urban and rural driving, and possible motorway section. The examiner evaluates all aspects of safe driving. Upon passing, pay the licence issuance fee (NOK 270 at DVLO / NOK 160 online) and receive your Norwegian driving licence.

Cost Breakdown

Norwegian Driving Licence Fees#

Total cost typically NOK 25,000–50,000 (~$2,300–4,600 USD) — driving school tuition is the largest expense

Driving school tuition (varies by school and region)NOK 20,000–45,000
Trafikalt grunnkurs (mandatory basic traffic course)NOK 3,000–4,500
Theory test (teoriprøve)NOK 480
Practical driving test (førerprøve)NOK 1,540
Licence issuance (førerkort)NOK 270
PhotoNOK 100
Safety course on track (sikkerhetskurs på bane)NOK 3,000–5,000
Additional lessons (per hour, if needed)NOK 700–1,200
Total Typical (Category B via driving school)NOK 25,000–50,000

Costs vary by region and driving school. Oslo tends to be most expensive. Official Statens vegvesen fees are fixed (as of 1 Feb 2026): theory test NOK 480, practical test NOK 1,540 (DVLO) / NOK 1,490 (online), licence issuance NOK 270 (DVLO) / NOK 160 (online). Exchange rate: approximately $1 USD ≈ NOK 10.8. Total in USD: approximately $2,300–4,600.

Categories

Licence Categories & Minimum Age

Moped (Category AM)

16 years — requires moped certificate

16

years

Motorcycle (Category A) — all sizes

24 years (direct access) or 20 (progressive from A2)

24

years

Passenger Car (Category B) — up to 3.5t

18 years — most common category

18

years

Heavy Vehicle (Category C) — over 3.5t

21 years (18 with vocational training)

21

years

Licence Validity

Category B (standard car)

Physical card valid for 15 years, driving rights valid until age 80

15 years
Category C/D (trucks/buses)

Requires medical certificate at each renewal

5 years
Holders aged 80+

Requires health certificate from a doctor — medical exam mandatory

Up to 3 years

Foreign Licence Conversion

  • EU/EEA licence holders can drive freely in Norway — no conversion needed while licence is valid
  • Non-EU/EEA licences from Vienna Convention countries: valid for 3 months (tourists) or until residency is established
  • Non-Roman alphabet licences require IDP or official English translation
  • Permanent residents must convert foreign licence within 1 year — some countries require retesting
  • US and UK licence holders: conversion possible but may require practical test

Penalty Points System (Prikksystemet)

  • Norway uses a penalty points system (prikker/prikksystemet) administered by Statens vegvesen
  • Points accumulate per traffic offence — they remain for 3 years from each offence
  • 8 points accumulated in 3 years = 6-month licence suspension
  • Phone use while driving: 3 penalty points
  • Running a red light: 3 penalty points
  • Speeding 16–20 km/h over: 2 penalty points
  • Speeding 21+ km/h over: 3 penalty points
  • After suspension, licence can be reinstated but points continue to accumulate on new offences
Speed Limits

Speed Limits in Norway#

As per Vegtrafikkloven (Road Traffic Act) — all speeds in km/h

Norwegian speed limits are generally lower than in most European countries, reflecting the country's commitment to road safety and Vision Zero. Built-up areas default to 50 km/h (residential zones often 30 km/h). Rural roads are 80 km/h. Expressways range 90–100 km/h. The maximum motorway speed is 110 km/h on selected dual carriageways. Heavy vehicles (over 3.5 tonnes) and vehicles towing trailers are limited to 80 km/h regardless of posted limits. Average-speed enforcement (streknings-ATK) is widely used, especially in tunnels. Speed fines are among the highest in Europe — ranging from NOK 1,200 for 1–5 km/h over to NOK 15,850 for 31–35 km/h over, with court prosecution for higher speeds.

Speed limits in Norway by road type, in km/h. Source: Vegtrafikkloven.
Road TypeCarsHeavy/TrailersNote
Residential zones303030 km/h common in residential areas
Built-up areas (urban)5050Default within city/town limits
Rural roads8080Default outside built-up areas
Expressways90–10080Posted 90 or 100 km/h
Motorways (max)11080Selected dual carriageways only

Residential zones

30

Cars

30

Heavy

30 km/h common in residential areas

Built-up areas (urban)

50

Cars

50

Heavy

Default within city/town limits

Rural roads

80

Cars

80

Heavy

Default outside built-up areas

Expressways

90–100

Cars

80

Heavy

Posted 90 or 100 km/h

Motorways (max)

110

Cars

80

Heavy

Selected dual carriageways only

Heavy vehicles (>3.5t) and vehicles towing trailers: max 80 km/h regardless of posted limit. Unbraked trailers: max 60 km/h. Average-speed cameras (streknings-ATK) operate in many tunnels and on high-risk stretches. Norway has some of the highest speeding fines in Europe — exceeding the limit by 36+ km/h (in zones ≥70 km/h) results in licence seizure and court prosecution. Always look for posted signs as local limits may differ.

Traffic Fines

Traffic Fines & Penalties#

Fines, penalty points, and additional penalties for common violations in Norway

Norway has some of the highest traffic fines in Europe. Speeding fines are fixed-rate for lower offences but escalate to court prosecution for serious speeding. The penalty points system (prikksystemet) means 8 points in 3 years triggers a 6-month suspension. Fines are updated regularly — the amounts below reflect the March 2025 schedule. For severe offences (speeding 36+ km/h over in zones ≥70 km/h, or DUI >0.5‰), penalties include licence seizure, court proceedings, and potential imprisonment.

Traffic fines and penalties in Norway. Amounts in NOK. Source: Statens vegvesen / Forskrift om forenklet forelegg.
ViolationFine (NOK)PointsOther
Speeding — 1–5 km/h overNOK 1,2000—
Speeding — 6–10 km/h overNOK 3,2500—
Speeding — 11–15 km/h overNOK 5,200–5,8000—
Speeding — 16–20 km/h overNOK 6,800–8,7002—
Speeding — 21–25 km/h overNOK 9,800–13,0503—
Speeding — 26–30 km/h overNOK 11,150–13,7503—
Speeding — 31–35 km/h overNOK 15,600–15,8503Licence seizure
Running a red lightNOK 6,8003—
Phone use while drivingNOK 10,7503—
No seatbeltNOK 1,5000—
Parking violation (municipal)NOK 660–9000—
Illegal overtakingNOK 6,800–10,7503Licence seizure
DUI (0.2–0.5‰ BAC)~1.5× monthly salary0Licence loss 12–18mo
DUI (>0.5‰ BAC)Court / imprisonment0Imprisonment

Speeding — 1–5 km/h over

NOK 1,200

Speeding — 6–10 km/h over

NOK 3,250

Speeding — 11–15 km/h over

NOK 5,200–5,800

Speeding — 16–20 km/h over

NOK 6,800–8,700Pts: 2

Speeding — 21–25 km/h over

NOK 9,800–13,050Pts: 3

Speeding — 26–30 km/h over

NOK 11,150–13,750Pts: 3

Speeding — 31–35 km/h over

NOK 15,600–15,850Pts: 3 · Licence seizure

Running a red light

NOK 6,800Pts: 3

Phone use while driving

NOK 10,750Pts: 3

No seatbelt

NOK 1,500

Parking violation (municipal)

NOK 660–900

Illegal overtaking

NOK 6,800–10,750Pts: 3 · Licence seizure

DUI (0.2–0.5‰ BAC)

~1.5× monthly salary · Licence loss 12–18mo

DUI (>0.5‰ BAC)

Court / imprisonment · Imprisonment

Speeding fines vary by speed zone — higher zones have lower fines at the same excess. 36+ km/h over (in zones ≥70): licence seizure + court prosecution with income-based penalties. DUI penalties: 0.2–0.5‰ = fine (typically 1.5× gross monthly salary) + possible conditional licence loss. 0.5–0.8‰ = fine + 12–18 month licence loss. >0.8‰ = court case, possible imprisonment + 2+ year licence loss. >1.2‰ = unconditional prison sentence. All fines as of March 2025 schedule (Forskrift om forenklet forelegg).

Know these rules before your theory test

Traffic fines, speed limits, BAC rules, and winter driving regulations are frequently tested in the teoriprøve. Practice with real exam-style questions.

Start Practising Free
Key Rules

Important Driving Rules in Norway

Drive on the Right

Norway drives on the right side of the road. Overtake only on the left. At unmarked intersections, yield to vehicles coming from the right (høyreregel / right-hand priority rule). This is one of the most commonly tested topics.

BAC Limit 0.02% (0.2‰)

One of the strictest alcohol limits in Europe. Novice drivers and professionals: zero tolerance. Penalties are income-based and escalate with BAC level. >0.5‰: licence loss 12–18 months. >0.8‰: court case and possible imprisonment. >1.2‰: unconditional imprisonment. Drug-driving has the same penalties.

AutoPASS Electronic Toll

Over 400 automated toll points nationwide — no manual booths. AutoPASS tag gives 20% discount. Without tag: highest rate + invoice fees. Rush-hour surcharges in cities (Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim). Zero-emission vehicles pay up to 50% of standard rate with AutoPASS. Motorcycles are exempt.

Winter Tyres (Vinterdekk)

Winter tyres must match conditions from November 1 to first Sunday after Easter Monday. Northern Norway (Nordland, Troms, Finnmark): October 16 to April 30. Minimum 3mm tread depth. Crashing without proper winter tyres: insurance can deny the entire claim. Studded tyres need city fees in Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim.

Mandatory Headlights

Dipped/low-beam headlights are mandatory at ALL times — day and night, year-round. This has been Norwegian law since 1985. Right-hand-drive vehicles must use beam converters to avoid dazzling oncoming traffic.

Mandatory Equipment

All vehicles must carry a warning triangle and a reflective safety vest. These must be deployed at any breakdown or accident scene. Third-party insurance (trafikkforsikring) is mandatory. Recommended: first aid kit, spare bulbs, tow rope.

Child Seat Rules

Children under 135 cm must use an approved child seat. Children under 15 months must be rear-facing. Rear-facing seats in front of active airbags are forbidden. The driver is responsible for ensuring children under 15 are properly restrained.

Phone Use Prohibited

Handheld phone use while driving is strictly prohibited — even briefly holding the phone is illegal. Only hands-free systems are permitted. Fine: NOK 10,750 + 3 penalty points. 8 penalty points in 3 years = 6-month licence suspension.

Tram Priority

Trams (trikk) always have priority in Norwegian traffic. You must yield to trams at all times, including when they are turning. Never park on or block tram tracks. This applies in Oslo, Bergen (Bybanen light rail), and Trondheim.

Stay Safe

Common Road Hazards in Norway

87 road fatalities in 2024 — know these hazards to stay safe on Norwegian roads

Moose & Reindeer (Elg og Rein)

Approximately 20,000 animal-vehicle collisions per year, including over 1,000 moose collisions. A fully-grown moose is as tall as a car — collisions are often fatal. High-risk periods: winter, dawn/dusk, full moon. Reindeer are common in northern Norway. If you hit an animal, report to police on 02800.

Winter Road Conditions

Norwegian winters bring ice, snow, and near-zero visibility. Roads may be snow-covered or icy for months. Black ice is particularly dangerous. Always use winter tyres, carry emergency supplies, and check road conditions on vegvesen.no or the Statens vegvesen app before driving.

Tunnel Driving (900+ Tunnels)

Norway has over 900 road tunnels, many single-tube with two-way traffic. The longest is the Lærdal Tunnel at 24 km. Ice bumps form near tunnel entrances due to temperature differences. Reduced speed limits inside tunnels. Average-speed cameras are common. Use headlights (mandatory anyway).

Mountain Roads & Steep Passes

Many Norwegian roads include steep mountain passes with hairpin bends, narrow sections, and no guardrails. Some roads have passing places for oncoming traffic. In winter, many mountain passes close entirely. Check road status at vegvesen.no before crossing mountain roads.

Darkness (Mørketid)

In northern Norway, polar night (mørketid) means no daylight for weeks in winter. Even southern Norway has very short daylight hours in winter. Mandatory headlights help, but reduced visibility increases risk. Wildlife collisions peak during darkness.

Aquaplaning & Wet Roads

Heavy rainfall, especially in western Norway, creates aquaplaning risk on highways. Standing water on roads is common during autumn storms. Reduce speed significantly in wet conditions. Norway's climate means rain is frequent across all seasons except deep winter.

All Counties

Norway's 15 Counties (Fylker)

Driving test administration is handled by Statens vegvesen offices across all 15 counties

Norway's 15 counties (fylker) with administrative centres and approximate populations, as of January 2024 reorganisation.
County (Fylke)Administrative CentrePopulation
OsloOslo717K
AkershusLillestrøm723K
ØstfoldSarpsborg327K
BuskerudDrammen296K
InnlandetHamar373K
VestfoldTønsberg254K
TelemarkSkien177K
AgderKristiansand320K
RogalandStavanger497K
VestlandBergen649K
Møre og RomsdalMolde268K
TrøndelagSteinkjer479K
NordlandBodø243K
TromsTromsø169K
FinnmarkVadsø77K
OSL

Oslo

Oslo · 717K

AKE

Akershus

Lillestrøm · 723K

ØST

Østfold

Sarpsborg · 327K

BUS

Buskerud

Drammen · 296K

INN

Innlandet

Hamar · 373K

VES

Vestfold

Tønsberg · 254K

TEL

Telemark

Skien · 177K

AGD

Agder

Kristiansand · 320K

ROG

Rogaland

Stavanger · 497K

VES

Vestland

Bergen · 649K

MØR

Møre og Romsdal

Molde · 268K

TRØ

Trøndelag

Steinkjer · 479K

NOR

Nordland

Bodø · 243K

TRO

Troms

Tromsø · 169K

FIN

Finnmark

Vadsø · 77K

Norway reorganised from 11 back to 15 counties on 1 January 2024. Traffic rules are national — no regional variations. Statens vegvesen has trafikkstasjoner (service centres) in all counties. Driving school costs vary significantly by region — Oslo is typically the most expensive.

Emergency

Emergency Numbers

All available 24/7. {number} is the police emergency number.

110

Fire (Brann)

112

Police (Politi)

113

Ambulance (Ambulanse)

120

Sea Rescue (Sjøredning)

Myth vs Fact

Common Misconceptions About Driving in Norway#

Myth: Winter tyres are required from November to April — fixed dates

Fact: The actual requirement is from November 1 to the first Sunday after Easter Monday (variable date, typically mid-April). In Nordland, Troms, and Finnmark, the period is October 16 to April 30. Outside these dates, you must still have tyres appropriate for conditions — non-studded winter tyres can be used year-round.

Myth: You need an International Driving Permit (IDP) to drive in Norway

Fact: EU/EEA licence holders can drive freely without an IDP. Licences from Vienna Convention countries are accepted for tourists (up to 3 months). An IDP is only required if your licence is not in a Latin alphabet (Arabic, Japanese, Cyrillic, etc.). US and UK licences are accepted without an IDP for short visits.

Myth: The speed limit on Norwegian motorways is 130 km/h like in other European countries

Fact: Norway's maximum speed limit is 110 km/h — and only on selected dual carriageways. Most expressways are 90 or 100 km/h. Norway has deliberately kept speed limits lower than most European countries as part of its Vision Zero road safety strategy.

Myth: Speeding fines in Norway are income-based like in Finland

Fact: Norway uses fixed-rate fines for speeding (NOK 1,200–15,850 depending on excess). They are NOT income-based. However, DUI fines ARE income-based (typically 1.5× gross monthly salary for 0.2–0.5‰ BAC). For extreme speeding (36+ km/h over in zones ≥70), the case goes to court where penalties may consider income.

Myth: Studded tyres can be used all year round

Fact: Studded tyres (piggdekk) can only be used during the winter period: November 1 to first Sunday after Easter Monday (Nordland/Troms/Finnmark: October 16 to April 30). Using them outside this period is illegal. Studded tyres also incur daily fees in Oslo (NOK 35/day), Bergen, and Trondheim.

Myth: Norway's roads are too dangerous in winter for inexperienced drivers

Fact: Norway has among the world's lowest road fatality rates (~1.6 per 100K) despite harsh winters. Mandatory winter driving training, excellent road maintenance, extensive tunnel networks, and strict tyre requirements make winter driving manageable. Check conditions on vegvesen.no and carry appropriate equipment.

Timeline

Recent Changes to Norwegian Driving Laws#

Key regulatory updates affecting drivers in Norway

2025

EV insurance tax introduced — electric vehicles now pay road-use tax

From 2025, electric vehicles in Norway are subject to a new road-use insurance tax, ending decades of EV exemptions. This reflects the maturing EV market — over 80% of new car sales in Norway are fully electric. EVs still receive reduced toll rates with AutoPASS.

Jan 2024

County reorganisation — Norway expanded from 11 to 15 counties

Norway reversed its 2020 county merger, splitting Viken back into Akershus, Buskerud, and Østfold; Vestfold og Telemark into Vestfold and Telemark; and Troms og Finnmark into Troms and Finnmark. Statens vegvesen offices updated accordingly.

2023

Traffic fine increases — phone use fine raised to NOK 10,750

Significant increases in traffic fines, with the phone use fine rising from NOK 5,000 to NOK 10,750 plus 3 penalty points. Speeding fines also increased across all tiers. Part of Norway's ongoing effort to reduce road fatalities to zero.

2022

New speed camera technology — average-speed enforcement expanded

Streknings-ATK (average-speed cameras) expanded to more tunnels and high-risk road sections. These cameras measure average speed over a distance rather than instant speed, making them very difficult to avoid. Norway now has hundreds of average-speed camera sections.

2020

EU Third Driving Licence Directive implementation

Norway implemented updated EU driving licence requirements through the EEA Agreement, including harmonised licence categories, validity periods, and mutual recognition rules. Category B licence validity standardised at 15 years.

Global Context

How Norway Compares Globally#

Norwegian driving regulations compared to other countries — data compiled from official government sources

Comparison of driving regulations between Norway, Sweden, Germany, USA, and UK including BAC limits, minimum age, speed limits, licence costs, and road fatality statistics.
ParameterNorwaySwedenGermanyUSAUK
BAC Limit0.02%0.02%0.05%0.08%0.08%
Min. Age (Car)1818181617
Driving SideRightRightRightRightLeft
Highway Speed110120No limit*105–137112
Test Questions457030 MCQ20–5050
Licence CostNOK 25–50KSEK 15–25K€2,000–3,500$30–90£200–1,500
Road Deaths/yr87~2272,83940,9011,695
Deaths/100K~1.6~2.2~3.412.22.5
BAC Limit0.02%

One of the strictest in Europe alongside Sweden (0.02%). Germany 0.05%, USA/UK 0.08%. Novice and professional drivers: zero tolerance.

Min. Age (Car)18 years

Same as Sweden and Germany. USA allows from 16. UK from 17. Learner driving with supervisor from 16.

Highway Speed110 km/h

Norway's max is 110 km/h — lower than most of Europe. Sweden max 120, Germany no limit on Autobahn, UK 112 km/h (70 mph).

Licence CostNOK 25–50K

~$2,300–4,600 USD. Among the most expensive in the world. Germany €2,000–3,500. USA $30–90. UK £200–1,500.

Road Deaths87/yr

~1.6 per 100K — among the world's safest. Sweden ~2.2, Germany ~3.4, UK 2.5, USA 12.2.

Road deaths: Norway 87 (SSB 2024), Sweden ~227 (Trafikverket 2024), Germany 2,839 (Destatis 2023), USA 40,901 (NHTSA 2023), UK 1,695 (DfT 2023). Per-100K rates calculated from national population data. UK BAC is 0.08% for England/Wales; Scotland is 0.05%. *Germany has no general speed limit on certain Autobahn sections.

Fact-Checked

Sources & Methodology

Primary Sources

  • Statens vegvesen — Driving licences, theory test, road safety — Norwegian Public Roads Administration (vegvesen.no)
  • Vegtrafikkloven — Road Traffic Act and regulations — lovdata.no
  • SSB — Road traffic accident statistics — Statistisk sentralbyrå (ssb.no)
  • Visit Norway — Driving rules and road safety for visitors — visitnorway.com
  • NAF — Norwegian Automobile Federation — naf.no
  • ETSC — European Transport Safety Council — etsc.eu

Verification Methodology

Every fact on this page has been cross-referenced against at least two authoritative sources. Our process:

  1. Primary data collected from official Statens vegvesen publications, legislation (lovdata.no), and SSB statistics
  2. Cross-verified against NAF, Visit Norway, ETSC, and international road safety databases
  3. National regulations apply uniformly across all counties — no regional variations in traffic law
  4. Page reviewed and fact-checked on {date}

If you find an error, please contact us so we can correct it immediately.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a Norwegian driving licence cost?
The total cost for a Category B licence (passenger car) is typically NOK 25,000–50,000 (~$2,300–4,600 USD). This includes: driving school tuition NOK 20,000–45,000, mandatory trafikalt grunnkurs ~NOK 3,500, theory test NOK 480, practical test NOK 1,540, safety course on track NOK 3,000–5,000, licence issuance NOK 270, and photo NOK 100. Oslo is typically the most expensive region.
What is the Norwegian theory test format?
The teoriprøve consists of 45 multiple-choice questions to be completed in 90 minutes. You must answer at least 38 correctly (84% pass mark). Fee: NOK 480. Computer-based at Statens vegvesen centres. Available in Norwegian, English, Arabic, Northern Sami, Kurdish, and Turkish. Dictionary permitted.
What are the speed limits in Norway?
Residential zones: 30 km/h. Built-up areas: 50 km/h. Rural roads: 80 km/h. Expressways: 90–100 km/h. Motorways (max): 110 km/h. Heavy vehicles and trailers: max 80 km/h. Norway has deliberately lower speed limits than most European countries as part of its Vision Zero policy.
What is the blood alcohol limit in Norway?
0.02% BAC (0.2 per mille) — one of the strictest in Europe. Novice drivers (<2 years) and professional drivers: zero tolerance. Penalties: 0.2–0.5‰ = fine (~1.5× monthly salary). 0.5–0.8‰ = fine + 12–18 month licence loss. >0.8‰ = court, possible imprisonment. >1.2‰ = unconditional imprisonment.
Are winter tyres mandatory in Norway?
Effectively yes. From November 1 to the first Sunday after Easter Monday (Nordland/Troms/Finnmark: October 16 to April 30), tyres must be suitable for winter conditions — meaning winter tyres are practically mandatory. Minimum tread depth 3mm. Non-studded winter tyres can be used year-round. Studded tyres incur daily fees in major cities.
What is the trafikalt grunnkurs?
The trafikalt grunnkurs (basic traffic course) is a mandatory 17-hour course (reduced for those 25+) that must be completed before you can begin practice driving. It covers traffic rules, first aid, risk awareness, and darkness driving. It can be started from age 15. Cost: approximately NOK 3,000–4,500.
Can I drive in Norway with a foreign licence?
EU/EEA licence holders can drive freely. Non-EU/EEA licences from Vienna Convention countries are valid for tourists (up to 3 months). Non-Roman alphabet licences require an IDP or official English translation. Permanent residents must convert their foreign licence within 1 year — some countries require retesting.
What are the emergency numbers in Norway?
Fire: 110. Police: 112. Ambulance: 113. Sea rescue: 120. All are toll-free and available 24/7. For non-emergency police matters, call 02800. NAF roadside assistance: (+47) 23 21 31 00.
How does the penalty points system work?
Norway's prikksystemet: 8 points in 3 years = 6-month licence suspension. Phone use: 3 points. Red light: 3 points. Speeding 16–20 km/h over: 2 points. Speeding 21+ km/h over: 3 points. Points remain for 3 years from each offence.
How many tunnels does Norway have?
Norway has over 900 road tunnels — the most per capita in the world. The longest is the Lærdal Tunnel at 24.5 km. Many tunnels are single-tube with two-way traffic. Average-speed cameras operate in many tunnels. Use headlights (mandatory at all times anyway) and follow posted speed limits.
What is the AutoPASS toll system?
AutoPASS is Norway's electronic toll system with over 400 toll points nationwide — all fully automated (no manual booths). An AutoPASS tag gives a 20% discount. Without a tag, you pay the highest rate and receive invoices by mail. Rush-hour surcharges apply in major cities. EVs pay up to 50% less with AutoPASS.
What equipment must I carry in my car?
Mandatory: warning triangle and reflective safety vest. Third-party insurance (trafikkforsikring) is required. Recommended but not legally required: first aid kit, spare bulbs, tow rope. Winter tyres with adequate tread depth are effectively mandatory during the winter period.
Is it safe to drive in Norway in winter?
Yes, with proper preparation. Norway has among the world's lowest road fatality rates (~1.6 per 100K) despite harsh winters. Use winter tyres (minimum 3mm tread), check road conditions on vegvesen.no, carry emergency supplies, and drive according to conditions. Mountain passes may close in severe weather.
What is the fine for using a phone while driving?
NOK 10,750 plus 3 penalty points (as of 2023 increase). Even briefly holding your phone is illegal. Only hands-free systems are permitted. At 8 penalty points in 3 years, your licence is suspended for 6 months.
How old do you have to be to drive in Norway?
Category B (car): 18 years. Category AM (moped): 16 years. You can start the trafikalt grunnkurs from age 15 and begin practice driving with a supervisor from age 16. The theory test can be taken from age 17.5 (6 months before turning 18). Category A (motorcycle, direct access): 24 years.

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AutoviaTest

Last updated: March 26, 2026Reviewed by AutoviaTest editorial team

Data sourced from Statens vegvesen (vegvesen.no), Vegtrafikkloven (lovdata.no), Statistisk sentralbyrå (SSB), and the European Transport Safety Council (ETSC).

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