What
type of visa should I apply for?
There are different types of visa which relate to the purpose of your
visit.
Visitor’s
visa for Schengen area (type C)
A visitor’s visa may be granted if you intend to travel to Norway
as a tourist, on a family visit, on public business or a business trip,
a study visit or other business. A visa for Norway and the Schengen
area may be granted for up to 90 days. However, you may not stay in
the Schengen area for more than 90 days in the course of the past six
months. This means that any stay in the Schengen area in the past six
months must be taken into consideration when calculating the duration
of a visa. The duration of the visa is stated on the visa sticker. The
visa sticker also states the first permitted entry date and last permitted
exit date.
A visa is generally issued for a single entry. If the applicant plans
to travel outside the Schengen area and return within the period of
the visa, the box for “Two entries” or “Multiple entries”
must be ticked on the visa application form.
The application must be accompanied by an explanation of why two or
more entries are required.
If the need arises for an extra entry after arrival in Norway, this
must be applied for via the police in the same way as an application
to extend a visa. The applicant must be able to document his/her need
for an extra entry (e.g. for a business meeting, or to visit family
outside the Schengen area).
A visa does not entitle the holder to work or carry out any commercial
enterprise during their visit. Persons who wish to work or stay for
an extended period in Norway must apply for a specific permit for this.
Persons with short-term work in Norway (not exceeding three months)
do not require a work permit. See more information about who is covered
by this rule in the section “Who needs a work permit?”.
National visitor’s visa
In the event that you cannot obtain a visitor’s visa for the whole
Schengen area, it may be possible, in certain specific circumstances,
to issue a national visitor’s visa. An applicant may only be granted
a visa that is valid for Norway alone when such a visa is required for
humanitarian reasons, national considerations or international obligations.
In such cases, the UDI decides on the application, which should be submitted
to the nearest foreign service mission, as when applying for any other
kind of visa.
VLTV visa (Visa with Limited Territorial Validity)
A visa with limited territorial validity can be given to applicants
holding a travel document that is not valid for entry into certain Schengen
countries. The visa granted is valid only for the countries in which
the travel document is valid.
Emergency visa
Persons subject to the visa requirement who arrive in Norway without
a visa may be granted an emergency visa if unforeseen and imperative
reasons so indicate. Persons subject to the visa requirement who arrive
in Norway without a valid visa must contact the police at the border
to apply for an emergency visa. Emergency visas can only be granted
in exceptional cases, subject to strict criteria. Consequently, many
persons arriving in Norway without a visa are sent out of the country
immediately.
Examples of reasonable grounds:
*
When you are notified that a close family member in Norway has suffered
a serious accident, but the Norwegian foreign service mission is closed
that day, and you must leave for Norway immediately
* You are to participate in events organised in Norway on short notice,
but the Norwegian foreign service mission is closed that day, and you
must leave for Norway immediately
* You are a seaman signing on or off a vessel in Norwegian waters, but
the Norwegian foreign service mission is closed that day, and you must
leave immediately
It is the UDI which decides on applications for emergency visas, after
being contacted by the police. Emergency visas are issued as ordinary
visitor’s visas if the requirements for the latter are fulfilled.
If the requirements for an ordinary visitor’s visa are not fulfilled,
an emergency visa may be issued as a national visitor’s visa,
if particular reasonable grounds so indicate.
Transit visa (type B)
Persons subject to the visa requirement intending to travel through
one or more of the Schengen countries may be granted a transit visa
that is valid for up to five days. This only applies when the person
enters from a country that is not a party to the Schengen Agreement
and is to exit to another country that is not a party to the agreement.
* Applicants who apply for transit visas for Norway include foreign
nationals subject to the visa requirement intending to travel from Svalbard
to a country outside the Schengen area. As with other visa applications,
transit visa applications are to be made using the appropriate application
form and submitted to the nearest foreign service mission
* Other applicants who may need a transit visa include seamen who will
be signing on or off a vessel in a Norwegian port, or seamen who will
be travelling through Norway to a country outside the Schengen area
Visa for applying for/waiting for a decision on an application
for family immigration (type D)
If you wish to obtain a permit for family immigration, as a rule you
must have obtained your permit before you enter Norway. However, in
certain circumstances you may enter Norway before a permit has been
granted. In this case, you must obtain an entry visa if you are subject
to a visa requirement. Such a visa will only be granted in exceptional
circumstances.
The following persons may apply for an entry visa:
* Spouse of a Norwegian citizen who is living in Norway or plans to
settle here
* Spouse of a Nordic citizen who has lived in Norway for the past three
years, and the spouses have been married for at least three years
* Spouse of a foreign national who has a settlement permit, and the
spouses have been married for at least three years
* Spouse of a foreign national who has an individual permit to work
in a group, and the spouses have been married for at least three years
Children which you and your spouse have had together, and who are not
Norwegian citizens, must also apply for an entry visa. Children of the
applicant by a previous partner who wish to seek family immigration
must apply from their country of origin.
Please be aware that you will not be entitled to schooling, Norwegian
language tuition or any other benefits while you are waiting for a first-issue
application for a family immigration permit to be processed. You are
also not permitted to take on work while your application is being processed,
unless you have been granted a temporary work permit.
Being granted an entry visa has no bearing on the outcome of an application
for a family immigration permit.
Fiancé permit (get married or enter into partnership)
If you wish to marry and live with a person who already lives in Norway,
you may apply for your own permit. Such a permit is not a visa, but
a residence permit.
Parental visit (residence permit for up to nine months to visit
children in Norway)
If you have children in Norway and wish to visit them, you can choose
whether to apply for a visitor’s visa (see above) or a residence
permit that will last for up to nine months. The rules for this type
of residence permit are described in more detail under family immigration.
Visa for persons who obtain a residence or work permit
If you are granted a residence or work permit for Norway, you automatically
also receive an entry permit which entitles you to stay in Norway for
seven days. You therefore do not need to apply for a visa. Within the
seven-day period, you must contact the police in order to obtain a sticker
in your passport or a travel document showing that you have a work or
residence permit for Norway.
Information about work and residence permits for Norway
Visa for seeking work in Norway (skilled worker/specialist)
If you qualify as a skilled worker/specialist, you may obtain a visa
if you have an offer of employment in Norway, or wish to seek work here.
The requirements for such a visa depend on whether or not you have an
offer of employment.
If you don't have an offer of employment, you may obtain a visa if you
have training equivalent to at least the level of further education.
If there is an offer of employment in Norway, the following expertise
may be taken into consideration instead of formal training:
* Course or other training in a company abroad. In order to obtain a
visa, the training must provide the same level of expertise as formal
vocational training, and the expertise must be relevant to the work
you will be taking on
* Specialist qualifications based on practical experience in a particular
field. In order to obtain a visa, the practical experience must be at
least as long as any formal vocational training which gives the same
expertise, and the expertise must be relevant to the work you will be
taking on
Residence
for medical treatment
If the intention of the visit is to have medical treatment in Norway,
then an application for a resident permit shall be submitted even if
the visit is shorter than 90 days. The regulations for such a permit
is based on the Immigration Regulation § 5 second paragraph letter
b
Some organisations may apply for a visa on behalf of individual performing
musicians, entertainers or artists:
* Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra
* The Norwegian National Opera
* The Bergen International Festival
* Førde Folk Music Festival
* Oslo Philharmonic Orchestra
* Rikskonsertene
In this situation, a visitor’s visa (type C) must be applied for
and the same conditions must be met (see above). For more information
on the application procedure for this type of visa, see Circular 2001-41:
Visa for performing musicians, entertainers and artists.
Visa for pleasure sailing in Norwegian waters
Persons subject to the visa requirement who want to take a pleasure
cruise in Norwegian waters need a visa and a special sailing permit.
These visas and sailing permits are issued by the UDI.
Such sailing permits are granted in the period from 1 May to 15 September,
but only once per year. All those participating in the trip must submit
a visa application to the nearest Norwegian foreign service mission
no later than two months prior to departure from their country of origin.
The application must be accompanied by:
* A list of all those taking part in the trip
* Information about the vessel and the sailing schedule This information
should be given on a special form available from the foreign service
mission. All participants must hold a valid passport or other travel
document.
The sailing permit indicates:
* Time period for the sailing
* Name of vessel
* Ports of call
It is prohibited to call at other ports unless there is an emergency.
In the case of an emergency, the police must be contacted.
Airport transit visa (type A)
Persons from certain countries who are to make an intermediate landing
in Norway en route to a country not a party to the Schengen Agreement
need a special airport transit visa. This visa only allows the holder
to stay in the airport’s international transit area, not to enter
Norway.