Norway · Cost of Living

Expensive. Not
uniformly.

Norway's food prices run 31% above the EU average — third-highest in Europe. A beer out is a small event. But electricity is often cheap by European standards, healthcare is capped at NOK 3,278 a year, and there's no tipping culture. Here's where the money actually goes.

Figures verified 9 July 2026
The key numbers
  • Food & non-alcoholic drinks: +31% vs the EU average (Eurostat 2024) — behind only Switzerland and Iceland
  • Average rent, 2-room, greater Oslo: NOK 15,260/month ≈ $1,500 (SSB 2025)
  • National 2-room average: ≈ NOK 11,800/month ≈ $1,160 (SSB 2025)
  • 2025 average inflation: ≈ 3.0% (SSB CPI)
  • Healthcare user fees capped at NOK 3,278/year (2026)
  • Exchange rate used: ≈ NOK 10.2 = $1 (July 2026, indicative)

The honest framing

Norway is priced for Norwegian salaries — among Europe's highest. Arrive with a Norwegian skilled-worker salary (minimum NOK 545,400 for permit purposes) and the math works. Arrive mentally converting everything to dollars and the grocery store will hurt weekly. The pattern: labour-intensive things are brutal (restaurants, trades, services), state-touched things are gentle (healthcare, childcare, university tuition for residents), and alcohol is policy-expensive on purpose.

Where it bites, where it doesn't

CategoryThe reality
Groceries31% above the EU average (Eurostat 2024). Limited competition — three chains dominate. Meat, dairy, and anything imported carry the premium.
Eating outA casual dinner for two with drinks commonly lands north of NOK 1,000 (≈ $100). Lunch culture is a packed matpakke for a reason.
AlcoholHeavily taxed; wine and spirits only via the state Vinmonopolet. Budget double North American prices as a rule of thumb.
HousingOslo is the pressure point (see the Housing hub); regional cities are roughly 20–25% gentler on rent (SSB 2025).
Electricity & heatingHydro-powered and historically cheap by EU standards, though southern-Norway spot prices swing; homes are built for the cold.
HealthcareCapped at NOK 3,278/year in approved user fees (2026) — the line item that shrinks most vs a US budget.
TransportExcellent transit in cities; cars, fuel, and tolls are expensive — but Norway is the world's EV capital for a reason.

A monthly picture for a couple (indicative)

Built from the official figures above plus conservative allowances — treat it as a starting grid, not a promise. Renting a 2-room in greater Oslo: NOK 15,260 (SSB 2025). Groceries for two, cooking at home: NOK 8,000–10,000. Utilities, internet, phone: NOK 2,000–3,500. Transit passes: ~NOK 1,800. Modest eating out and life: NOK 4,000+. That's roughly NOK 31,000–35,000/month (≈ $3,000–3,400) before travel, insurance, and the tax questions on the Tax hub. In Trondheim or Kristiansand, knock 20–25% off the housing line.

Do the budget in kroner, not dollars. The krone has swung hard against the dollar in recent years — it's one of the most volatile G10 currencies. If your income is in USD or CAD, currency movement can change your effective cost of living by 10%+ in a year without a single Norwegian price moving.
In this section

Guides

Coming soon

The real grocery bill

A priced-out weekly shop from the big three chains, vs the same basket in the US and Canada.

Coming soon

Oslo vs the regional cities

The same life in Oslo, Trondheim, and Kristiansand — three real budgets side by side.

Coming soon

Running a car (or not) in Norway

EV incentives, tolls, fuel, and when transit + rental beats owning.

Sources

  1. Eurostat — comparative price levels for food, beverages and tobacco (2024; Norway +31%): ec.europa.eu/eurostat (checked 9 Jul 2026); SSB's comparison: ssb.no
  2. SSB rental market survey 2025: ssb.no
  3. SSB consumer price index (2025 average ≈3.0%): ssb.no
  4. Healthcare user-fee cap 2026: Helsenorge
  5. Non-official allowances (groceries, utilities, transit) are our conservative estimates, marked indicative.
Budgets are indicative. Prices change; verify current figures before committing to a move.
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