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 2026Norway 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.
| Category | The reality |
|---|---|
| Groceries | 31% above the EU average (Eurostat 2024). Limited competition — three chains dominate. Meat, dairy, and anything imported carry the premium. |
| Eating out | A casual dinner for two with drinks commonly lands north of NOK 1,000 (≈ $100). Lunch culture is a packed matpakke for a reason. |
| Alcohol | Heavily taxed; wine and spirits only via the state Vinmonopolet. Budget double North American prices as a rule of thumb. |
| Housing | Oslo is the pressure point (see the Housing hub); regional cities are roughly 20–25% gentler on rent (SSB 2025). |
| Electricity & heating | Hydro-powered and historically cheap by EU standards, though southern-Norway spot prices swing; homes are built for the cold. |
| Healthcare | Capped at NOK 3,278/year in approved user fees (2026) — the line item that shrinks most vs a US budget. |
| Transport | Excellent transit in cities; cars, fuel, and tolls are expensive — but Norway is the world's EV capital for a reason. |
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.
A priced-out weekly shop from the big three chains, vs the same basket in the US and Canada.
The same life in Oslo, Trondheim, and Kristiansand — three real budgets side by side.
EV incentives, tolls, fuel, and when transit + rental beats owning.
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