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Short Description: A complete guide to Norway’s family immigration route and Type D entry visa for joining close family, including eligibility, documents, work rights, fees, and PR path.
Last Verified On: 2026-04-05
Visa Snapshot
| Item | Details |
|---|---|
| Country | Norway |
| Visa name | National Long-Stay Visa (Type D) – Family Reunification |
| Visa short name | D-Family |
| Category | Long-stay family immigration / entry visa linked to residence permit |
| Main purpose | To enter Norway and live with qualifying family members under the family immigration rules |
| Typical applicant | Spouse, registered partner, cohabiting partner, child, parent in limited cases, or other qualifying family member of a person in Norway |
| Validity | Usually tied to entry for residence; the core status is normally a residence permit, not a standalone long-term visa status |
| Stay duration | Long-term residence if the family immigration residence permit is granted |
| Entries allowed | Often single entry for the initial entry visa; travel rights after residence card issuance depend on permit status |
| Extension possible? | Yes, the residence permit may usually be renewed if conditions continue to be met |
| Work allowed? | Usually yes for the holder of a family immigration residence permit, but check the exact permit basis and decision letter |
| Study allowed? | Usually yes while holding a valid residence permit, subject to general education admission rules |
| Family allowed? | This route itself is for family members; further family sponsorship may be possible later depending on status |
| PR path? | Possible; time on a qualifying residence permit can count toward permanent residence if the legal requirements are met |
| Citizenship path? | Indirect; long-term lawful residence may later support an application for Norwegian citizenship if all conditions are met |
For Norway, applicants often use the phrase “family reunification visa” or “family visa,” but the official system is centered on a family immigration residence permit. In many cases, the applicant applies for residence permit for family immigration, and if approved, may receive an entry visa (often a Type D national visa) to travel to Norway and then collect the residence card.
So, in practical terms:
- the real immigration status is usually a residence permit
- the Type D visa is typically the entry clearance used to travel to Norway after approval, if needed
- not every applicant will receive or need the same visa sticker process, because procedures vary by nationality and where the application is lodged
This route exists so close family members can legally join a person who lives in Norway, such as:
- a Norwegian citizen
- a Nordic citizen living in Norway
- a foreign national with a residence permit in Norway
- in some cases, a person with protection/refugee status or other qualifying basis
In Norway’s immigration system, this sits under family immigration rules administered mainly by the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) and governed by the Immigration Act and Immigration Regulations.
What Norway officially calls it
The most common official names are:
- Family immigration
- Residence permit for family immigration
- Entry visa
- National visa (Type D) in the visa-format sense where applicable
Important distinction
Common confusion: many applicants think they are applying for a “Norway family visa” as the main status.
Official reality: for long-term residence, you are usually applying for a residence permit, not just a visa sticker.
2. Who should apply for this visa?
This route is best for people who genuinely want to live in Norway with close family and who meet the family immigration rules.
Best-fit applicants
Spouses and registered partners
This is one of the main groups covered.
Cohabiting partners
Possible if you meet Norway’s cohabitation requirements and can prove the relationship properly.
Fiancés
Norway has a route in some cases for a fiancé to come to Norway to marry, but this is different from already being married or cohabiting. The conditions are specific.
Children
Children joining a parent in Norway are a core category, with extra documentation needed for custody and consent.
Parents
Only in narrower situations. This is not a broad “bring any parent” route.
Family of workers, students, and other residents
If your family member already has a qualifying permit in Norway, you may qualify as their dependent family member.
Who should generally not use this route
Tourists
Do not use family immigration if your real purpose is a short visit. Use a visitor visa / Schengen short-stay visa if eligible and if your stay is short-term.
Business visitors
Use the relevant short-stay business visit route, not family immigration.
Job seekers
Family immigration is not a substitute for a work permit or job seeker route.
Students
If your main purpose is study and you do not qualify under family immigration, use a student residence permit.
Digital nomads
Norway does not generally treat family immigration as a digital nomad route. Work rules must match your actual permit rights.
Investors and founders
Use the relevant work/self-employment/business route if your purpose is entrepreneurship or investment, not family immigration.
Transit passengers
Not applicable; use transit/short-stay rules.
Medical travelers
Use the medical treatment route if the primary purpose is treatment.
Diplomats and official travelers
These fall under separate diplomatic/official frameworks.
3. What is this visa used for?
Main permitted purpose
The main purpose is:
- long-term residence in Norway with qualifying family
Usually permitted under the family immigration residence permit
Depending on the exact permit granted:
- living with your spouse/partner/parent/child in Norway
- ordinary day-to-day residence
- working in Norway, if the permit grants work rights
- studying in Norway, if the permit remains valid and school admission rules are met
- travel in and out of Norway while the permit and travel documents remain valid
Not the right route for these primary purposes
- tourism
- short business trips
- airport transit
- direct employment where there is no qualifying family basis
- internship as the main purpose
- volunteering as the main purpose
- journalism assignment as the main purpose
- medical treatment as the main purpose
- investment/business setup as the main purpose
Grey areas and common misunderstandings
Marriage in Norway
If you want to come to Norway to marry a person there, your route may differ from standard spouse family immigration. Do not assume that “I intend to marry soon” is the same as “I am already eligible as a spouse.”
Remote work
Whether remote work is allowed depends on the rights attached to the family immigration permit and tax/compliance rules. It is not enough to say “my employer is abroad.” You must still comply with Norwegian residence and tax rules.
Paid activity
If you receive a family immigration residence permit that includes work rights, paid work is generally possible. But a short-stay visitor status is very different.
4. Official visa classification and naming
| Label | What it means in practice |
|---|---|
| Family immigration | The main official category for joining family in Norway |
| Residence permit for family immigration | The core long-term permission applicants usually seek |
| Entry visa | The visa issued so the approved applicant can travel to Norway if required |
| National visa (Type D) | The visa format often used for long-stay entry where applicable |
Related permit names
These may include official UDI categories such as:
- family immigration with spouse
- family immigration with cohabitant
- family immigration with child
- family immigration with parent
- family immigration with a person who has protection
- fiancé permit or marriage-related route in limited cases
Old vs current naming
People often still say:
- family reunification visa
- family reunion visa
- dependent visa
- spouse visa
These are useful informal labels, but UDI’s official terminology is generally family immigration and residence permit.
Commonly confused categories
- Visitor visa for family visit: short stay only, does not create residence rights
- Residence card for EU/EEA family members: different regime from standard family immigration
- Work permit: based on employment, not family ties
- Student permit: based on studies, not family ties
5. Eligibility criteria
Eligibility depends heavily on:
- who the sponsor/reference person is
- the family relationship
- the sponsor’s immigration status in Norway
- whether maintenance/income requirements are met
- whether the relationship is genuine and documented
Eligibility matrix
| Applicant type | Possible? | Key conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse of Norwegian citizen | Usually yes | Valid marriage, genuine relationship, maintenance rules often apply |
| Registered partner | Usually yes | Equivalent proof of registered partnership |
| Cohabiting partner | Often yes | Usually must prove durable relationship and often prior cohabitation or common child |
| Fiancé | Sometimes | Specific marriage-intention route; limited and condition-based |
| Child under 18 | Often yes | Parent-child proof, custody/consent, sponsor status |
| Parent of child in Norway | Limited | Narrower conditions |
| Adult child | Usually difficult unless special grounds | Standard family immigration generally focused on close core family |
| Family of worker/student in Norway | Often yes | Sponsor must hold qualifying permit and meet conditions |
Nationality rules
There is no single “all nationalities treated the same at the submission stage” rule. Differences can affect:
- whether you need an entry visa after approval
- where you can submit
- whether you can apply from Norway or must apply from abroad
- embassy or consular logistics
EEA/EU family members may fall under different residence rules, not the standard third-country family immigration regime.
Passport validity
You need a valid passport. The exact minimum validity should be checked with UDI and the embassy/VFS handling your case. A damaged passport or one with insufficient validity can delay or block issuance.
Age
- Spouses/partners must meet the relevant legal relationship criteria.
- Children are subject to age-based rules.
- Minor applicants need parental/custody documentation.
Education, language, work experience
For the family immigration permit itself:
- education is generally not the main issue
- work experience is generally not the main issue
- Norwegian language is generally not a condition for initial grant of family immigration in the basic application stage
However, later permanent residence or citizenship may involve language/social studies requirements.
Sponsorship / reference person
A qualifying sponsor/reference person in Norway is central. They may be:
- Norwegian citizen
- Nordic citizen
- foreign national with a qualifying residence permit
- person with protection status
- in some cases, another qualifying category under UDI rules
Relationship proof
This is critical. You usually need to prove:
- legal marriage or registered partnership
- durable cohabitation, if applying as a cohabitant
- parent-child relationship
- custody and consent for minors
- that the relationship is genuine and ongoing
Maintenance funds / income requirement
Norway often applies a maintenance requirement to the sponsor/reference person. This usually means the person in Norway must document a minimum income level and sometimes that they have not received certain social assistance benefits.
Because thresholds are updated, applicants should check the latest official UDI maintenance requirement page.
Accommodation proof
The family member in Norway usually must show that suitable housing exists or will exist.
Health
There is generally no universal public medical exam requirement published for all family immigration applicants, but health-related issues may arise in individual cases or for registration purposes. Do not assume a medical exam is never needed locally.
Character / criminal record
Criminal history, security issues, or prior immigration abuse can affect eligibility.
Insurance
Norway’s family immigration route does not always operate like private-insurance-dependent visitor visas. Still, healthcare registration and lawful residence compliance after arrival matter. Check if your nationality or local mission requires any travel insurance for travel/entry issuance stages.
Biometrics
Usually required as part of the residence permit process.
Intent requirements
This route is for genuine long-term family residence. The relationship and living arrangement must be real.
Local registration rules
After arrival, applicants typically need to:
- book police appointment if instructed
- provide biometrics if not already completed
- obtain residence card
- possibly register address and seek ID/tax registration depending on stay and work
Quotas/caps/ballots
Not generally a quota-based route.
Embassy-specific rules
Application logistics vary by:
- country of application
- local Norwegian embassy or external service provider
- whether documents must be uploaded in advance
- whether originals, copies, translations, or appointment booking rules differ
6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers
Ineligibility factors
- no qualifying family relationship
- sponsor in Norway does not hold a qualifying status
- maintenance requirement not met
- insufficient housing documentation where required
- applicant applied under the wrong category
- relationship appears non-genuine
- prior immigration violations
- security or criminal concerns
Common refusal triggers
Relationship proof is weak
Examples:
- very few photos or communication records for a claimed long relationship
- inconsistent addresses or dates
- no evidence of having met, where expected
- no proof of cohabitation when applying as cohabitants
Sponsor income is insufficient
This is one of the most important refusal risks.
Incorrect category
For example:
- using spouse route when not yet married
- using family immigration instead of visitor visa for a short visit
- using family immigration where EEA free movement rules actually apply
Incomplete documentation
Missing:
- passport copies
- marriage certificate
- birth certificate
- custody order
- tax/income records
- signed forms
- translations
Prior overstays or false information
Any earlier immigration misconduct can create major credibility issues.
Document problems
- unofficial or unverifiable documents
- mismatch in names/dates
- poor translation quality
- documents not legalized where required
Interview or statement inconsistencies
If the applicant and sponsor tell different stories about:
- relationship timeline
- living arrangements
- children
- previous marriages
- finances
that can seriously damage the case.
7. Benefits of this visa
If granted as a family immigration residence permit, this route can be highly valuable.
Main benefits
- legal long-term residence in Norway
- ability to live with qualifying family
- in many cases, broad work rights
- ability to study
- access to a pathway toward permanent residence if conditions continue to be met
- potential later pathway toward Norwegian citizenship
- permission to travel in and out of Norway while status remains valid
- family unity under a lawful status
Family benefits
- children can often join a parent
- spouses/partners can live together lawfully
- allows a more stable route than repeated short visits
Long-term benefits
- may count toward permanent residence
- creates a much stronger foundation than temporary visits
- gives a lawful basis for registration, tax number, bank account, housing, school, and employment
8. Limitations and restrictions
Main restrictions
- the permit is conditional on continued eligibility
- dependence on the sponsor/reference relationship can matter
- renewal is not automatic
- false or incomplete information can lead to refusal or revocation
- separation, divorce, or change in family situation may affect future renewals
- children’s permits depend on age and family circumstances
- some applicants cannot switch freely from a visitor status inside Norway
Reporting and compliance obligations
You may need to:
- inform authorities of address changes
- attend police appointments
- collect residence card
- comply with Norwegian tax and registration rules
- maintain the conditions that justified the permit
9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules
How duration works
The entry visa and the residence permit are not the same thing.
Entry visa / Type D
This is usually just for travel to Norway after approval.
Residence permit
This is the real legal basis for staying long term.
The exact initial validity depends on:
- your permit category
- sponsor’s status
- your passport validity
- decision terms
Entries allowed
- the initial Type D entry visa may be single-entry in many cases
- once you have a valid residence card and valid travel document, travel rights generally become easier
When the clock starts
Your lawful residence period generally follows the permit validity dates, not simply the date you applied.
Overstay consequences
If you remain after permit expiry without lawful renewal or other status:
- you may lose rights
- future immigration applications can be harmed
- removal measures may follow
Renewal timing
Apply for renewal well before expiry, following UDI’s renewal guidance.
Bridging/interim status
Whether you can remain in Norway while waiting on renewal depends on the legal filing situation and permit category. Check UDI’s renewal guidance carefully.
10. Complete document checklist
Document requirements vary by subcategory and nationality. Always use the exact UDI checklist generated for your route.
A. Core documents
| Document | Why needed | Common mistakes |
|---|---|---|
| Completed online application | Starts the case | Selecting wrong category |
| Receipt for fee payment | Proof application was lodged | Missing payment reference |
| UDI checklist / cover sheet if applicable | Helps submission | Bringing old checklist version |
B. Identity/travel documents
- current passport
- copies of all used passport pages if requested
- previous passports if relevant
- national ID card where accepted as supporting ID
Common mistakes: – passport expiring too soon – damaged passport – name mismatch across documents
C. Financial documents
Usually for the sponsor/reference person in Norway:
- tax assessments
- payslips
- employment contract
- other official income evidence
- declaration that they have not received disqualifying social assistance if required under current rules
Common mistakes: – uploading only bank statements when official tax/income evidence is required – using outdated income documents – failing to explain recent job changes
D. Employment/business documents
If the sponsor works in Norway:
- employment contract
- confirmation from employer
- recent payslips
If self-employed:
- company registration documents
- tax records
- accounting proof
E. Education documents
Usually not core for family immigration, but may be relevant in special sub-streams or if the sponsor is a student with family rights.
F. Relationship/family documents
This is usually the heart of the application:
- marriage certificate
- registered partnership certificate
- proof of cohabitation
- birth certificates
- family book/civil registry extracts where applicable
- divorce judgments or death certificates from prior marriages
- custody orders
- parental consent for minors
G. Accommodation/travel documents
- housing contract, ownership papers, or proof of available accommodation in Norway
- travel booking is usually not the main deciding factor for residence permit approval, and applicants should avoid non-refundable travel until approved unless instructed otherwise
H. Sponsor/invitation documents
- sponsor’s passport copy or residence card
- proof of legal residence in Norway
- signed explanation or invitation where relevant
- proof of relationship and intention to live together
I. Health/insurance documents
Not always a standard family immigration document, but carry any mission-specific instructions if your local mission asks for travel insurance for the travel phase.
J. Country-specific extras
Some applicants may need:
- legalized civil documents
- apostille
- embassy-certified translations
- extra identity verification
- DNA testing in rare family proof situations if requested by authorities
K. Minor/dependent-specific documents
- birth certificate
- custody papers
- consent from the non-traveling/non-relocating parent
- school records if relevant
- proof of who the child lives with
L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs
If documents are not in a language accepted by the mission/UDI, certified translations may be required. Some foreign civil documents may need legalization or apostille depending on the country of issue.
Warning: translation and legalization rules are highly country-specific.
M. Photo specifications
Where photos are required, use the exact official photo standards from the application center or mission. Many biometric systems capture the photo on site.
11. Financial requirements
The key concept: maintenance requirement
For many family immigration applications, the person in Norway must meet a maintenance requirement. This is usually an income threshold set by UDI and updated from time to time.
Because the threshold changes, this guide does not state a fixed amount unless verified for a specific date. Check the latest UDI page on the maintenance requirement.
Who can sponsor
Usually the reference person in Norway whose family member is applying.
Acceptable proof
Typically official evidence is stronger than informal proof:
- tax records
- employment contract
- recent payslips
- income confirmations
- business income records for self-employed sponsors
Important practical point
Bank balance alone is often not enough if the rule requires stable qualifying income.
Hidden costs applicants often underestimate
- translations
- apostille/legalization
- document retrieval from civil registries
- travel to application center
- relocation costs
- initial housing setup in Norway
- residence card follow-up logistics
12. Fees and total cost
Fees change. Always check the latest official UDI fee page.
Fee table
| Cost item | Notes |
|---|---|
| Application fee | Usually payable to UDI; amount depends on applicant category and age |
| Child fee | Often reduced or exempt in some categories; verify current rules |
| Biometrics fee | Often included in the process, but local service providers may have separate service charges |
| Visa application center service fee | May apply if an external center handles submission |
| Translation / notarization / apostille | Varies widely by country |
| Police certificate cost | Country-specific |
| Courier cost | If passport/documents are returned by courier |
| Travel cost | To embassy/application center and later to Norway |
| Renewal fee | Check current UDI fee page |
| Legal/consultant fee | Optional, not required by government |
Warning: local service center charges can vary by country even when the UDI fee itself is fixed.
13. Step-by-step application process
1. Confirm the correct route
Use UDI’s family immigration pages to identify the exact subcategory:
- spouse
- cohabitant
- child
- parent
- fiancé
- family of permit holder in Norway
2. Gather documents
Use the personalized UDI checklist.
3. Complete the online application
Applications normally start through UDI’s online application portal.
4. Pay the fee
Pay online if required.
5. Book appointment
Book with:
- Norwegian embassy/consulate, or
- authorized external application center
6. Submit the application
Normally this includes:
- identity check
- document submission
- biometrics where required
7. Upload or hand in supporting documents
The method depends on location.
8. Additional checks
Authorities may request:
- more documents
- better translations
- clarification of family relationship
- sponsor financial evidence
9. Track the application
Some tracking is possible through the submission channel, but detailed case handling remains with UDI/mission.
10. Respond quickly to requests
Delays in answering can slow or damage the case.
11. Receive the decision
If approved, you will be informed how to proceed.
12. Visa issuance / travel document handling
If you need an entry visa, the mission will instruct you on passport submission or visa issuance.
13. Travel to Norway
Carry all key supporting papers when traveling.
14. Post-arrival steps
You may need to:
- meet the police
- give biometrics if not already done
- order/collect residence card
15. Residence card collection
Follow the instructions in the approval notice.
14. Processing time
UDI publishes processing information, but times vary significantly.
What affects timing
- exact family category
- nationality
- country of application
- embassy workload
- security/background checks
- whether documents are complete
- whether the case is straightforward
- seasonal demand
Priority options
A formal premium or super-priority lane is not generally a standard public feature for Norway family immigration.
Practical expectation
Straightforward cases can still take time. Complex family situations usually take longer.
Pro Tip: do not make irreversible travel, job, or school commitments until the permit is granted.
15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks
Biometrics
Usually required for the residence permit process.
Interview
Not every applicant is interviewed. If interviewed, expect questions on:
- relationship history
- sponsor details
- intended living arrangements
- prior marriages
- children and custody
- finances
Medical checks
No universal medical exam requirement is publicly emphasized for all family immigration cases, but local or case-specific instructions can differ.
Police clearance
May be requested depending on the case or local checklist, but it is not always a universal requirement for every applicant in every family category. Check your exact UDI checklist.
16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality
Official approval-rate statistics for this exact sub-stream are not always published in a simple applicant-facing format. If no current official percentage is available publicly, applicants should not rely on unofficial approval claims.
Practical refusal patterns
- weak relationship documentation
- sponsor does not meet maintenance requirement
- wrong family category chosen
- missing custody/consent papers for children
- contradictory relationship explanations
- poor-quality civil documents
- prior immigration non-compliance
17. How to strengthen the application legally
Strong legal ways to improve the case
Use the exact UDI category
Do not guess.
Submit a clean relationship timeline
Include:
- when you met
- when relationship became serious
- visits
- cohabitation periods
- marriage/partnership date
- future living plan in Norway
Make the sponsor’s finances easy to assess
Provide:
- latest tax record
- employment confirmation
- recent payslips
- brief note explaining any job change or income fluctuation
Explain unusual facts up front
Examples:
- large recent bank deposit
- prior refusal from another country
- child custody complexity
- different surnames
- delayed registration of marriage/birth
Organize evidence logically
Use one PDF index if permitted.
Translate properly
Poor translation causes avoidable delays.
Be consistent
Application form, cover letter, relationship history, and sponsor statement should all match.
18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies
Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies
Apply with a document index
A one-page index helps caseworkers find key evidence quickly.
Put civil status documents first
For family cases, the strongest documents are usually:
- passport
- relationship certificate
- birth certificates
- sponsor status in Norway
- financial proof
- housing proof
Explain large deposits honestly
If a bank statement contains a large transfer, add a short note and proof of source.
Use a relationship timeline
This is especially helpful for spouses and cohabitants.
Families should cross-reference evidence
If both sponsor and applicant submit statements, make sure dates and facts align.
For children’s cases, over-document custody
Applicants often underestimate how important parental consent and custody papers are.
Contact the embassy only when necessary
Good reasons include:
- appointment system failure
- passport return issue
- urgent document instruction problem
Poor reasons include asking for a faster decision without any official expedite basis.
If you had a prior refusal, disclose it honestly
Then explain what has changed.
19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance
A cover letter is often not mandatory, but it can be very helpful.
What to include
- exact permit category
- who the sponsor/reference person is
- relationship summary
- intention to live together in Norway
- list of attached key documents
- explanation of any unusual facts
What not to say
- anything inaccurate
- emotional exaggeration without evidence
- claims that conflict with the application form
- “I will work immediately” if your right to work has not yet been granted in the permit decision stage
Simple outline
- Applicant identity
- Category applied for
- Sponsor identity and status in Norway
- Relationship history
- Intention in Norway
- Financial and housing summary
- Explanation of any complexities
- Attached document list
20. Sponsor / inviter guidance
Who can sponsor
The sponsor/reference person is usually the family member in Norway.
What they usually need to provide
- passport or ID copy
- proof of Norwegian citizenship or valid residence permit
- proof of income/maintenance
- housing proof
- explanation of family relationship
- in some cases, proof they have not received certain social benefits
Sponsor mistakes
- assuming bank funds replace income requirements
- submitting old tax papers only
- forgetting housing proof
- giving a statement that conflicts with the applicant’s version
- failing to disclose prior marriage or children
21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children
Are dependents allowed?
Yes. This route itself is fundamentally about family members.
Who qualifies
Common categories include:
- spouse
- registered partner
- cohabiting partner
- fiancé in limited route
- child
- in narrower cases, parent or other close family category recognized by UDI
Partner definition issues
Married
Marriage certificate is central.
Registered partner
Official registration proof required.
Unmarried/cohabiting partner
Expect stricter evidence. This often requires proof of durable cohabitation or a common child.
Children
For minor children, expect close scrutiny of:
- identity
- relationship to parent
- custody
- consent from other parent
- where the child currently lives
Work/study rights of dependents
Dependents under a family immigration residence permit often have broad residence rights, and adult family permit holders commonly have work rights. But always check the individual permit decision.
22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules
Work rights
A family immigration residence permit in Norway often allows the holder to work without a separate work permit. However:
- check the wording of the actual decision
- do not assume rights before the permit is granted
- visitor status is different from family immigration residence status
Study rights
Generally possible while residing on a valid family immigration permit, subject to admission by the educational institution.
Self-employment and business activity
Often possible if your permit gives general work rights, but tax, registration, and sector-specific rules still apply.
Remote work
This is a compliance issue as much as an immigration issue. If living in Norway, foreign remote work can still create:
- Norwegian tax consequences
- social security questions
- employer compliance issues
Volunteering and internships
Usually less sensitive than paid employment, but if structured like work, compliance still matters.
23. Travel rules and border entry issues
Entry clearance is not the same as final admission
Even with an entry visa or approval letter, border authorities can still check:
- passport validity
- identity
- reason for travel
- approval documents
Documents to carry on arrival
Bring:
- passport
- permit approval letter
- sponsor contact details
- proof of accommodation if available
- copies of core civil documents
Re-entry after travel
Once you hold a valid residence card and passport, re-entry is generally smoother. If the card is pending, travel can be more complicated.
New passport issues
If your passport changes, keep the old one if it contains the visa sticker and follow official guidance on travel with old/new passports.
24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion
Extension / renewal
Yes, family immigration residence permits can often be renewed if the conditions continue.
Inside-country renewal
Usually handled in Norway through the proper renewal procedure.
Switching
Switching from another status to family immigration may or may not be possible depending on the existing status and where you apply from. Check UDI guidance carefully.
Changing sponsor
If your family basis changes, the legal basis may change too. A separation or divorce can affect renewal options.
Visitor to family immigration
Do not assume you can always enter as a visitor and then switch inside Norway. In many cases, standard rules require application from abroad unless an exception applies.
25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway
Permanent residence
This route can often count toward permanent residence if:
- you have held qualifying residence permits for the required period
- you meet residence and income/self-support requirements where applicable
- you meet any language/social studies requirements
- you have not had serious violations
Citizenship
A family immigration permit does not itself grant citizenship, but lawful long-term residence under this route can support later naturalization if all requirements are met.
When this visa does not help PR
A mere short-stay family visit visa does not create the same long-term residence count. The key is the residence permit, not a short Schengen visit.
26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations
If you live in Norway, you may become subject to:
- tax residence rules
- reporting obligations
- national identity number or D-number processes
- employer registration/tax withholding if you work
- address registration
- school enrollment rules for children
- general compliance with permit conditions
Warning: immigration approval does not automatically resolve your tax status. Check with Norwegian authorities after arrival if you will work or stay long term.
27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions
EEA/EU family members
These may fall under EEA regulations and residence card rules rather than the standard third-country family immigration rules.
Nordic citizens
There are special Nordic arrangements in some residence situations.
Visa waiver vs residence permit
Even if your nationality allows visa-free short visits to Schengen, you may still need a residence permit for long-term family residence in Norway.
Applying from a third country
Some applicants can apply from the country where they legally reside; others may face local mission restrictions.
28. Special cases and edge cases
Minors
Expect stronger scrutiny of custody and welfare issues.
Divorced/separated parents
Consent and custody are often decisive.
Adopted children
Adoption documents must be legally recognized and may require extra verification.
Same-sex spouses/partners
Norway recognizes same-sex marriages and partnerships under applicable law, but foreign documents still need proper legal proof.
Stateless persons / refugees
Special rules may apply, especially for sponsors with protection status.
Dual nationals
Use the passport and identity history consistently. Name and nationality mismatches should be explained.
Prior refusals
Disclose them and address the reason directly.
Criminal records
This can affect admissibility and credibility.
Applying from a third country
May be possible if you are lawfully resident there, but check local mission competence.
Gender marker/name mismatch
Provide official proof of legal name change or corrected civil status records to avoid identity confusion.
29. Common myths and mistakes
Myth vs fact table
| Myth | Fact |
|---|---|
| “It’s just a family visa sticker.” | For long-term stay, the main status is usually a residence permit. |
| “If my spouse lives in Norway, approval is automatic.” | No. You must still meet relationship, documentation, and often maintenance requirements. |
| “A big bank balance guarantees approval.” | Not necessarily. Official income and maintenance rules matter. |
| “I can go as a tourist and convert later.” | Not always. Many applicants must follow the proper application route. |
| “All family permit holders need a separate work permit.” | Often false; many family immigration permits include work rights. Check the decision. |
| “If we are unmarried, photos are enough.” | Usually false. Cohabitation/durable relationship proof is often essential. |
| “Embassy processing times are fixed.” | They vary widely by location and case complexity. |
30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication
After refusal
You should receive a written refusal explaining the reasons.
Appeal
Norway generally allows appeals in immigration matters, subject to the instructions and deadlines stated in the decision letter. Follow the refusal notice exactly.
Deadlines
Appeal deadlines are strict. Check the refusal letter.
Fee refund
Application fees are generally not refunded after processing begins, unless official rules say otherwise.
Reapplication
Possible, especially if you can fix the refusal reason, such as:
- stronger income proof
- corrected documents
- better relationship evidence
- proper custody consent
When legal help may be useful
- complex refusals
- suspected marriage-of-convenience concerns
- children’s cases with cross-border custody issues
- criminal or overstay history
- appeals raising legal interpretation issues
31. Arrival in Norway: what happens next?
At the border
You may be asked for:
- passport
- approval letter
- sponsor details
- travel purpose confirmation
Soon after arrival
Depending on your instructions:
- attend police appointment
- provide biometrics if needed
- order or collect residence card
First practical steps
Within the first weeks, many applicants need to think about:
- registered address
- national ID number or D-number
- tax card if working
- bank account
- GP/health registration where applicable
- school enrollment for children
First 30 to 90 days
Most new arrivals should make sure:
- residence card issues are completed
- employer paperwork is correct if working
- tax registration is addressed
- all authority letters are kept safely
32. Real-world timeline examples
Example 1: Spouse of a Norwegian citizen
- Weeks 1–4: collect marriage certificate, sponsor income records, housing proof
- Week 5: submit online application and attend appointment
- Following months: UDI processes case; possible request for more evidence
- Approval: entry visa issued if needed
- Arrival: police/residence card steps
Example 2: Child joining parent in Norway
- Weeks 1–6: gather birth certificate, custody order, consent from other parent, sponsor permit documents
- Submission: child application lodged
- Processing: extra review if custody is complicated
- Approval and travel
- Arrival and local registration
Example 3: Cohabiting partner
- Longer preparation stage due to evidence gathering
- Collect proof of shared address, relationship duration, travel history, communication
- Submit with strong timeline and sponsor income evidence
- Possible interview or additional scrutiny
Example 4: Family of foreign worker in Norway
- Sponsor first secures/holds valid residence permit
- Family then applies under family immigration
- Processing depends on sponsor status and maintenance documentation
Example 5: Fiancé route
- Confirm exact UDI category first
- Provide marriage plans and compliance with route conditions
- Do not confuse with spouse route
33. Ideal document pack structure
Recommended order
- Document index
- Application receipt
- Applicant passport
- Sponsor ID/residence proof
- Relationship proof
- Children/custody documents if relevant
- Sponsor financial documents
- Housing proof
- Explanation letter
- Translations and legalization proofs
Naming convention
Use clear file names such as:
01-Application-Receipt.pdf02-Applicant-Passport.pdf03-Sponsor-Passport-and-Permit.pdf04-Marriage-Certificate.pdf05-Sponsor-Payslips-Jan-Mar-2026.pdf
Scan quality tips
- color scans where possible
- all edges visible
- no shadows
- one upright orientation
- merge small related files logically
34. Exact checklists
Pre-application checklist
- confirmed exact UDI family category
- checked whether EEA rules apply instead
- valid passport ready
- civil documents collected
- sponsor income documents collected
- housing evidence collected
- translations arranged
- prior refusals disclosed
Submission-day checklist
- passport
- appointment confirmation
- fee receipt
- printed checklist if required
- originals and copies
- translations
- sponsor supporting file
Biometrics/interview-day checklist
- arrive early
- bring original documents
- know your relationship timeline
- answer honestly and consistently
Arrival checklist
- carry approval letter
- carry sponsor contact details
- attend police/residence card steps
- arrange address and tax registration if working
Extension/renewal checklist
- apply before expiry
- confirm relationship still qualifies
- update income/housing evidence
- check passport validity
Refusal recovery checklist
- read refusal reason carefully
- identify missing/weak evidence
- check appeal deadline
- decide appeal vs fresh application
- correct inconsistencies before resubmitting
35. FAQs
1. Is Norway’s family reunification route really a Type D visa?
Usually the core status is a family immigration residence permit. A Type D national visa may be used as entry clearance after approval.
2. Can I apply just for a long family visa without a residence permit?
For long-term family stay, usually no. The residence permit is the main legal basis.
3. Can I work in Norway on a family immigration permit?
Often yes, but check the exact decision letter.
4. Can my child join me in Norway?
Often yes, if the legal parent-child relationship and custody/consent rules are met.
5. Do I need to be legally married?
Not always. Cohabitants may qualify if they meet the specific evidence requirements.
6. Is a fiancé treated the same as a spouse?
No. Fiancé cases usually follow a different, narrower route.
7. Does the sponsor need a minimum income?
Often yes. Check UDI’s current maintenance requirement.
8. Is savings alone enough?
Usually not if the rule requires qualifying income.
9. Can I apply from inside Norway as a visitor?
Sometimes applicants assume this, but it is not always allowed. Check UDI rules for your situation.
10. Do I need private health insurance?
Not always as a core family immigration condition, but check travel-phase and local registration requirements.
11. How long does processing take?
It varies by category, location, and complexity. Check UDI’s processing information.
12. Can I study on this permit?
Usually yes.
13. Can I run a business on this permit?
Often possible if your permit gives general work rights, but tax and business registration rules still apply.
14. What if my passport expires soon?
Renew it early if possible. Passport validity can affect permit issuance.
15. What if my marriage certificate is not in English or Norwegian?
A certified translation may be required.
16. Do same-sex spouses qualify?
Yes, if the relationship is legally recognized and properly documented.
17. Do all applicants need an interview?
No.
18. Can previous visa refusals hurt my case?
They can, especially if not disclosed honestly.
19. What if the sponsor recently changed jobs?
Provide updated employer letter, payslips, and explanation.
20. Can I travel before my residence card is issued?
Sometimes risky. Check the approval notice and travel rules carefully.
21. Does time on this permit count toward permanent residence?
Often yes, if it is a qualifying residence permit and other conditions are met.
22. Can I include my children in the same application?
Each person normally needs their own application, though family cases can be prepared together.
23. What if the other parent refuses consent for the child?
This can make the case much more difficult and may require court or legal custody evidence.
24. Can my sponsor be a student in Norway?
Possibly, depending on their status and ability to meet the rules.
25. What happens if I divorce after getting the permit?
Future renewal can be affected. Seek official guidance immediately.
26. Can I apply through another Schengen country’s embassy?
Only if that mission officially represents Norway for your location.
27. Is there a fast-track service?
Not generally as a standard published premium option for this route.
28. Can I submit photocopies only?
Originals may need to be shown. Follow local mission instructions.
29. Will UDI ask for DNA evidence?
Only in some cases where family relationship proof is unclear and the authorities request it.
30. Can I use this route for my elderly parents?
Only in limited situations. Parent routes are narrower than spouse/child routes.
36. Official sources and verification
Below are official sources relevant to Norway family immigration, entry visas, fees, processing, and legal framework.
-
Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) family immigration portal:
https://www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/family-immigration/ -
UDI application portal information:
https://www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/ -
UDI guide for family immigration with a spouse:
https://www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/family-immigration/spouse/ -
UDI guide for family immigration with cohabitant:
https://www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/family-immigration/cohabitant/ -
UDI guide for family immigration for children:
https://www.udi.no/en/want-to-apply/family-immigration/children/ -
UDI maintenance requirement information:
https://www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/maintenance-requirement-in-family-immigration-cases/ -
UDI processing times page:
https://www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/guide-to-case-processing-times/ -
UDI fees page:
https://www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/fees/ -
UDI entry visa information:
https://www.udi.no/en/word-definitions/entry-visa/ -
Norwegian Immigration Act and related legal materials via Lovdata / official legal publishing access point:
https://lovdata.no/dokument/NLE/lov/2008-05-15-35 -
Norwegian Ministry of Justice and Public Security:
https://www.regjeringen.no/en/dep/jd/id463/ -
Norwegian police immigration information:
https://www.politiet.no/en/services/residence-permits-and-protection/
37. Final verdict
Norway’s so-called “D-Family visa” is best understood as a family immigration residence permit process, sometimes followed by a Type D entry visa so the approved applicant can travel to Norway.
Best for
- spouses
- registered partners
- qualifying cohabitants
- children
- certain other close family members under specific rules
Biggest benefits
- lawful long-term residence
- often broad work and study rights
- real path toward permanent residence
- stable family unity in Norway
Biggest risks
- weak relationship proof
- sponsor not meeting maintenance requirement
- wrong route chosen
- incomplete child custody documents
- treating a residence permit like a short-stay visa application
Top preparation advice
- identify the exact UDI family category first
- use the official checklist
- make sponsor finances easy to understand
- document the relationship thoroughly
- explain unusual facts proactively
- never rely on assumptions from other countries’ family visa systems
When to consider another visa
Use another route if your real purpose is:
- a short family visit
- tourism
- study without family basis
- employment without family basis
- business setup without family basis
- EEA free movement residence rights instead of standard third-country family immigration
Information gaps or items to verify before applying
- exact current maintenance requirement amount
- current application fee and whether any child exemptions apply
- whether your nationality requires a separate entry visa after approval
- whether you may apply from your current country of lawful residence
- whether your local Norwegian mission uses an external service provider
- exact document legalization/apostille rules for your country’s civil records
- whether your case falls under standard family immigration rules or EEA family member rules
- current processing times for your exact category and place of submission
- whether your local mission requires extra documents beyond the UDI core checklist
- whether a police certificate is required in your exact subcategory/location
- whether travel before residence card issuance is practical in your situation
- current rules if the sponsor has protection status, student status, or a temporary permit
- child cases involving shared custody, absent parent consent, adoption, or foreign court orders
- whether any recent legal or policy updates have changed renewal, PR, or citizenship counting rules