Norway visa options for Canada passport holders
Tourist / short stay
Visa-free · up to 90 days
Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days.
Visa types & longer-stay routes for Norway
Non-EU/EEA/EFTA nationals for residence permits; Schengen short-stay rules for non-visa-exempt; Svalbard rules apply to all
- Tourist
Schengen Visa-Free / ETIAS Short Stay
90 days in any 180-day period across Schengen
- Insurance
- Recommendednot legally required for visa-exempt but strongly advised given uninsured costs
- Good for
- US/UK/CA/AU/NZ/JP and other visa-exempt for tourism or business
- Requirement
- Passport (6 months beyond stay), funds, return ticket; ETIAS from Q4 2026
- Work
Self-Employed Person Residence Permit
Initially 1 year renewable; PR after 3 years
- Insurance
- OptionalCovered under National Insurance Scheme once registered as resident
- Good for
- Non-EU/EEA founders and freelancers establishing a viable Norwegian-registered business
- Requirement
- Skilled-worker qualifications (3+ years education or equivalent), viable business plan with sufficient economic foundation, registered Norwegian company, secured housing
- Work
Skilled Worker Residence Permit
Up to 3 years renewable; PR possible after 3 years
- Insurance
- OptionalCovered under National Insurance Scheme once registered
- Good for
- Non-EU/EEA workers with concrete full-time job offer in Norway requiring vocational or higher education
- Requirement
- Job offer matching qualifications; min gross salary NOK 522,600 (~49,800 USD) for bachelor-level or NOK 599,200 (~57,100 USD) for master-level as of Sep 2025
- Residence
Svalbard Residence (No Visa)
Indefinite as long as self-supporting; register in Population Register within 8 days of arrival
- Insurance
- RecommendedStrongly recommended; Svalbard has no public healthcare entitlement and medevac to mainland is costly
- Good for
- Any nationality wishing to live or work in Svalbard archipelago outside Schengen
- Requirement
- Self-support financially, secured accommodation, no burden on public welfare; Schengen access needed to transit mainland
- Residence
Job Seeker Visa
6 months general skilled job seekers; 12 months graduates and researchers; non-extendable
- Insurance
- Required(private cover for full duration of stay)
- Good for
- Skilled workers seeking employment in Norway, plus recent graduates and researchers from Norwegian institutions
- Requirement
- Skilled-worker qualifications, ~NOK 155,034 (~14,800 USD) for living expenses, valid health insurance, secured accommodation
Visa rules change often and depend on your nationality. Last checked: 2026-06. Always confirm with the official immigration service or your nearest consulate before you apply.
Last verified June 2026
Routes that depend on your nationality
Some of Norway’s long-stay routes are open only to citizens of specific countries. Here’s where a Canada passport stands:
Working Holiday for Young Adults
You qualify — open to Canada passport holders
Norway's only nationality-restricted long-stay route. Bilateral working holiday agreements (residence permit, up to 1 year, renewable to max 2 years total). Age 18-30 (must not have turned 31 at application) for Andorra, Argentina, Australia, Japan and New Zealand; Canada is the exception with a higher age limit (up to 35/36). Must be a citizen (permanent residence is not sufficient). Cannot work for the same employer more than 6 months. Funds requirement ~NOK 46,464 for first 3 months. Argentina has an annual quota of 300 permits, which was already exhausted for 2026 (reopens January 2027); the other countries have no published quota. Verified against the official UDI (Norwegian Directorate of Immigration) site and corroborated by Wikipedia. ISO-2 mapping: AD=Andorra, AR=Argentina, AU=Australia, CA=Canada, JP=Japan, NZ=New Zealand.
Visa-free isn’t insurance-free
Whatever route you take into Norway, your entry stamp never includes health cover. Many longer-stay visas also require proof of insurance before they’re granted. That part is on you — and it’s what we actually do.
Canada → Norway: frequently asked
- Do Canada passport holders need a visa to visit Norway?
- Visa-free · up to 90 days. Enter without a visa, usually for a set number of days. Always confirm with the official source before booking.
- Can a Canada passport holder live or work long-term in Norway?
- Yes, via a long-stay visa. Norway has 5 documented visa types covering work, study, residence and — where it exists — digital-nomad routes.
- Do I need travel insurance for Norway?
- Entry to Norway never includes health cover, so travel medical insurance is strongly recommended. Several Norway visas also require proof of insurance before they're granted.
Last updated
Visa rules can change at short notice and depend on your purpose of travel, length of stay and onward tickets. Always confirm with the destination’s embassy or the IATA Travel Centre before you book. Visa-free entry never includes travel health insurance. That’s still on you.