Norway

1. Official institutions

2. Key datasets

3. Demographics

3.1 Current population composition

Population composition (January 1, 2026 — estimated total population 5,627,400)
78.2%
17.5%
  • Norwegian background78.2%
  • Immigrants17.5%
  • Norwegian-born to immigrant parents4.2%
Source: SSB, "Innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre"

3.2 Origin breakdown

Immigrants by region of origin (January 1, 2026 — main groups)
5.1%
3.9%
2%
6.5%
  • Asia5.1%
  • Eastern Europe (EU members since 2004)3.9%
  • Africa2%
  • Other regions6.5%
Source: SSB, "Innvandrere og norskfødte med innvandrerforeldre"

3.3 Immigration waves (1970 – present)

Number of immigrants and their Norwegian-born children (1970 → 2026)
03431766863511029527137270219701980199020002010202020261225627987120
  • Immigrants + their children (total)
  • Of which immigrants (born abroad)
Source: SSB StatBank API (table 05182, each January 1)
📊Immigrant population data for 1945–1969, and a detailed decade-by-decade breakdown by country of origin (Pakistan, Vietnam, former Yugoslavia, etc.), are planned for a future update.

3.4 Age structure (population pyramid)

Age structure (January 1, 2026 — share within each group)
0–19
20–44
45–66
67+
  • Total Norwegian population
  • Immigrants + their children
Source: SSB StatBank API (tables 07111 and 07459, January 1, 2026)

3.5 Long-term projection

Projected total population of Norway (2026 → 2100, medium scenario MMM)
017876733575346536301971506932026205021006384547
  • Total population (MMM scenario)
Source: SSB, Befolkningsframskrivinger (national population projections)
6.38 million
SSB's projected total population in 2100, medium scenario MMM (up from 5.63 million in 2026)
📊A projected population share by origin (immigrants and descendants) for 2050 and 2100 is planned for a future update. SSB's projection pages publish the underlying components (births, deaths, migration) but not a direct origin-based population share forecast that could be confirmed during this research.

4. Public finances — net cost

+4.1m NOK
Net present-value cost per person from the R3 group ('rest of world'), for an additional cohort of immigrants in 2015 (measured 2015–2100, 2012 NOK)
Net present value per additional immigrant, by origin group (2015 cohort, 2012 NOK)
R1: Western Europe, North America, Australia-800k NOK/person
positive net fiscal contribution
R2: Eastern Europe (EU members)+800k NOK/person
R3: Rest of world (mainly asylum and non-European family migration)+4100k NOK/person
Source: SSB Rapporter 2017/31 (Holmøy & Strøm, commissioned under NOU 2017:2)
📊An independent second fiscal-cost methodology (e.g. from NHO or Civita) is planned for a future update. No post-NOU 2017:2 update has been identified at this stage.

4.1 Pension system / contributor-to-pensioner ratio

Demographic dependency ratios (2026, national level, not broken down by origin)
Old-age dependency ratio (65+ ÷ 20–64)+32.8%
Total dependency ratio (0–19 + 65+ ÷ 20–64)+70.2%
Source: Calculated by this observatory from SSB StatBank API table 07459 raw data
📊A demographic dependency ratio broken down by origin (immigrants / descendants / Norwegian background) is planned for a future update. No such breakdown could be found in SSB's published statistics.

5. Labor market

Employment rate trend (2015 → 2024, ages 20–66)
0%22%45%67%90%2015202468%74%80%
  • Immigrants
  • Norwegian-born children of immigrants
  • People without an immigrant background
Source: IMDi, Indikatorrapport 2025, 'Arbeid'

6. Security / justice

7. Education

8. Housing

9. Social cohesion

📊Specific social cohesion indicators (interpersonal trust, sense of belonging, perceived discrimination figures) are planned for a future update. The latest edition of SSB's living conditions survey needs to be checked.

10. Recent political context

11. Data limitations and biases

⚠️ Limits SSB’s definitions: “innvandrer” (immigrant) refers to a person born abroad to two parents born abroad (and all four grandparents born abroad). Norwegian-born children of immigrants form a separate statistical category. International comparisons should account for the fact that other countries (e.g. Denmark) use similar but not identical definitions.

Demographic composition: gross differences in employment, income, housing, and crime between immigrants and the rest of the population partly reflect differing age and sex structures (more young men in certain immigrant groups). SSB and IMDi generally also publish adjusted figures, but not systematically for every indicator (e.g. the housing and education figures presented here are raw rates by origin group).

Aggregation by “group”: IMDi groups countries of origin into “group 1” (Western Europe, North America, Australia, New Zealand) and “group 2” (rest of world, including most asylum and non-European family migration), which masks significant heterogeneity within each group.

Coverage of crime statistics: SSB data covers only offenses known to the authorities (siktede) and explicitly excludes unregistered persons in irregular status or asylum seekers whose case did not generate an official report — an under-coverage bias for the illegal/unregularized component of the immigrant population.

Uneven data availability by topic: the net fiscal cost data (section 4) is based on a 2017 SSB report (NOU 2017:2), with no independent second methodology update identified to date. Social cohesion indicators (section 9) lack recent figures with a direct verifiable link. Dependency ratios broken down by origin (section 4.1) and projected future population shares by origin (section 3.5) could likewise not be confirmed from public primary sources. These gaps are documented as “data not publicly available” in the relevant sections rather than filled by estimation.

Source for explicit methodological limitations: SSB itself notes, in its own crime publications, that “crime is more frequent among young men” and that residual differences after adjustment remain unexplained — https://www.ssb.no/sosiale-forhold-og-kriminalitet/artikler-og-publikasjoner/innvandrere-mindre-overrepresentert-blant-siktede-enn-for