Norway is a Scandinavian favourite, with its glassy fjords, Northern Lights, storybook railways and design‑forward cities. For short visits, Indian passport holders typically apply for a Schengen visitor’s (Type C) visa that permits up to 90 days in any 180‑day period across Norway and the wider Schengen Area. Applications are registered online through the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (UDI) and then lodged at VFS Global centres across India for document collection and biometrics; the decision is taken by Norwegian authorities (usually the Embassy in New Delhi).
Norway follows Schengen rules for short stays and issues national permits for longer stays.
This is the standard Norway tourist visa used by Indian travellers for leisure, short family visits, business meetings, events and similar purposes. It allows single or multiple entries within overall 90/180‑day limits; employment is not permitted.
For study, work or family immigration (stays over 90 days), you must apply for the relevant residence permit rather than a tourist visa. These applications are registered on UDI’s portal and processed under separate rules and timelines.
Some nationalities travel visa‑free for short Schengen visits; Indian citizens are not visa‑exempt and must obtain a visa before travel.
You’ll be assessed under Schengen rules. Typical Norway tourist visa requirements include:
Valid passport (issued within the last 10 years, with 2 blank pages and valid at least 3 months beyond the planned exit).
Genuine short‑term purpose (tourism/visit/business) and intention to leave before your authorised stay ends.
Sufficient funds to cover travel, stay and return journey, supported by recent bank statements and, if applicable, employment evidence.
Confirmed travel plans, including the return/onward itinerary and proof of accommodation (hotel bookings, tour confirmation, or invitation if visiting family/friends).
Schengen‑compliant travel medical insurance valid for all Schengen states for the entire trip with minimum ₹31,71,360 (approx. €30,000) coverage.
Biometrics (fingerprints and photo) unless captured for Schengen within the last 59 months.
Confirm your need for a Norway travel visa and that Norway is your main destination (longest stay or primary purpose). Start at UDI’s official page set to India for tailored guidance.
Prepare a valid passport, photographs, itinerary, accommodation proof, financial evidence, and insurance meeting €30,000 minimum coverage. Having clean scans and orderly printouts ensures a smoother appointment.
Create an account and register the Schengen (visitor’s) application online. You’ll pay the visa fee online during registration and receive a PDF application form and receipt by email. Ensure to take a print and sign these to carry to VFS.
After registering, book an appointment at a VFS Global Norway centre in India. VFS collects your documents and biometrics and forwards your file to the Embassy in New Delhi; VFS is not the decision‑maker.
Arrive with your checklist, organised documents, signed application, and passport. Give fingerprints and a photo unless exempt due to recent Schengen biometrics. Keep your VFS acknowledgement for tracking.
Standard decision time is up to 15 calendar days after your file reaches the Embassy; complex cases can be extended per the Schengen Visa Code. Apply early, especially for peak seasons.
Always follow the latest list on UDI/VFS. A standard file for a Norway tourist visa from India typically includes:
Signed Schengen application form (printed from UDI portal) and payment receipt.
Passport (validity and pages as above) + copy of biodata page.
Recent photo meeting Schengen standards.
Travel itinerary and return flight booking; proof of accommodation for the entire stay.
Travel medical insurance for all Schengen states with €30,000 minimum cover for the full trip.
Proof of funds (recent bank statements; employment letter/salary slips for employees; business proofs for self‑employed).
Purpose‑specific papers (e.g., invitation + ID of host for family visits; event registrations for conferences).
Tip: Do not purchase non‑refundable tickets or fully prepaid hotels until the visa is granted; hold or cancellable bookings are safer.
A Norway itinerary, Oslo + fjords + a hint of Arctic magic, can be balanced with sensible Indian financial products.
Personal travel loans from Indian banks/NBFCs can spread big‑ticket costs like flights, hotels, tours, and the Norway visa application fees across EMIs. Compare annualised costs (APR), foreclosure charges, and prepayment options before you decide.
Credit cards help with UDI portal payments, hotel prepayments and airfares. Prefer low‑forex‑markup cards and always pay in full to avoid interest. Many issuers offer lounge access and travel insurance add‑ons; ensure your Schengen insurance still meets €30,000 coverage and geographic scope.
Norway rewards every extra day you can squeeze into your 90‑day allowance. Build your plan around these classics:
Oslo
A green, waterfront capital where the MUNCH museum, the Opera House and the Barcode skyline sit beside leafy neighbourhoods. Efficient public transport and walkable cultural quarters make it ideal for the first three days of a Norway tourist visa trip.
Bergen
The gateway to the fjords, with UNESCO‑listed Bryggen and easy access to cruises and viewpoints (Fløyen, Ulriken).
Flåm & Nærøyfjord
A picture‑book branch of the Sognefjord. The Flåm Railway climbs through waterfalls and valleys—pair it with a fjord cruise for a blockbuster day.
Tromsø (Northern Lights)
From September to March, head north for aurora hunting, dog‑sledding and polar museums. Midnight Sun adventures await in summer.
Lofoten Islands
Dramatic peaks plunging into cobalt seas, scarlet rorbuer cabins, white‑sand Arctic beaches, ideal for photographers and slow travellers alike.
Note: Plan inter‑Schengen travel carefully to ensure Norway remains your main destination if you file the Norway tourist visa from India.
Under Schengen rules, the visa application fee is €90 for adults, €45 for ages 6–11, and free for children under 6. You pay this online in the UDI portal when registering your application. (Amounts are charged in EUR; local conversions vary.)
To present costs per your preference (INR first, then Norwegian currency):
Approx. ₹8,200–₹8,800 (about NOK 980–1,050) for adults, depending on the day’s rates; actual payment is in EUR 90 at UDI.
Approx. ₹4,100–₹4,400 (about NOK 490–520) for children aged 6–11; actual payment is EUR 45.
Note: Visa fees can be updated by EU regulation; always check the fee displayed in the UDI portal at payment time.
When lodging at VFS, a separate service fee applies (collected by VFS as the external service provider). The fee is additional to the government visa fee and is paid as part of the appointment/centre submission process. Check the Norway—India VFS one‑pager for current details and any optional services you may select.
Typical timeline: Up to 15 calendar days once the Embassy has your complete file.
Apply early: You can apply 6 months ahead (9 for seafarers); late or peak‑season applications risk delays.
Appointment time is separate: The 15‑day clock starts after biometrics/documents are lodged; appointment availability at VFS may add days.
For Indian travellers, a Norway tourist visa is straightforward if you prepare well: register on UDI, book VFS Global for biometrics, submit a clean document set, and apply early. Keep an eye on the official UDI/VFS guidance for fees, checklists, and timelines so your Norway visa application stays smooth and predictable.
Reviewer
No. Indian passport holders must obtain a Schengen visitor’s visa before travel; there is no visa‑on‑arrival for Indians in Norway.
If your file is complete and your travel purpose is clear, it’s generally straightforward. The process is standardised via UDI (online registration) and VFS Global (submission/biometrics), with typical decisions in up to 15 days after the Embassy receives your case. Apply early and follow the official checklist closely.
Schengen’s application fee is €90 for adults, €45 for ages 6–11, and free for under‑6s, payable in the UDI portal. Presenting this in your preferred format: about ₹8,200–₹8,800 (roughly NOK 980–1,050) for adults; actual charge is in EUR and may vary with exchange rates. A VFS service fee applies separately.
There’s no fixed universal amount published; you must prove sufficient means for your itinerary (stay, transport, daily costs) using recent bank statements and, where relevant, employment or business proofs. Ensure your evidence plausibly matches your trip length and plan.
Passport (validity rules apply), completed application + fee receipt from UDI, photo, travel itinerary, proof of accommodation, €30,000‑coverage Schengen travel insurance, and financial proofs. Additional purpose‑specific documents may be required (e.g., invitations).
Use the official VFS Norway (India) one‑pager for submission logistics and the UDI visitor visa page (India) for rules, checklists and fees. These are the authoritative sources.