URGENT: Every voice matters — Reunite these families /// Master’s in Norway: Application Routes, Deadlines, and Common Requirements /// URGENT: Every voice matters — Reunite these families /// Master’s in Norway: Application Routes, Deadlines, and Common Requirements ///
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Master’s in Norway: Application Routes, Deadlines, and Common Requirements

How master’s applications work in Norway: programme-specific portals, typical deadline patterns, entry requirements (180 ECTS bachelor), tuition rules for non‑EU/EEA applicants, and documentation tips.

Master’s admissions in Norway are often programme-by-programme (not always via Samordna). The biggest traps for immigrants are: missing deadlines, incomplete documentation, and misunderstanding tuition/financial requirements.

Entry requirements (common baseline)

  • A bachelor’s degree comparable to a Norwegian bachelor (often 180 ECTS).
  • Relevant academic background in the subject (often 1.5 years of related studies).
  • English language documentation for English-taught programmes.
  • Some programmes require minimum grade averages.

Deadlines vary (watch your category)

Many institutions have earlier deadlines for applicants from outside EU/EEA/Switzerland (often autumn/winter). Other applicant groups may apply in spring. Always check the programme page for your institution and your applicant category.

Tuition + funding documentation (non‑EU/EEA reality)

Degree-seeking students from outside EU/EEA and Switzerland must normally pay tuition fees. Institutions may also require proof of funding for living costs and tuition as part of admissions/study permit workflows. Do not assume “Norway is free” unless you are clearly exempt.

Do Better Norge checklist

  1. Pick 2–3 programmes and read each programme’s admission page carefully.
  2. List required documents: degree, transcript, grading scale, language test, passport/ID.
  3. Upload complete documents early (day 1, not day 30).
  4. If your degree is foreign and you’re unsure about comparability, consult HK-dir recognition guidance.
  5. If you are a single parent, plan: childcare, school holidays, exams, and funding timelines.

Sources & further reading

Do Better Norge note: Master’s admissions are paperwork-heavy by design. Don’t fight the system emotionally—win with structure: documents, deadlines, and confirmations.

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