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Service provider, seconded employees

Skilled workers who are employed by a foreign enterprise and who are to provide services in Norway can be granted a residence permit. Your foreign employer must have entered into a contract to provide services for a Norwegian enterprise.

MannPC

 Who is eligible for this type of residence permit?

You must be an employee of a foreign enterprise which has entered into a contract with a Norwegian enterprise.

You must be a skilled worker. The term skilled worker covers the following categories:

  • Specialist training corresponding to upper secondary education level. You must have completed vocational training for a specific occupation. The education must as a minimum correspond to upper secondary education level, i.e. at least three years. If your were educated abroad, you must have achieved the same level of expertise as you would have achieved had you been educated in Norway. Examples include vocational education for joiners, plumbers or auxiliary nurses.
  • Craft certificate. A craft certificate taken abroad must have resulted in the same level of expertise as a Norwegian craft certificate. 
  • University college or university education. The requirement is a completed degree or study programme. Examples include nurses, engineers, Bachelor or Master’s degrees. 
  • Special qualifications. You must have gained expertise through professional experience of a certain duration, alternatively in combination with other training (courses and similar). If there is a formal education in the field in question, then your level of expertise must be approximately equivalent to the level of such education. Please note that, in principle, a skilled worker permit is only granted on the basis of special qualifications in exceptional circumstances and that thorough documentation is required.  

Your expertise must be relevant to your ability to complete the assignment. 

What requirements apply to the employment relationship and the assignment?

  • A contract must have been entered into between a foreign enterprise (the contractor) and a Norwegian enterprise (the client).
  • The contract must state that you are to provide services of a limited duration in Norway.
  • The client’s registered business address must be in Norway. 
  • You must be an employee of the foreign enterprise.
  • As a rule, the offer of an assignment must be for one employer.
  • There is no requirement for the assignment to be full time.
  • The pay and working conditions must not be poorer than those stipulated in the current collective agreement or pay scale. If no such collective agreement or pay scale exists, the pay and working conditions must not be poorer than is normal in Norway for the occupation and place concerned. 
  • If the position is not covered by a collective agreement or pay scale, you must be paid in accordance with the government collective agreement, unless it is documented that other conditions are normal for the occupation and place concerned.
  • The Norwegian client must ensure that the foreign employer meets the requirement for pay and working conditions during the assignment, and must be able to document this to the supervisory or immigration authorities on request.

How to apply

To apply for a residence permit, you must complete the application form. As a rule,you must submit your application to the Norwegian embassy or consulate in your home country or in the country where you have held a residence permit for the past six months.

However, if you are a skilled worker with legal residence in Norway, you can apply from Norway through the police.   

The opportunity to apply for a residence permit from Norway does not, however, apply if you are staying in the country in connection with an asylum application or pending departure after rejection of an asylum application.

Applications from Norway must be submitted to the police district where you live.

See also information about visas to apply for a permit, and information about stays of up to six months to seek employment in Norway. 

The client in Norway can apply on your behalf

The client in Norway can apply for a residence permit on your behalf if you authorise him or her in writing. You can do this by filling in the authorisation section in the application form, by completing an authorisation form or by providing some other form of written authorisation. In this case, the application must be submitted to the police district in which the client has his/her registered business address.

Your employer abroad cannot submit a residence permit application on your behalf, since the employer does not have a registered business address in Norway. 

The early employment scheme

You can enter Norway and start working before your application has been processed if your client meets the criteria for and takes advantage of the early employment scheme. For this scheme to apply, you must be employed by an international company.

Permits during the processing of applications

You may not start working until you have been granted a residence permit. The police can issue a permit while your application is being processed, if you so request, if the police are of the opinion that you are entitled to apply from Norway and it is probable that your application will be granted. 

What must be enclosed with the application?

In addition to the completed application form, you must enclose: 

  • a copy of your passport 
  • a passport photo/ photo that meets specific requirements
  • an offer of assignment form, signed by the Norwegian client, the foreign enterprise and yourself as a seconded employee
  • the contract between the Norwegian client and the foreign enterprise documenting the nature of the contractual relationship. The contract must also clearly state which services you are to provide and that they are of a limited duration. 
  • your employment contract with the foreign enterprise
  • a Certificate of Registration for the Norwegian enterprise from the Brønnøysund Register Centre  
  • confirmation from the Norwegian client that he/she will ensure that the foreign employer meets the pay and working conditions requirements during the assignment
  • documentation of education containing information about the duration of the education, its content and the level of the educational institution
  • documentation of work experience containing detailed information from former employers about the duration, tasks and the nature of the activities 
  • information about accommodation in Norway
  • documentation that you have paid the application feeAs a rule, it is sufficient that you enclose a copy of the documents with your application, but you must be able to present the original documents when you hand in your application. You must also enclose a translation of the documents into Norwegian or English with the application.

How long will it take to process the application?

See the list of the UDI’s expected case processing times at www.udi.no/caseprocessingtime.

The content of the permit

  • A residence permit as a service provider, seconded employee, is linked to the assignment or assignments stipulated in the contract. You may therefore not take other assignments than stipulated by the permit. Nor can you carry out work for an employer in Norway or engage in business activities in Norway.
  • The permit can be granted for one year, however, not for longer than the duration of the assignment.
  • The permit entitles you to repeated entry into Norway for the duration of the permit.
  • The permit does not form the basis for a permanent residence permit.
  • Family members can apply for residence permits pursuant to the rules relating to family immigration, provided that your assignment lasts for more than six months.

Is the permit renewable?

The permit is renewable, but the duration of the permit cannot exceed a total of four years. The permit cannot be renewed after this, nor can a new permit as a service provider, seconded employee, be granted.
 
You must apply for a renewal of your residence permit at least one month before your previous residence permit expires, and the application must be submitted to the police where you live. A fee must be paid for renewal applications.

You can appeal a rejection

You can appeal the decision. Read more about how to appeal a decision at www.udi.no/appeals.

Further information

For more information, contact your nearest Norwegian embassy or consulate or the UDI’s Information Service for Applicants.

Read more about the conditions for this permit at the website UDIregelverk.no


Last updated 08.01.2010
Published 07.04.2006

The Norwegian Directorate of Immigration, PB 8108 Dep, 0032 Oslo. Phone: (+ 47) 23 35 15 00, Editor in chief: Bente E. Engesland, Web editor: Helen K. Åsli