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Guidance: Healthcare for UK nationals living in Norway

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This guidance will be updated if anything changes to how you get state healthcare in Norway.

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If you started living in Norway before 1 January 2021, your rights to access healthcare in Norway will stay the same for as long as you remain resident.

This guidance explains what you need to do in Norway depending on your circumstances.

Anyone registered as a resident in Norway has a right to access the Norwegian state healthcare system.

State healthcare in Norway is not completely free. Healthcare costs are covered by both the state and through patient contributions (user fees).

UK nationals usually access the Norwegian healthcare system (called Helfo) in one of these ways:

  • registering a UK-issued S1 form with the National Insurance Scheme (see ‘UK-funded healthcare: getting and using an S1 form in Norway’ below)
  • making contributions to the National Insurance Scheme through their employer or as a self-employed person
  • using a UK passport for temporary stays
  • taking out private health insurance

Healthcare if you live and work in Norway

If you are planning on moving to Norway, see the guidance on Living in Norway for more information about visa and residency requirements.

You must register as a resident if you’re living in Norway for more than 3 months.

Once you’re a resident, you’re entitled to state healthcare on the same basis as a Norwegian citizen.

If you’re employed or self-employed, you’ll make contributions to the National Insurance Scheme.

Once you’re a resident you may also be entitled to a Norwegian European Health Insurance Card (EHIC) for travel.

If you were living Norway before 1 January 2021

If you started living in Norway before 1 January 2021, your rights to access healthcare in Norway will stay the same for as long as you remain resident.

This means you may also be entitled to:

  • a Norwegian EHIC for travel, including visits to the UK
  • a UK S1 if you start drawing a UK State Pension (see ‘UK-funded healthcare: getting and using an S1 form in Norway’ below)

How to register for healthcare

You first need to register as a resident in Norway. You’ll receive a Norwegian ID number. This is the same number you’ll use for healthcare access.

If you’re employed, your employer will sign you up to the National Insurance Scheme automatically. You’ll make contributions through your payroll.

If you’re self-employed, you first need to register your business on the national register (website in Norwegian). You can then sign up to the National Insurance Scheme.

Once you’ve joined you’ll be able to access healthcare services through the Norwegian state healthcare system, Helfo.

Give your Norwegian ID number when you register with a GP and each time you have an appointment.

To be referred to a specialist you need to see your GP first.

How much you’ll pay

State healthcare in Norway is not completely free. You may have to pay some of the cost of any treatment.

Find out how much you’ll need to pay for health services

If you’re a hospital inpatient, treatment is free. There are charges for outpatient treatment.

If you have an occupational health injury, Helfo may cover the full cost of your treatment.

Dentists and dental hygienist fees will vary as they can set their own prices.

Once you’ve spent a certain amount on state healthcare in a calendar year, you can get an exemption card (‘frikort’).

Your exemption card means the National Insurance Scheme will cover most of your user fees for the rest of the calendar year.

If your UK employer has sent you to Norway temporarily (‘posted workers’)

A posted worker, also known as a detached worker, is someone employed or self-employed in the UK, but temporarily sent to a European Economic Area (EEA) country.

You can use your UK passport or registered S1 form to access healthcare in Norway on the same basis as a Norwegian citizen.

HMRC has a helpline for National Insurance enquiries from non-UK residents. They can answer questions about posted worker status and explain which documents you will need to get healthcare while posted.

UK-funded healthcare: getting and using an S1 form in Norway

There’s different guidance if you have an S1 as a posted worker (see ‘If your UK employer has sent you to Norway temporarily (‘posted workers’)’ above).

If you started living in Norway before 1 January 2021, you may be entitled to state healthcare paid for by the UK if you’re a Norwegian resident and receive either:

  • a UK State Pension
  • some other ‘exportable benefits’

You may also be entitled to an S1 form if you’re a frontier worker (someone who works in one state and lives in another). You must contact HMRC National Insurance enquiries to find out if you’re eligible.

Once you have an S1 form, you must register it on the Norwegian system.

This will mean you and your dependants will be entitled to healthcare in Norway on the same basis as a Norwegian citizen.

You’ll also get:

Dependants and family members may be classified differently in Norway than the UK.

Check with the local authorities when you register your S1 form.

NHS Overseas Healthcare Services
Telephone: +44 (0)191 218 1999

Monday to Friday, 8am to 6pm

Saturday, 9am to 3pm

How to get an S1 form

If you have a UK State Pension or another qualifying exportable benefit, and you started living in Norway prior to 1 January 2021, you must request an application form by phone from NHS Overseas Healthcare Services (see contact details above).

How to use an S1 form in Norway

You must register your S1 with the Norwegian state healthcare service Helfo. Send your S1 form to:

Helfo

Postboks 2415

3104 Tønsberg

Give your Norwegian ID number each time you access healthcare. This will prove that you’re an S1 holder and are entitled to healthcare on the same basis as a Norwegian citizen.

If you are experiencing delays registering your S1 with local authorities and require emergency or urgent treatment, contact the Overseas Healthcare Services on 0044 191 218 1999.

Studying in Norway

You can use your UK passport to access healthcare in Norway on the same basis as a Norwegian citizen.

Getting treatment in the UK

Because the NHS is a residency-based system, under NHS rules UK nationals who move abroad on a permanent basis may lose their entitlement to free NHS healthcare.

If you are a UK national and move to the EU, you should not expect to be able to use NHS services for free when visiting the UK unless you have an EHIC, PRC or S2 to show your healthcare costs are funded by the EU country in which you now live, or another exemption applies.

Some former UK residents do not have to pay for NHS treatment when visiting England. This includes:

  • UK war pensioners
  • UK government employees
  • UK nationals living in the EU on or before 31 December 2020, once they have a registered, UK-issued S1

Read more about using the NHS when you no longer live in the UK (see ‘UK nationals who no longer live in the UK’ in Healthcare for visitors to the UK from the EU).

If you return to live in the UK you’ll be able to use the NHS like any other UK resident.

Read more about using the NHS when you return to live in the UK.

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