Study in - Norway

Why study here

Norway offers research-intensive, English-taught Master’s options in energy, marine technology, data/AI, climate science, public health, and architecture. Universities emphasise sustainability and hands-on fieldwork, with strong ties to industry in Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim, and Stavanger. Teaching quality, student wellbeing, and accessibility of faculty are notable strengths. Although living costs are higher, the academic environment is supportive and multicultural, and English is widely used. Graduates gain exposure to Scandinavian work culture—team-oriented, responsible, and innovation-focused—attractive to employers across Europe. The country’s leadership in renewables and ocean industries offers distinctive career pathways in a stable, high-trust society.

Quick Facts :

Education system:

Universities and Private Colleges

Top programs & hiring sectors:

University:

Scholarship:

Eligibility & documents:

  • 10+2, UG
  • GSU list rules
  • English tests
  • transcripts
  • SOP/LOR
  • funds

Student life & culture:

  • Outdoors
  • winter prep
  • English widely used

Work during & after study:

  • Student work allowed
  • job‑seeker residence up to ~12 months

Major Cities — Living & Tuition

City Monthly Living (range, local) Currency UG Tuition / yr (range) Masters Tuition / yr (range)
Oslo NOK 15,000–22,000/mo NOK NOK 90k–180k NOK 100k–200k
Bergen NOK 13,000–20,000/mo NOK NOK 80k–160k NOK 90k–180k
Trondheim NOK 12,000–18,000/mo NOK NOK 60k–150k NOK 80k–170k

 

Earnings (Indicative)

Part-time hourly (typical/min) Part-time monthly (20 hrs/wk est.) Full-time average monthly salary (gross)
NOK 170–230 (no national minimum; typical advertised student hourly jobs) 20 hrs/week → ~NOK 14,700–20,000/month ~NOK 48,000–62,000 gross/month

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