WINDROSEPRIVATE
Aksjeselskap (AS) · Europe

Incorporate in Norway

A trusted Nordic AS for operations in one of Europe's strongest economies.

All-in fee$2,120Renewal$1,370/yrTimeline1–2 weeks
Key facts
Legal systemCivil law
Corporate tax22%
Public registerDirectors public
Min. capitalNOK 30,000
Formation (all-in)$1,870 · with registered agent & office $2,120
Annual renewal$1,370
Timeline1–2 weeks after verification
Begin an engagement

Why Norway

A trusted Nordic AS for operations in one of Europe's strongest economies. Your engagement is handled end-to-end by one dedicated agent, at the published fixed fee — government charges and courier included.

Your dedicated agent confirms the current requirements, timeline and any filing or substance obligations for your situation before anything is filed — and handles renewal before it falls due, every year.

Who forms companies in Norway

The process, step by step

  1. Order online at the published fixed fee — $2,120 all-in with registered agent & office, or $1,870 formation only.
  2. Verify once. We email you a secure identity-verification link; it takes about ten minutes. No documents are uploaded to this website.
  3. Name check and preparation. Your dedicated agent confirms name availability and prepares the filing with the licensed local provider.
  4. The registry completes formation — typically 1–2 weeks.
  5. Delivery and beyond. Documents arrive digitally the day they issue, originals by courier — and the same agent handles your renewals every year after.

Naming your company

Company names in Norway must end with one of the permitted designations: AS. Give us two name choices when you order — your agent checks availability with the registry before anything is filed.

Transparency and reporting

Modern offshore is transparent offshore. Like virtually every serious jurisdiction, Norway exchanges financial-account information internationally under the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) — banks report account details to the account holder's home tax authority each year — and maintains beneficial-ownership records for regulators. None of this affects a lawfully run structure: a company is a tool for organising your affairs, not for hiding them. Your agent flags anything that applies to your intended activity, and clients remain responsible for tax reporting wherever they are resident.

Annual obligations

Renewal is $1,370 per year, covering the registered office and agent. As an onshore company you will also file annual returns and accounts with the local registry (with audits where required) — your agent tells you exactly what applies and when.

What's included

Frequently asked

How much does it cost to incorporate in Norway?

The all-in formation fee is $1,870, or $2,120 including the first year of registered agent and office. Annual renewal is $1,370. Government charges and courier delivery are included, and every fee is published before you speak to us.

How long does incorporation take in Norway?

Typically 1–2 weeks once identity verification is complete. Your dedicated agent gives you a precise expectation before anything is filed.

What is the corporate tax position in Norway?

22% Clients remain responsible for tax reporting in their home jurisdictions; we never provide tax advice.

Do I need to travel to Norway to form a company?

No. Formation is completed remotely: you order online, verify your identity once through a secure portal, and your documents are delivered digitally with originals couriered worldwide.

Is there a public register of owners in Norway?

Directors public Ownership information is always collected privately for anti-money-laundering purposes, whatever the public position.

What are the annual costs after formation?

Renewal is $1,370 per year, covering the registered agent and office and recurring government fees. Your dedicated agent handles renewal before it falls due, every year.

Will the company's bank account be reported under CRS?

Generally yes. Banks report financial accounts and their controlling persons to the account holders' home tax authorities under the OECD Common Reporting Standard (or FATCA for US persons) — automatically, worldwide. Lawfully run structures are unaffected beyond normal home-country tax reporting.

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