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  1. A company approached me to work at least two periods of eight months in Norway. I consulted a lot of website and it is difficult to find a good answer to the cost of living. Your website is the best I’ve viewed so far. :-)

    I want to have approximate prices for the following:
    1. A normal one bedroom apartment already furnished. Is it so difficult to find in reality (Comments sites seem to say that this is the case?
    2. Cost of nourishment for an average grocery store for a week?

    In fact, I want to know the average cost of life if I take public transit to work with a flat average quality and not too abused in restaurants.

    Thank you in advance,

    Dany

    1. Hi Dany!

      Thanks again for your email and comment :)

      As for the average price of a one bedroom, furnished apartment, it is really hard to say. It completely depends on the city in Norway you plan to live, and then further depends on the area of town. Here is a starter for ya though…this is Finn.no and they are the best place to look for such information. Everything is in kroner, but if you divide it by around 6, that should give you an estimate of about what you’d pay in USD. In a good area of Oslo, I think you’re looking to pay around 10,000kr (like $1700) a month for good living quarters in the city. That would be the lower end of things if you’re looking in a safe, nice area. However, I would definitely not come here and make less than what you’re making now. A lot of jobs in Norway pay more if they are unskilled (cleaners, grocery store workers, etc), but around the same as the US for those jobs that require education. There are some that make more in the US, and some that make more here, depending on the job itself. The cost of living here is extreme. So, I would just make sure that if you are moving here, you have all your ducks in a row before doing it.

      http://www.finn.no/finn/realestate/lettings/browse1

      Grocery shopping is quite expensive too. I shop mostly organic, so I pay a lot more than the average person. But, I think you can get away easily with $100/week on food and eat decent. I spend, personally, around $150ish a week and I juice (which is expensive) and don’t really eat meat. But like I said, I shop organic.

      Transportation is expensive too, but if you buy a monthly pass on the train in Oslo, it will run you about $100/month. Which, in the grand scheme of things, isn’t bad at all if you’re taking public trans every day! If you’re paying for individual rides, it is around $5 per ride anywhere you go within the first zone (not regional trains and buses). Public transportation here is very good compared to most of the US, so I don’t ever really miss having a car. :)

      I hope this better answers your questions! Feel free to write back if not and I can help to the best of my ability!

  2. Interesting stuff. I may be moving back to Norway in a year or so, since my son seems set on doing so. Haven’t lived there for almost 40 years, back when it was a relatively poor country (mid-1970s). Have Norwegian citizenship and personal number; nevertheless, figuring out how everything works will be interesting, as will looking for a job. Am a civil engineer here in California, so the high demand for engineers sounds encouraging, anyway. Thanks for the blog.

    1. you’re very welcome! best of luck with your move and i hope things work out for ya! oslo is a great city (that is where i live) and i love living there. well, i prefer summers, but winters are not so bad either haha :)

      it’s amazing to see how much has changed in a country since your departure from it. i cant even fathom what norway was like just about 40 years ago compared to today!

  3. I just read the bold headlines and they all sound so depressing. I thought Britian was bad, having so much deficit. Then I researched Norway and found that it’s one of the richest countries- then I found they take away 50% of your income tax. So what excatly are you left with but to complain? And there are only “15 Things We Should Know About Norway” mentioned instead of 30.

    1. the other 15 are on the other blog linked to above.

      yes, norway is very expensive, but it has its benefits, too. it just depends on how important those things are to a person of whether or not you feel like you get a ‘good deal’ living here.

  4. Hi Megan. Interesting enough that I read everything the whole way through. Informative also. I’m a Yankee originally from Columbia, PA and my wife’s Norwegian. We moved to Roa in ’98 for year so Toril could deliver our second child Sara in Oslo as the healthcare for pregnant women is quite good – and almost free. Moved back to Scarsdale, NY Dec ’99. We’ve lived in Geneva, Switzerland also for a 10+ years and find that is our preferred place to live. None the less we moved back to the Oslo suburbs (Jar) this past June so Sara could go to the Oslo International School in Bekestua and get her IB. Getting an IB in the US is simply cost prohibitive unless you are really rich, and I’m a retired UNHCR officer and no longer get the education grant from the UN for a child’s international education. I do still work abroad with the UNHCR on short contracts and am currently in Erbil, Iraq until end January. I am also a big time foodie which brings me to your opinion of the quality and availability of food in Oslo. I fully agree.

    However with a bit of diligence and time and $$, one can find decent fruit, veg and other items but not in the ICA, RIMI, REMA, etc. One has to shop around. Generally MENY is OK and the COOP Mega in Beskestua also. For meat there is only one shop in town, it’s Strom-Larsen. Pricey, but aged prime NY strip and rib-eye is pricey even in NY. On the whole we find a lot to complain about but like you said the locals don’t and think we’re being “picky”. We are. A weekend in London or Dublin or Scotland or Geneva keeps us happy. Thanks for your insight and Happy New Year from Iraq!