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712 Comments

  1. Hi Megan,

    Hilarious, you put a smile on my face today. I moved to Norway, Oslo 1,5 year ago. I love the country and I am lucky that the Norwegians I met are nice, warm and giving people. But all the stories you have mentioned above are soooo true. If I would have know in 2012 what I know now, I would never have the Netherlands to migrate to Norway. To add to your list: (1) Most norwegian refuse to speak english unless you display some knowledge of Norwegian first. My husband (2 meters tall, blond and blue eyes) gets mistaken for norwegian all the time, so he smiles end explains in english that he is dutch. Resulting with people turning there back on him and not speaking with him at all. So rude! I am originally from South-america, so 1.60, black hair, brown eyes, but I can speak a little bit norwegian. and they are all nice to me en speak english to me. drives me crazy. (2) you have to pay for everything and everything is expensive (3) yes they make a lot of money here (like 2 times more then Holland), but everything is more expensive (cost of living is average 3,5 time more expensive than Holland). (3)And they are not masters in saving, because the family has money and helps the young generation. The young generation studies, not because they like it or because they want to achieve something, but because they want to have the stuy grant that comes with it. They loan the max amount of money, againt the lowest amount of interest and than put it on a savings account. they do not have start paying back the first 7 years after they graduated. And when they start, they get 30 years tp pay everything back. we are talking approx between 30.000 and 60.000 euros saving when they have reached the age of 26. (4) They have an amazing amount of norwegian traditions (food related) that go back to the time that they were a poor country and they try to force there horrible food down everybody’s throat (is like Dutch food, yikes, no taste and just bad). (5) giant gap between rich and poor is getting bigger by the minute. If you are not rich or norwegian by birth, it is nearly impossible to buy a house here. you have to save 20% of the houseprice and be able to show that to the bank when you apply for a mortgage. and this is really mean, because actually helps the rich to become even richer and the poor will stay poor. Say the rent of your house is 20.000 kroner per month. and you pay that without a problem every month. now you want to buy a house og 3.5 million kroner, if financed for 100% that would be approximately 18.000 kroner a month in say 25 years. But you wont get a loan because you must have to produce a savingsamount of 700.000,- kroner first and then they are willing to loan you 2.8 million kroner. Now if you would be a homeowner you would be able to have taxdeduction for the houseloan of approcx 35%. so going back to the 18.000 kroner per month in case of a mortgage, you would be able to save real money. Instead of renting for 20.000 kroner, your are now a houseowner for 18.000 kroner per month and you get money back from the tax every year, which will make your real amount per month evern lower. BUT ONLY for rich people. (6) Big is brother is watching you!!!! You can not eat or drink what you want when you want, because this is the last district of the russian communistic replublic!!! Many many many monopolies here, vinmomopolet (you can only buy alcohol al the goverment shop, during the hours that they allow you to) if there is fat or sugar in something it will be ridiculiously expensive or just not available! And that was just the first year :-D

    1. 1 .In my experience most Norwegians are actually falling over themselves to use English, which can be frustrating when you’re trying to learn Norwegian.
      2. The outdoors is free and there’s lost of it, education is free up to and including University, healthcare is vastly subsidised (and I could take case with the way its described above, if only that US health care is so much based on who your insurer is and how you obtain that care. It can be great but it can be terrible as well) and the engansdeler is low. What is it that you expected to get for free anyway?
      3. and 5. Oh look where the savings come from. I’m not Norwegian by birth and had no problem buying a house as I had saved previously, maybe its the Scots Calvinist traditions as well. Sure this can be tough for people coming from other countries, but Hello, the system isn’t designed for that, sorry. Oh and it’s 15% not 20%.
      4. Never had the stuff forced on me, but Norway was the poor man of Europe all the way up to the 1960’s. People forget that because of the Oil money now but the traditions are strong.
      6. Norway used to have one of the highest levels of Alcohol consumption in Europe and the ‘pol system is shared with Sweden, Finland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands – its a Nordic thing.
      The place is just different, and as someone coming in you have to go with the flow. If you search around there are ways to work the system (even that 15% deposit – look up Husbanken)

  2. Hey there,
    I’m a doctor, doing residency in usa, will do fellowship and then plan to move to Norway because they have a better social system. I’m European. Any ideas how it is for docs? How hard is the language to learn. Where’s best place to move with most amount of sunshine?
    Ann

  3. Dear Megan

    thank you for your information about Norway, it was so helpful and thanks for other people who makes comments too, i would like to know how Norwegian people deal with Arabian immigrants in Norway specially the Islamic one?
    i am a Libyan citizen and i am searching for European country to immigrate to, i really like Norway

    Best Regards
    Abdala