Introduction / Who is it for
In Norway, everyone needs an identification number to work, open a bank account, sign a rental agreement, and for almost all formalities. There are two types:
- D-number (temporary number) — for individuals staying in Norway for less than 6 months or without a permanent address
- Fødselsnummer / Personnummer (permanent number, "11 digits") — for residents (stay of 6+ months)
Both have 11 digits, but only the fødselsnummer grants full resident rights.
D-number — step by step
You can obtain a D-number through:
- Employer — the most common route. The employer applies for the D-number at Skatteetaten after signing the contract.
- Bank — some banks (DNB, Nordea) apply for a D-number when opening an account.
- Self-application — fill out the Skatteetaten form and submit it in person at the tax office.
Required documents (for self-application)
- Valid passport
- Polish birth certificate with apostille and translation into English or Norwegian
- Marriage certificate (if applicable) with apostille + translation
- Documents confirming the purpose of stay in Norway (employment contract, letter from the university)
Time
D-number: 2-4 weeks. You will receive a letter from Skatteetaten.
Fødselsnummer (personal number) — step by step
As an EU citizen (Pole), you can become a Norwegian resident after registering your stay. The procedure:
- Live in Norway for at least 6 months — exposure requirement
- Register in person at Skatteetaten with:
- Valid passport
- Birth certificate (apostille + translation)
- Marriage certificate, if applicable
- Documents proving your address in Norway (rental agreement, bills)
- Employment contract / employer's declaration
- Submit an application — form "Bestilling av personnummer / D-nummer"
- Wait 2-8 weeks
- You will receive a letter with your fødselsnummer
Folkeregister (registration of residence)
Along with the fødselsnummer, you register in the Folkeregister (population register). As a resident, you have access to:
- BankID — universal online authentication (banks, authorities)
- Helsenorge — online health system
- Altinn — online tax settlements
- Norwegian passport (after naturalization, 7+ years of residence)
Costs
Obtaining a D-number and fødselsnummer is FREE.
Translations and apostille
Polish documents (birth certificate, marriage certificate) MUST be:
- Marked with apostille — issued by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Poland, fee 60 PLN
- Translated by a sworn translator into Norwegian or English
Cost of apostille + translation: ~200-400 PLN per document.
Common mistakes
- Applying for a fødselsnummer before a 6-month stay — rejection
- Missing apostille on Polish documents — rejection
- Regular translation instead of sworn translation
- Applying for both numbers simultaneously — choose one according to your situation
- Skipping registration in the Folkeregister — blocks BankID and many other services
What to do after obtaining fødselsnummer
- BankID — set up through a bank; a universal key to all Norwegian services
- Skattekort — tax card, linked to the payroll system
- Helfo — registration in the health system; assign a fastlege (family doctor)
- NAV — registration at the employment office (if you are looking for a job)
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