Norway International Update Q4 2025

This quarterly update highlights key legal developments and market trends from the last quarter of 2025 across sectors of strategic importance to Norway, including ESG and Compliance, Tax, Financial Regulatory and Employment Law. In addition, we share selected business updates from Wiersholm, reflecting our continued commitment to delivering relevant insight and value to both international and domestic clients.

Some highlights include:

ESG and Compliance: In late 2025 and early 2026, Norway and the EU introduced several significant legal and regulatory developments, including Norway’s incorporation of the UN CRPD into domestic law, new sanctions against Russia aligned with the EU’s 18th package, the entry into force of the Marine Protection Act, updated Norwegian Transparency Act due diligence guidance, and a one-year postponement of the EUDR’s application.

Tax: Key tax and VAT developments were adopted or initiated in late 2025 and early 2026, covering updated OECD guidance on home offices and permanent establishments, proposed changes to the tax treatment of paid-in capital, new tax rules for securities funds, amendments to Norway’s Pillar 2 supplementary tax regime, and revised VAT rules for cross-border intra-entity services.

Financial Regulatory: Recent financial regulatory developments include improved tax rules for Norwegian securities funds, a consultation on the national implementation of AIFMD II (with some proposed national adjustments), and an extension of the transitional deadline under MiCA for existing crypto-asset service providers to 30 June 2026.

Employment Law: From 1 January 2026, amendments to the Norwegian Employment Act clarify employers’ responsibility for ensuring a fully satisfactory psychosocial working environment, strengthening expectations related to preventive measures, internal control, governance and documentation, integration into HSE processes, cooperation with employee representatives, updated whistleblowing procedures, and training of managers and safety representatives—without introducing materially new obligations.

Business Updates from Wiersholm

In the fourth quarter, Wiersholm continued its high level of activity across key practice areas, advising on complex transactions, regulatory matters and strategic assignments for leading Norwegian and international clients.

Note from Managing Partner

Stephan L. Jervell, Managing Partner

«The fourth quarter of 2025 has taken place against a global backdrop defined by persistent geopolitical fragmentation, constrained growth expectations and heightened regulatory intervention, conditions which have continued to influence capital allocation and strategic decision-making across markets. Within this environment, the Nordic region has demonstrated relative economic and institutional resilience, underpinned by strong governance frameworks, predictable legal systems and sustained public investment, while remaining exposed to global volatility through trade, energy markets and cross-border capital flows.

For internationally active clients, operations and investments in the Nordic region during Q4 have therefore combined defensive qualities with strategic opportunity, particularly in sectors linked to energy transition, infrastructure, technology and critical industries. At the same time, expanded sustainability requirements, foreign investment scrutiny and evolving governance standards across Nordic jurisdictions have reinforced the importance of rigorous regulatory assessment and transaction structuring. As global uncertainty becomes increasingly structural rather than cyclical, the Nordic market continues to offer a stable but highly regulated operating environment in which informed legal judgement is integral to managing risk and securing long-term value.

Since the start of 2026, developments such as continued instability in Venezuela and heightened geopolitical competition in the Arctic around Greenland have reinforced the importance of robust legal risk assessment, particularly in relation to sanctions, regulatory compliance and cross-border investments. For Wiersholm, this environment highlights the importance of providing commercially driven, proactive legal counsel that helps clients navigate complexity while securing resilient, long-term outcomes» .

ESG and Compliance

Key contacts: Georg Abusdal Engebretsen

In the last quarter of 2025, Norway decided to incorporate the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UN CRPD) into the Human Rights Act. Norway has also implemented new sanctions against Russia, aligning with the EU’s 18th sanctions package. The Marine Protection Act, which was formally adopted by the Norwegian Parliament in the summer of 2025, entered into force on 1 January 2026. The Norwegian Consumer Authority has updated its guidance on due diligence assessments under the Norwegian Transparency Act. The EU has now postponed the application of the EUDR, extending deadlines to 30 December 2026, for large and medium operators, and to 30 June 2027, for small and micro-operators.

In the following section, we will give you a summary of these key developments.

Tax

Key contacts: Nicolay Vold

An introduction to what the readers can expect to read in the following text. (example from tax follow below)

In the fourth quarter of 2025 the government gathered support for its national budget for 2026, and several changes in tax and VAT rules was passed. Key topics include the government’s approach to the wealth tax, proposed changes regarding paid-up capital, and the implementation of recent guidance relating to global minimum tax (Pillar 2). 

Financal Regulatory

Key contacts: Kjersti. T. Trøbråten & Stian A. Endre

In the fourth quarter of 2025, among other things, changes were made to the rules on taxation of funds and funds accounts to provide better framework conditions for Norwegian funds. In addition, a public consultation on the implementation of AIFMD II was published and the deadline to obtain authorisation under MiCA for existing service providers has been postponed to 30 June 2026.   

In the following section, we will give you the latest updates in the financial regulatory area.

Employment law

Key contacts: Christel Søreide

With effect from 1 January 2026, Norway has adopted amendments to the rules in the Norwegian Employment Act concerning the psychosocial working environment. The changes are not intended to establish new obligations, but rather to clarify what is expected of employers to ensure a fully satisfactory psychosocial working environment.

To ensure fulfilment of the requirements, businesses with Norwegian employees should address psychosocial working environment in the company’s HSE annual cycle. In addition, it should be considered whether there is a need to update the current whistleblowing procedures so that they provide the necessary flexibility in the handling of whistleblowing cases of various kinds. Furthermore, work on the psychosocial working environment should be included in cooperation with employee representatives, as well as in management training.

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