Intermediary AS Connecting Companies Cross Countries
Denmark → Norway

Establishing a Danish-owned company in Norway

A practical, MitID-first flow for Danish founders, ApS owners and Danish board members who want a Norwegian organisasjonsnummer — without travelling to Norway. We register a NUF (Norwegian-registered foreign branch of your Danish ApS) or a fully independent Norwegian AS, handle MVA registration, and configure the right Norway-Denmark double-tax defaults from day one.

On this page
  1. Who this page is for
  2. NUF vs Norwegian AS — which one fits?
  3. Our four-step Denmark→Norway flow
  4. Why MitID is the natural starting point
  5. Tax: 22 % selskapsskatt, MVA & the DK-NO treaty
  6. Board residency & aksjeloven § 6-11
  7. Banking, KAR-register & share capital
  8. Realistic timeline & what we need from you
  9. FAQ

AudienceWho this page is for

This page is written for three Danish audiences who keep arriving at registercompany.no with the same questions:

Intermediary AS is built for these cross-border cases. We do not help Norwegian citizens set up companies for themselves — Altinn handles that natively. We exist because the Danish-to-Norwegian path involves an extra layer of identity verification, language, banking and tax-treaty logistics that the public portals do not solve end-to-end.

Organisation formNUF vs Norwegian AS — which one fits?

The first real decision is not a form to fill in; it is a choice of legal vehicle. For Danish owners there are two realistic options. The NUF (Norskregistrert utenlandsk foretak) is a Norwegian-registered branch of your existing Danish ApS — same legal entity, new Norwegian organisasjonsnummer. The AS (Aksjeselskap) is a brand-new, independent Norwegian limited company, comparable in form to a Danish ApS.

 NUF (branch of your Danish ApS)Norwegian AS
Legal entitySame as your Danish ApS — the ApS is the legal owner of all rights and obligations in Norway.New, independent Norwegian legal entity with its own organisasjonsnummer and own balance sheet.
Share capitalNone required in Norway. The Danish ApS already has its DKK 20 000 capital under Danish law.NOK 30 000 minimum, paid into a Norwegian capital account before Brønnøysund will register the AS.
AccountingBranch accounts roll up into the ApS's Danish annual report. A separate Norwegian bookkeeping for the branch is required for MVA and selskapsskatt purposes.Full Norwegian årsregnskap, audited if thresholds are met (revenue > NOK 7m, balance > NOK 27m, >10 FTE).
Tax in Norway22 % selskapsskatt on the profit attributable to the Norwegian permanent establishment.22 % selskapsskatt on worldwide profit of the AS.
MVA (VAT)Registers in the Norwegian MVA-register once turnover in Norway exceeds NOK 50 000 / 12 months.Same NOK 50 000 / 12 months threshold.
Best forDanish ApS that already exists and wants a Norwegian presence under one consolidated balance sheet.Danish founders who want a fully independent Norwegian company — typically to take in Norwegian co-investors, sign Norwegian public contracts, or ring-fence Norwegian risk.
Our default recommendation for Danish ApS owners is the NUF. It is faster, cheaper and avoids tying up NOK 30 000 of share capital — and it remains the right answer for the majority of cases we see. We only steer you to an AS when the commercial situation actually requires an independent Norwegian legal entity.

ProcessOur four-step Denmark→Norway flow

1

Log in with MitID

You open registercompany.no, click Login with MitID and authenticate with the same MitID you use for skat.dk.

2

Choose organisation form

NUF or AS. The flow defaults to NUF if you indicate you already have a Danish ApS; otherwise it suggests AS.

3

We prepare the filing

We pre-fill the founder section, draft the articles in Norwegian, set up the share-capital account (AS only) and align the activity codes with NACE.

4

Brønnøysund & MVA

Our Norwegian state-authorised partners co-sign with Norwegian BankID and file with the Brønnøysund Register Centre, including the MVA registration when relevant.

For the underlying eID and trust-service layer that powers step 1, see our dedicated trust services page.

IdentityWhy MitID is the natural starting point

Danish MitID is a notified eID at eIDAS assurance level Substantial under Regulation (EU) 910/2014. Because Norway has implemented the eIDAS regulation through the EEA agreement and Lov om elektroniske tillitstjenester (LOV-2018-06-15-44), a MitID login that we receive via our trust-service broker Idura Verify is legally recognised in Norway. In plain language: the same MitID you use to log in to your Danish bank, to skat.dk or to your Danish ApS in CVR is enough for us to verify you as an Ultimate Beneficial Owner of a Norwegian company.

This matters because it removes the historical bottleneck of Danish founders not having a Norwegian D-number or BankID. You do not need either to start. We obtain a signed token from MitID containing your verified full legal name, date of birth and a pseudonymous UUID. The full CPR number is only released if you separately consent — and we only ask for it where Norwegian law actually requires it, such as for an AS director registration.

Tax22 % selskapsskatt, MVA & the DK-NO double-tax treaty

Norwegian corporate income tax (selskapsskatt) is a flat 22 % for 2026. There is no progressive rate, and no separate municipal corporate tax on top.

The Norway-Denmark double-tax treaty (signed 1996, with later protocols, and the Nordic multilateral convention) prevents the same income from being taxed twice. In practice, for most Danish-owned NUFs and ASes we register, the result is:

On the indirect side, MVA (Merverdiavgift, Norwegian VAT) registration becomes mandatory once taxable turnover in Norway exceeds NOK 50 000 over a 12-month period. The standard MVA rate is 25 %, with 15 % on foodstuffs and 12 % on certain services. If you only sell low-value goods from abroad to Norwegian consumers, the simplified VOEC scheme may apply instead — we will tell you which one fits during step 2.

GovernanceBoard residency & aksjeloven § 6-11

Aksjeloven § 6-11 requires that the daglig leder (general manager) and at least half of the members of the board of a Norwegian AS are resident in Norway or another EEA state, or are citizens of an EEA state who are domiciled there.

Because Denmark is an EEA state through its EU membership, a Danish-resident CEO and a Danish-resident board satisfy the residency requirement on their own. No Norwegian-resident director is mandatory. This is one of the most common misconceptions we correct in our intake calls.

A NUF has no separate Norwegian board — it inherits the governance of the Danish ApS. The only Norwegian role you must appoint for a NUF is the representant (a contact point in Norway who can receive official correspondence), and Intermediary AS can act as that representative.

BankingBank account, KAR-register & share capital

For a Norwegian AS, Brønnøysund will not issue the organisasjonsnummer until the NOK 30 000 share capital has landed in a dedicated Norwegian capital account and a bank confirmation (bekreftelse på innbetalt aksjekapital) has been issued. Our partner banks accept SEPA transfers from Danish ApS-owned accounts for this, so you do not need a personal trip to Norway to fund the company.

Once registered, the Norwegian company is enrolled in the KAR-register (Konto- og adresseregister) maintained by the tax authorities, which lets Norwegian counterparties verify that bank account numbers really belong to the registered company — an important fraud-prevention step that Norwegian customers will expect from any supplier they pay.

For a NUF there is no Norwegian capital requirement. The branch can operate using the Danish ApS's existing bank, although in practice we recommend opening a small Norwegian operating account once MVA registration is in place — it simplifies refunds from Skatteetaten and payments to Norwegian suppliers.

TimelineRealistic timeline & what we need from you

From the moment you successfully log in with MitID, a typical NUF registration completes within 5–10 working days and a Norwegian AS within 10–20 working days, almost entirely driven by bank onboarding and Brønnøysund processing time. To start, we need:

Everything else — articles of association in Norwegian, founders' statement (stiftelsesdokument), Brønnøysund filing forms, MVA application, the bank capital-account opening for AS — is drafted and submitted by Intermediary AS and our Norwegian state-authorised partners.

FAQFrequently asked questions

Can I use my Danish CVR-registered ApS as the founder of a Norwegian AS instead of registering as a personal founder?
Yes. We routinely set up Norwegian AS-es with a Danish ApS as the sole shareholder. The ApS is then the legal parent and the Norwegian AS is its subsidiary, which is usually the cleanest structure for tax and liability purposes.

Will I need a Norwegian D-number?
You will only need a Norwegian D-number if you personally take on a registered role in a Norwegian AS (founder, board member, CEO). NUFs do not require their owners to obtain a D-number. When a D-number is needed, we apply for it on your behalf as part of the Brønnøysund filing — you do not have to interact with Skatteetaten separately.

How does the Norwegian Transparency Act (Åpenhetsloven) affect a Danish-owned NUF or AS?
The Transparency Act applies to larger enterprises (revenue > NOK 70m, balance > NOK 35m, >50 FTE) regardless of where the owner sits. Most newly-registered Danish-owned NUFs and ASes fall well below those thresholds in their first years, but we flag this proactively for any group that is close to the limits.

What does it cost?
Pricing is published on the front page of registercompany.no in real time. We do not have hidden Danish-customer surcharges — the same prices apply.

Ready to register your Danish-owned company in Norway?

Log in with MitID, choose NUF or AS, and let our Norwegian state-authorised partners handle the rest. No travel required.

Start with MitID →

Questions first? Write to contact@intermediary.no or see our trust services page.

Last reviewed: 21 May 2026 · Home · Insights · Trust Services · Cookies · Terms