Werkcultuur en weekritme in Norway
Norway operates on a thirty-seven-and-a-half-hour standard workweek for most office-based employees, lower than the European norm and a reflection of the country's broader emphasis on work-life balance. The five-day Monday-to-Friday rhythm is universal, the workday typically runs from eight in the morning to four in the afternoon, and after-hours communication outside of clear emergencies is not the cultural expectation.
Statutory paid leave is twenty-one working days under the Holidays Act, with most collective agreements adding four or five days to bring the practical entitlement to twenty-five days. Employees aged sixty and over receive an additional week. The cultural expectation is for at least three consecutive weeks of summer vacation between June and August, a period during which most non-essential business activity slows substantially.
Norway is not a member of the European Union but participates in the European Economic Area, which means it adopts most EU labour market and product market regulations while retaining sovereignty on agriculture, fisheries and trade policy. From a workforce planning perspective, hiring a Norwegian employee is administratively similar to hiring an EU employee for an EU-based company, although VAT and customs treatment differs.