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How Do I Instantly Dismiss an Employee? Summary Dismissal in Norway (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

If you are asking how do I instantly dismiss an employee in Norway, the short answer is that you may do so only when the employee has committed a gross breach of duty or fundamentally defaulted on the employment relationship, and even then, strict procedural requirements apply. The Working Environment Act (arbeidsmiljøloven, “WEA”) §15-14 provides the statutory basis for summary dismissal (avskjed), permitting immediate termination without a notice period in the most serious cases. Since 1 January 2026, amendments to the WEA have tightened employer obligations around dismissal processes more broadly, making it essential for employers to follow an updated, evidence-driven procedure.

This guide provides a complete dismissal procedure checklist, evidence templates and a litigation-risk analysis so employers in Norway can act decisively while remaining on the right side of the law.

Quick Facts, Summary Dismissal in Norway

  • Statutory basis. WEA §15-14, the employee may be summarily dismissed when guilty of a gross breach of duty or other serious default.
  • 2026 update. Amendments effective 1 January 2026 strengthened procedural and documentation requirements for all forms of dismissal, including redundancy and summary dismissal.
  • Employer risk. An unlawful summary dismissal can result in reinstatement, full back-pay and substantial compensation, Norwegian courts scrutinise both the grounds and the process.

How Do I Instantly Dismiss an Employee? The 10-Step Employer Checklist

Summary dismissal in Norway demands speed, but it also demands discipline. The following ten steps form a practical dismissal procedure checklist that employers should execute in sequence, or, where events move fast, as close to this order as circumstances allow.

  1. Secure the scene and remove immediate risk. If the misconduct involves violence, theft, sabotage or a safety hazard, separate the employee from the workplace immediately. Protect other staff, customers and assets before doing anything else.
  2. Suspend if necessary, but document the decision. Suspension is not the same as dismissal. If you need time to investigate, place the employee on paid suspension and confirm this in writing the same day, stating the reason and expected duration. Suspension preserves the employment relationship while you gather facts.
  3. Secure and preserve evidence. Lock down CCTV footage, email accounts, access logs, financial records and any physical evidence. Norwegian courts expect employers to produce contemporaneous documentation; evidence that is lost or overwritten will weaken the case considerably.
  4. Take witness statements immediately. Interview every relevant witness as soon as possible after the incident. Record signed, dated statements that capture what the witness saw or heard, with timestamps. A template is provided below.
  5. Hold a §15-1 discussion meeting (drøftelsesmøte). Before making a final decision, the employer must, so far as is practicable, discuss the matter with the employee pursuant to WEA §15-1. Invite the employee in writing, allow them to bring an adviser (union representative, lawyer or colleague) and minute the meeting carefully. Skipping this step is one of the most common grounds for courts to overturn a dismissal.
  6. Make and document the dismissal decision. If, after the discussion meeting, you conclude that the employee’s conduct amounts to a gross breach of duty under §15-14, issue the summary dismissal in writing. The dismissal letter must comply with the formal requirements of WEA §15-4, including information about the employee’s right to demand negotiations and bring legal proceedings, as well as applicable time limits.
  7. Calculate and pay final wages. Upon summary dismissal the employment ends immediately. Settle outstanding salary, accrued holiday pay and any other entitlements. Withholding pay without a clear legal basis will undermine an employer’s credibility if the case reaches court.
  8. Notify union or employee representatives. If a collective agreement is in place, or if company policy requires consultation with a works council or tillitsvalgt, carry out that notification. Failure to follow collective-agreement procedures can expose the employer to additional claims.
  9. Report to police where criminal conduct is involved. Theft, fraud, assault and similar acts may require a police report. Filing a report also strengthens the employer’s evidence file should the employee later contest the dismissal.
  10. Prepare a defence file and plan for litigation. Assume the employee will challenge the dismissal. Assemble all evidence, meeting minutes, the dismissal letter, correspondence and the internal investigation report in a single file. Identify the manager who will serve as the employer’s witness and brief legal counsel early.

When Is Summary Dismissal Lawful in Norway? The Legal Threshold

An employer can only instantly dismiss an employee when the conduct meets the high statutory bar set by the Working Environment Act §15-14: a gross breach of duty or other serious default in the employment relationship.

Statutory framework, WEA §15-14 and supporting provisions

Section 15-14 of the WEA draws a clear line between ordinary dismissal with notice (§15-7) and summary dismissal. Ordinary dismissal with notice in Norway requires only that the employer demonstrate an objectively justified reason, poor performance, redundancy or lesser misconduct may suffice. Summary dismissal, by contrast, is reserved for the most egregious cases where it is unreasonable to expect the employer to continue the employment even for the duration of a notice period.

Norwegian courts apply a strict proportionality test. The assessment considers the nature and severity of the breach, the employee’s position and responsibilities, whether the conduct was a single incident or part of a pattern, the degree of fault, and the consequences both for the employer and for the employee of an immediate termination. Industry observers note that courts routinely re-examine every aspect of the employer’s decision-making process, not merely the underlying facts of the misconduct.

Grounds that Norwegian courts have accepted

While each case turns on its own facts, the following categories of conduct have historically supported summary dismissal in Norway:

  • Theft or fraud. Misappropriation of company funds, inventory or data, even relatively small amounts, can constitute a gross breach of trust sufficient for instant dismissal.
  • Violence or threats of violence. Physical aggression against colleagues, customers or managers in the workplace.
  • Serious safety breaches. Deliberate or reckless disregard of health-and-safety rules that endangers life or property, particularly in high-risk industries such as construction, oil and gas, or maritime operations.
  • Gross insubordination or refusal to work. A clear and deliberate refusal to carry out core duties, especially after a direct instruction from management.
  • Serious breach of confidentiality. Disclosing trade secrets or sensitive business information to competitors.
  • Criminal conduct closely connected to the role. Off-duty criminal acts may also qualify if they directly undermine the trust required for the position, for example, a finance manager convicted of external fraud.

Where employers get it wrong

The most common error is treating cumulative lesser misconduct, lateness, attitude issues, minor policy breaches, as if it were a single gross breach. Norwegian courts have repeatedly held that a pattern of moderate infractions is better addressed through warnings and ordinary dismissal with notice rather than summary dismissal. Reaching for the nuclear option when a graduated response is available almost always results in a finding of unlawful dismissal.

Evidence Required for Gross Misconduct, What Proves a Lawful Instant Dismissal

The burden of proof in a summary dismissal rests squarely on the employer. Norwegian courts expect clear, contemporaneous evidence for gross misconduct, a general impression or hearsay is not enough.

Evidence checklist

Evidence type Why it matters Employer action to preserve
CCTV / video footage Provides objective, time-stamped proof of physical acts (theft, violence, safety breaches) Download and back up footage within 24 hours; confirm retention period with security provider
Digital logs (email, chat, access control) Establishes timelines, intent and awareness Place a litigation hold on relevant accounts; export logs to a secure location with IT support
Signed witness statements Corroborates the employer’s account with first-hand observations Interview witnesses the same day; use a structured template (see below); have each statement signed and dated
Financial records / audit trails Critical in fraud, embezzlement or expense-abuse cases Engage the finance team or external auditor to pull transaction records and reconcile immediately
HR records (warnings, performance notes) Shows whether the employer followed a graduated approach or whether the act was truly isolated Compile the complete personnel file, including prior warnings, appraisal records and any written agreements
Physical evidence (stolen property, damaged equipment) Tangible proof of the misconduct Photograph, tag and store securely; maintain a chain-of-custody log

Chain-of-custody best practice

Courts give greater weight to evidence that has been systematically preserved. Maintain a simple log that records: what the item of evidence is, when it was collected, by whom, where it has been stored and whether it has been accessed since. This practice, standard in criminal proceedings, significantly reduces the risk that an employee will successfully challenge the authenticity or reliability of the employer’s evidence.

Procedure vs Fairness, How Much Process Is Still Required for Instant Dismissal

Even the most clear-cut case of gross misconduct can fail if the employer short-circuits procedural fairness. Norwegian labour law requires employers to follow several process steps, and the 2026 WEA amendments reinforced the expectation that employers document each stage thoroughly.

The employee’s right to be heard

WEA §15-1 requires the employer to hold a discussion meeting with the employee before making a final decision on dismissal. The obligation applies to summary dismissal as well as ordinary dismissal. While extreme urgency, for example, an ongoing safety threat, may justify issuing the dismissal before the meeting, this exception is interpreted narrowly. If the employer could reasonably have waited a few hours to convene a meeting, courts will generally expect them to have done so.

During the meeting the employee must be allowed to present their side, bring a representative and respond to the evidence. The employer should minute the meeting, record who attended and note any explanation or mitigation offered by the employee.

When suspension is appropriate

If the employer needs time to investigate but faces an immediate risk (to evidence, safety or business operations), paid suspension under WEA §15-13 provides a lawful pause. Suspension can last for a reasonable period, typically no more than three months, and must be reviewed if the investigation takes longer than expected. Suspending first and investigating properly is almost always less risky than rushing to dismiss and then discovering that the evidence is weaker than it initially appeared.

Formal notice requirements

The written dismissal letter must satisfy WEA §15-4. It must be delivered personally or by registered mail, and it must inform the employee of their right to request negotiations (§17-3), the deadlines for bringing a claim and the right to remain in the position pending legal proceedings in the case of ordinary dismissal. Although the right to remain in position is more limited following a summary dismissal, the information requirements in the letter still apply in full. A deficient letter does not automatically invalidate the dismissal, but it shifts risk towards the employer if the matter reaches court.

Alternatives to Instant Dismissal and Pay Consequences

Not every serious incident warrants summary dismissal. In marginal cases, choosing a different route can significantly reduce litigation risk and cost. The comparison table below outlines the three main options available to Norwegian employers.

Factor Summary dismissal (instant) Dismissal with notice / pay in lieu
Trigger Gross breach of duty / serious misconduct Business reasons, redundancy, performance or lesser misconduct
Employee entitlement No further salary or notice period (subject to court review) Statutory notice period (1–6 months depending on tenure and age) or pay in lieu; possible severance per contract
Process required Immediate action + rapid documentation; fairness still assessed by courts Full §15-1 discussion meeting, formal written notice, statutory timelines observed
Litigation risk High, courts apply strict proportionality; employer bears full burden of proof Moderate, employer must show objective justification, but threshold is lower
Practical cost if overturned Back-pay from dismissal date, reinstatement, compensation, potentially very expensive Compensation for unfair dismissal; reinstatement less commonly ordered

Where the facts are borderline, for example, a first offence involving negligence rather than deliberate wrongdoing, early indications suggest that the 2026 amendments make it even more important to consider ordinary dismissal with notice or a negotiated exit rather than summary dismissal. Garden leave during the notice period achieves a similar practical outcome (the employee leaves the workplace immediately) while dramatically reducing the risk of a costly court challenge.

Litigation and Employer Risks, Likely Remedies and Damages

If a summary dismissal is found to be unlawful, the consequences for the employer can be severe. Norwegian courts have broad discretion, and the available remedies are designed to put the employee back in the position they would have been in had the dismissal not occurred.

Reinstatement

Under WEA §15-12, the main remedy for an unjustified dismissal is reinstatement, the employee returns to their position. While courts may decline reinstatement where the relationship has irretrievably broken down, the possibility remains a live risk for every employer. In summary dismissal cases, the employee does not have an automatic right to remain in the position during proceedings (unlike in ordinary dismissal cases), but the court may grant an interim order requiring continued employment if the employee applies for one.

Compensation

Where reinstatement is not ordered, or in addition to it, the court may award compensation for financial loss and non-economic damages. Financial loss typically covers wages from the date of dismissal to the date of judgment, minus any interim earnings. Non-economic compensation reflects the manner in which the dismissal was handled, a poorly documented or procedurally deficient dismissal will attract a higher award. Industry observers note that total compensation awards in Norwegian summary dismissal cases have trended upward in recent years, and the likely practical effect of the 2026 amendments will be to reinforce that trend by raising the procedural bar employers must clear.

How to reduce exposure

  • Follow the checklist. Courts weigh the quality of the employer’s process almost as heavily as the underlying facts. A well-documented investigation, a properly conducted §15-1 meeting and a compliant dismissal letter dramatically reduce risk.
  • Take legal advice early. Engaging counsel before issuing the dismissal, even if only for a brief phone call, creates a record of considered decision-making and helps identify gaps in the evidence.
  • Consider settlement. In cases where the evidence is strong but not overwhelming, a negotiated severance agreement can be faster, cheaper and more certain than litigation. Most Norwegian dismissal disputes are resolved by settlement before trial.

Quick Templates and Evidence Checklist

The templates below are illustrative examples only. They do not constitute legal advice and should be reviewed by qualified Norwegian counsel before use.

Template 1, Immediate dismissal letter (summary)

  • Date: [Insert date]
  • To: [Employee name, position, employee number]
  • From: [Employer / authorised manager name and title]
  • Subject: Summary dismissal pursuant to Working Environment Act §15-14
  • Statement of facts: [Briefly describe the conduct constituting the gross breach of duty, including date(s), location and persons involved]
  • Discussion meeting: A discussion meeting pursuant to §15-1 was held on [date]. [Employee name] attended [with/without representative]. The employee’s response was [summarise briefly].
  • Decision: Based on the above, the employer has decided to summarily dismiss you with immediate effect.
  • Rights: You have the right to request negotiations pursuant to WEA §17-3. The deadline for requesting negotiations is [insert]. The deadline for bringing legal proceedings is [insert]. [Include additional rights information as required by §15-4.]
  • Signature: [Employer representative]

Template 2, Witness statement

  • Witness name: [Full name]
  • Position / department: [Insert]
  • Date and time of incident: [Insert]
  • Location: [Insert]
  • Account: [In the witness’s own words, describe what they saw, heard or experienced. Include specific details, times, distances, words spoken, sequence of events.]
  • Other witnesses present: [List any other persons who may have observed the incident]
  • Declaration: I confirm that this statement is true and accurate to the best of my knowledge.
  • Signature: ________________ Date: ________________

Evidence chain-of-custody log

Item description Date/time collected Collected by Storage location Access record
[e.g., CCTV file, Camera 3, 14:00–15:00] [Date, time] [Name, title] [Secure server / locked cabinet] [Log each access with date, name and purpose]

Conclusion, Getting Instant Dismissal Right in 2026

Knowing how do I instantly dismiss an employee is only half the challenge, executing the dismissal lawfully and defensibly is where most employers stumble. The 2026 amendments to Norway’s Working Environment Act have raised the procedural bar, and Norwegian courts continue to hold employers to a high standard of evidence, proportionality and fairness. Employers who follow a structured dismissal procedure checklist, preserve evidence meticulously and seek legal advice before acting will be in the strongest position if the decision is later challenged.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Kristoffer Dalvang at Verito, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Arbeidstilsynet, Dismissal with notice (EN)
  2. Advokatfirmaet Verito, What does summary dismissal mean?
  3. Thommessen, The employment law year 2025
  4. Legal 500, Norway: Employment and Labour Law
  5. Altinn, Termination of employment relationships
  6. BoundlessHQ, Norway end of employment guide

FAQs

Can I instantly dismiss an employee in Norway?
Yes, but only for a gross breach of duty under WEA §15-14. You must follow procedural requirements, including a discussion meeting, and document the grounds thoroughly. Failing to do so risks the dismissal being declared unlawful.
Theft, fraud, violence, serious safety violations and severe breaches of trust are typical examples. Courts assess each case individually, weighing the severity of the act, the employee’s role and whether a proportionate response was available.
Suspension is not mandatory but is often prudent, particularly where an investigation is needed or there is a safety risk. Suspension under §15-13 must be documented in writing and is normally on full pay.
CCTV footage, digital access logs, emails, signed witness statements and financial records are all commonly relied upon. The employer must preserve a clear chain of custody and present contemporaneous documentation to the court.
Probationary employees can be dismissed more easily under WEA §15-6, but lawful grounds and procedural fairness are still required. Summary dismissal during probation still demands evidence of a gross breach of duty.
The court may order reinstatement, compensation for lost wages and non-economic damages. The employer may also bear the employee’s legal costs. Poorly handled dismissals attract higher compensation awards.
If a collective agreement is in place, follow its consultation requirements. Even without one, notifying the relevant tillitsvalgt is strongly recommended. Failure to consult can be treated as a procedural defect.
The employee must request negotiations within two weeks of receiving the dismissal and bring legal proceedings within eight weeks if negotiations fail, or within six months if no negotiations are requested. These time limits are set out in WEA §17-3 and §17-4.
No. Summary dismissal ends the employment immediately with no notice period. Dismissal with notice in Norway gives the employee a statutory notice period (or pay in lieu) and uses a lower legal threshold, an objectively justified reason under §15-7.
Yes. If the court finds that the misconduct, while real, did not reach the threshold of a gross breach, or that the procedure was flawed, it may still award compensation even though the employee was at fault. Proportionality is key.
By Cem Arda Tepe

posted 31 minutes ago

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How Do I Instantly Dismiss an Employee? Summary Dismissal in Norway (2026)

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