Our Expert in Norway
No results available
The Norwegian Transparency Act (Åpenhetsloven) requires larger enterprises operating in or into Norway to carry out human-rights and decent-working-conditions due diligence across their supply chains, publish an annual account of that work, and answer public information requests, all under the supervision of the Norwegian Consumer Authority (Forbrukertilsynet), which now actively enforces the law with binding orders and fines. Whether you run a Norwegian-domiciled company or a foreign subsidiary selling goods and services into the Norwegian market, the Act imposes three concrete duties: conduct and document proportionate supply-chain due diligence, publish an annual transparency report on your website, and respond to any person’s written request for information about how you handle actual and potential adverse impacts.
Failure to comply exposes the enterprise to enforcement action, coercive fines, and reputational damage at a time when Norwegian authorities have signalled a sharper enforcement posture.
This guide provides a transparency act compliance checklist built for general counsel, compliance officers, and legal teams at Norwegian SMEs and multinational subsidiaries. It walks through each obligation step by step, from establishing whether the thresholds apply to your entity, through preparing the annual report and fielding information requests, to embedding robust contract clauses in your supplier agreements. Every section references the statute itself (hosted on Lovdata), the official English translation published by the Norwegian Government (Regjeringen), and the enforcement guidance issued by Forbrukertilsynet, so you can trace each requirement back to its primary legal source.
The Norwegian Transparency Act entered into force on 1 July 2022 with an overarching objective: to promote enterprises’ respect for fundamental human rights and decent working conditions in connection with the production of goods and the provision of services, and to ensure the general public’s access to information about how enterprises address adverse impacts. The statute aligns Norway’s domestic obligations with the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises and the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, creating a legally binding framework rather than a voluntary standard.
Norwegian corporate transparency obligations under the Act extend to two categories of enterprise. The first is any enterprise that is resident in Norway and meets the size thresholds set out in Section 3 of the Act. The second is any larger foreign enterprise that offers goods or services in Norway and is liable to tax in Norway, provided it also meets the same size criteria. The transparency act Norway framework therefore catches both domestic companies and certain foreign operators with a genuine Norwegian-market nexus.
An enterprise falls within the scope of the Act if it meets at least two of the three size criteria set out in Section 3, which mirrors the thresholds used for “larger enterprises” in the Norwegian Accounting Act (Regnskapsloven). The thresholds are assessed on a consolidated basis where the enterprise is a parent company.
| Threshold criterion | Quantitative limit | Practical example |
|---|---|---|
| Sales revenue | NOK 70 million | A mid-size importer with annual turnover of NOK 80 million meets this criterion |
| Balance sheet total | NOK 35 million | A professional-services firm with assets of NOK 40 million meets this criterion |
| Average number of full-time employees during the financial year | 50 employees | A logistics subsidiary with 55 FTEs meets this criterion |
If your enterprise satisfies at least two of the three criteria above, it is covered. Parent companies must calculate the thresholds on a consolidated group basis, which means a small Norwegian holding company can be swept in if its subsidiaries collectively exceed the limits. Industry observers note that this consolidation rule catches more groups than many initially expect, particularly where several smaller subsidiaries operate under a single Norwegian parent.
Norwegian-registered entities (AS, ASA, and other legal forms) that meet the thresholds are directly covered. Foreign enterprises are covered if they (a) offer goods or services in Norway, (b) are liable to tax in Norway under internal law or a tax treaty, and (c) meet the size thresholds. In practice, this means a foreign company with a Norwegian branch (NUF) exceeding the thresholds will be subject to the Act. The statute does not apply to sole proprietorships that fall below the size criteria. Businesses needing guidance on cross-border scope can consult our international business law guide for broader context on jurisdictional triggers.
The annual transparency report is the centrepiece of transparency reporting Norway obligations. Section 5 of the Act requires every covered enterprise to publish an account of its due diligence activities at least once per year and to make that account easily accessible on its website.
Section 5 of the Norwegian Transparency Act sets out six categories of information the annual account must cover:
The account must be published no later than 30 June each year, covering the preceding financial year. For enterprises with a standard calendar-year financial year, this means the report for the financial year ending 31 December must be live on the company website by 30 June of the following year. The report must be signed by the board of the enterprise, which reinforces that this is a board-level governance obligation and not merely an operational task.
A structured preparation process reduces last-minute scrambles and ensures the report meets both the letter and spirit of the statute. The following sequence reflects recommended practice drawn from the Altinn guidance for businesses and the Forbrukertilsynet enforcement expectations.
| Item | Why it matters | Example wording |
|---|---|---|
| Enterprise structure and operations | Gives context; required by Section 5(a) | “[Company] is a Norwegian-registered AS with 120 employees, operating in garment import and wholesale distribution.” |
| Guidelines and procedures for due diligence | Demonstrates governance framework | “Our Responsible Sourcing Policy, adopted by the board in [year], sets minimum standards for all Tier 1 suppliers.” |
| Identified actual adverse impacts | Shows transparency and accountability | “A supplier audit in Q3 revealed non-compliant overtime practices at one facility in [country].” |
| Significant risk of adverse impacts | Forward-looking risk assessment | “Our risk screening flagged elevated forced-labour risk in raw-material sourcing from [region].” |
| Measures implemented or planned | Demonstrates remediation effort | “We issued a corrective action plan requiring compliance within 90 days and conducted a follow-up audit.” |
| Results or expected results of measures | Closes the loop on accountability | “The supplier achieved full compliance on re-audit. We continue quarterly monitoring.” |
| Reporting obligation | Entity type | Deadline / frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Publish account of due diligence (Section 5) | Large Norwegian enterprises meeting at least two of three thresholds | Annually, published on the enterprise’s website by 30 June following the end of the financial year |
| Respond to public information requests (Section 6) | Any enterprise covered by the Act | Within three weeks of receiving the request; extendable to two months for complex or voluminous requests |
| Group reporting (parent company account) | Parent companies with subsidiaries exceeding consolidated thresholds | Annual group-level account covering all subsidiaries, published by the same 30 June deadline |
Section 6 of the Norwegian Transparency Act grants any person, whether a consumer, journalist, NGO, investor, or competitor, the right to request information from a covered enterprise about how it handles actual and potential adverse impacts on fundamental human rights and decent working conditions. This right goes beyond the general information in the annual report: requesters may ask about specific products, services, or supply-chain segments.
Enterprises must provide a written response within three weeks of receiving a request. Where the request is unusually extensive or involves complex information, the deadline may be extended to two months, but the enterprise must notify the requester of the extension and the reason for it within the initial three-week window. According to the Forbrukertilsynet guidance, a response must be “adequate”, meaning it should substantively address the question rather than offering a generic redirect to the annual report.
There are limited grounds for refusal. An enterprise may decline to provide information that constitutes a trade secret (as defined in the Norwegian Trade Secrets Act) or that relates to classified security matters. However, even when a refusal is justified, the enterprise must explain the legal basis for refusing and describe the type of information withheld.
Practical preparation is essential. Companies that lack an internal triage process risk missing the three-week deadline, a failure that is itself a breach. The recommended approach involves four steps:
The following template provides a starting framework for responding to a request under Section 6. Enterprises should adapt the wording to the facts of each request:
“Dear [Requester], thank you for your request dated [date] regarding [subject]. [Company] is subject to the Norwegian Transparency Act and takes its obligations seriously. In response to your query about [specific product/service/supply-chain segment], we can confirm the following: [Describe the due diligence measures conducted, risks identified, and actions taken or planned]. [If refusing any part of the request: We are unable to disclose [specific information] as it constitutes a trade secret within the meaning of the Trade Secrets Act. The withheld information relates to [general description of nature of information]. Should you wish to discuss this response further, please contact [designated contact]. Yours faithfully, [Signatory, position].”
Businesses handling cross-border supply chains may find our guide on protecting intellectual property across borders helpful for understanding when trade-secret defences are available in international contexts.
The Norwegian Transparency Act requires covered enterprises to carry out due diligence “in accordance with the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.” Section 4 sets out the statutory due diligence duty as a six-step cycle: embed responsible business conduct into policies, identify and assess actual and potential adverse impacts, cease or mitigate adverse impacts, track implementation and results, communicate how impacts are addressed, and provide for or co-operate in remediation where appropriate.
The statute explicitly applies a proportionality standard: due diligence must be proportionate to the size of the enterprise, the nature and context of its operations, and the severity and probability of adverse impacts. This means a 60-person Norwegian wholesaler importing finished consumer goods is not expected to replicate the supply-chain mapping of a global extractives company, but it is expected to do something meaningful and to document what it has done and why.
Effective supply chain due diligence Norway programmes typically deploy three core tools, scaled by supplier tier:
| Activity | Tier 1 (direct suppliers) | Tier 2+ (sub-suppliers and raw-material sources) |
|---|---|---|
| Self-assessment questionnaire | Mandatory for all Tier 1 suppliers; updated annually | Targeted at high-risk Tier 2 suppliers identified through risk screening |
| Risk scoring and prioritisation | Score each supplier against country risk, sector risk, and past-performance data | Apply sector- and geography-based proxies where direct information is unavailable |
| On-site or third-party audits | Prioritise high-risk Tier 1 suppliers; audit at least a sample annually | Conduct desktop reviews or request audit reports via Tier 1 flow-down clauses |
| Corrective action and remediation plan | Issue formal corrective action requests with deadlines; re-audit to confirm closure | Require Tier 1 suppliers to escalate Tier 2 non-conformances and share remediation evidence |
| Documentation and recordkeeping | Maintain full audit trail (questionnaires, audit reports, correspondence) for at least five years | Record risk-screening methodology and rationale for scope limitations |
The KPMG review of the Act commissioned by the Norwegian Government found that many enterprises underestimate the documentation requirement. Even where a company concludes that no adverse impacts exist in its supply chain, the statute requires it to explain the due diligence process that led to that conclusion. The absence of findings is not, by itself, a compliant report.
Embedding compliance obligations in commercial contracts is the most effective way to operationalise the Norwegian Transparency Act throughout a supply chain. The following clauses are illustrative, enterprises should tailor them to sector-specific risks and the commercial relationship. For deeper coverage of international commercial contracting, see our dedicated practice guide.
The Forbrukertilsynet (Norwegian Consumer Authority) is the designated enforcement body. Its powers include issuing orders to compel compliance, imposing prohibitions against continued infringements, and levying coercive fines (tvangsmulkt) that accrue daily until the enterprise comes into compliance. In addition, the Market Council (Markedsrådet) may impose infringement fines (overtredelsesgebyr) for serious or repeated breaches.
The KPMG review commissioned by the Norwegian Government documented early enforcement activity and identified common compliance gaps: enterprises publishing overly generic annual accounts that fail to address specific adverse impacts; companies missing the three-week deadline for information requests; and businesses relying entirely on boilerplate supplier codes of conduct without any verification or follow-up mechanism. Industry observers expect the penalties transparency act framework to tighten further as the Consumer Authority builds institutional capacity and learns from the initial compliance cycles.
When an enterprise identifies, or receives a complaint about, an actual adverse impact in its supply chain, the following escalation plan reduces both legal exposure and reputational risk:
Mitigation strategies that reduce enforcement risk include maintaining a documented, board-approved due diligence policy; retaining complete audit trails; designating a trained compliance officer; and carrying appropriate directors’ and officers’ liability insurance. The Global Law Experts lawyer directory connects businesses with practitioners experienced in Norwegian regulatory compliance and supply-chain risk management.
Use the following checklist as an immediate action plan. Each item maps directly to a statutory obligation and can be completed within a 30/60/90-day framework.
Days 1–30:
Days 31–60:
Days 61–90:
For enterprises operating across multiple jurisdictions, understanding how the Norwegian Transparency Act interacts with broader international business law obligations, including the EU Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), is an essential next step in building a unified compliance programme.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Sigurd Knudtzon at Wahl-Larsen Advokatfirma AS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 8 minutes ago
posted 9 minutes ago
posted 31 minutes ago
posted 55 minutes ago
posted 57 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Advisory Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message