How safe is Norway?

Officially recorded crime for every municipality - 355 in total - with rates per 1,000 residents, on an interactive map you can zoom from the whole country down to street level.

Data period: 2024-2025 average. Sources: Statistics Norway (SSB, table 08487) · GISCO boundaries and population.

Across all 355 municipalities of Norway, officially recorded crime ranges from about 13.4 per 1,000 residents in Rindal to 145.5 in Ullensaker - about 11 times as high. A typical municipality sits at around 40.5 per 1,000. The two lists below show the five lowest and the five highest; the interactive map holds the full ranking, and you can zoom past the municipality level to see how the picture changes from one area to the next.

Safest areas in Norway

  1. Rindal - 13.4 crimes / 1,000 residents
  2. Kvitsøy - 14.0 crimes / 1,000 residents
  3. Rødøy - 14.7 crimes / 1,000 residents
  4. Osen - 15.7 crimes / 1,000 residents
  5. Vega - 18.2 crimes / 1,000 residents

Highest recorded crime in Norway

  1. Ullensaker - 145.5 crimes / 1,000 residents
  2. Evenes - 123.3 crimes / 1,000 residents
  3. Alvdal - 123.2 crimes / 1,000 residents
  4. Storfjord - 108.3 crimes / 1,000 residents
  5. Oslo - 100.1 crimes / 1,000 residents

Read the numbers honestly. Rates are per 1,000 residents, so city centres and tourist areas look worse than they feel - many visitors, few residents. Recorded crime is not the same as how safe a place feels, and recording practices differ between countries, so compare within Norway only.

All 356 municipalities (kommuner), reported-offence rates as a rolling two-year average, with violence and theft broken out. Whichever area you land on, the rate is counted per 1,000 residents, so you can weigh a capital city against a quiet town on the same scale - as long as both sit inside Norway. Use the search box to jump to a place by name, or the locate button to find the municipality you are standing in right now.

Open the interactive map of Norway →