Albanians in Norway (; ) are ethnic Albanians living in Norway, initially coming from Kosovo then Albania, numbering at 21,809 people.
The earliest documented Albanian presence in Norway dates to the late 1980s, when small numbers of ethnic Albanians from Kosovo migrated as part of broader labor migration from Yugoslavia to Western Europe, including the Nordic countries. Due to Albania's strict communist isolation under Enver Hoxha until 1991, direct migration from Albania was negligible during this period, with only a handful of students or diplomats possibly present earlier, though no comprehensive records exist.
By 1990, the number of persons with Kosovar background in Norway was under 100, according to historical immigration records.
The Albanian presence in Norway began in earnest during the breakup of Yugoslavia. Small numbers of Kosovars arrived from 1991 onward, but the decisive wave came during and immediately after the Kosovo War (1998âÂÂ1999). Between 1998 and 2000, Norway received approximately 16,000 asylum seekers from Kosovo, mostly ethnic Albanians. Around 6,000 were evacuated directly from North Macedonia in 1999 as part of international humanitarian efforts. The Norwegian government granted almost all of them protection status, either as refugees or on humanitarian grounds. This made Albanians one of the largest refugee groups in Norway during that period. Around 6,000 Albanians from Kosovo were evacuated to Norway from North Macedonia in 1999
After the war ended in June 1999, only a minority returned to Kosovo. Most stayed and brought over family members through the family-reunification programme, which continued throughout the 2000s.
From 2000 to 2015, annual arrivals from Kosovo and Albania remained modest (200âÂÂ600 per year), consisting almost entirely of family members of those already settled. Many of the original refugees obtained Norwegian citizenship after the required residence period. The community gradually shifted from refugee status to permanent residents and citizens.
After Albania received visa-free access to the Schengen Area in December 2010, a new flow began, particularly after the 2015 European migrant crisis. Young men from northern Albania (mainly Kukës, Tropojë, and Has) started arriving as labour migrants or asylum seekers, often citing poverty and lack of opportunities. Although most asylum applications from Albanian citizens were rejected (rejection rates above 95% in 2016âÂÂ2018), many remained in the labour market informally or through work permits.
Since 2020, labour migration from both Albania and Kosovo has grown steadily, particularly in construction, cleaning, hospitality, and agriculture. By 2024, new arrivals were again predominantly economic migrants rather than refugees.
By the mid-2020s, a significant second generation (Norwegian-born children of the 1990s refugees) has come of age. This group is fully educated in the Norwegian system, fluent in Norwegian, and increasingly visible in universities, sports, music, and politics.