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statistikk
2020-02-27T08:00:00.000Z
Population;Population;Immigration and immigrants
en
folkemengde, Population, population, inhabitants, mean population, increase in population, marital status (for example married, single, divorced), age, sexPopulation, Children, families and households, Population count, Population, Immigration and immigrants
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Population

Updated

Next update

Not yet determined

Key figures

5 367 580

the population in Norway on January 1, 2020

Population and population changes
2019
Population at the beginning of the year5 328 212
Population growth39 368
Population at the end of the year5 367 580
 
Excess of births13 811
Births54 495
Deaths40 684
Net migration25 327
Immigration52 153
Emigration26 826

See selected tables from this statistics

Table 1 
Population, by age. 1. January

Population, by age. 1. January
2020Change in percent
2019 - 20202015 - 20202010 - 2020
Total5 367 5800.73.910.5
 
0 years54 827-1.0-7.7-11.7
1-5 years296 332-1.5-5.8-1.7
6-12 years451 246-0.34.16.0
13-15 years191 1301.31.2-0.5
16-19 years255 214-1.0-2.8-1.2
20-44 years1 789 8140.61.78.1
45-66 years1 501 5971.05.412.3
67-79 years596 7102.918.847.3
80-89 years185 4802.54.80.6
90 years or older45 2300.64.026.9

Table 2 
Population by sex, age and marital status. 1 January

Population by sex, age and marital status. 1 January
2020
TotalMarital status
Never marriedMarriedWidows/widowersDivorcedSeparatedRegistered partnersSeparated partnersDivorced partnersSurviving partners
 
Males and females
Total5 365 9332 837 5311 807 383225 584431 34961 3891 3181351 099145
0-4 år290 063290 06300000000
5-9 years315 295315 29400000000
10-14 years324 769324 76500000000
15-19 years318 622318 509830400000
20-24 years340 829334 0716 27761562210101
25-29 years370 923318 99047 5341022 2991 7411110
30-34 years374 224238 944120 5893179 5214 48910151
35-39 years356 323169 049159 84974519 4046 770495883
40-44 years347 515131 055175 6241 39630 6298 263116211617
45-49 years376 148118 994196 6932 42447 49210 0291572319411
50-54 years371 93197 682199 7204 25760 5319 1762113722413
55-59 years331 89969 692185 9516 60461 7457 3802552018622
60-64 years307 22346 272184 05911 52059 8735 1431931410421
65-69 years275 27226 814174 09518 25152 1983 65315047116
70-74 years259 45217 219165 02031 25143 2862 49010563932
75-79 years176 3829 359104 17436 82624 6741 261593137
80-84 years113 7155 14855 42740 16112 41353717027
85-89 years71 7653 29224 53238 6725 0611973014
90-94 years34 4501 7246 84124 2121 638341000
95-99 years9 6615208747 88837540000
100 years or older1 11975419525010000
 
Males
Total2 705 5531 515 894921 50250 171186 23630 22777474574101
0-4 år149 413149 41300000000
5-9 years161 579161 57900000000
10-14 years166 586166 58600000000
15-19 years163 702163 690110100000
20-24 years176 434174 7111 636131550000
25-29 years189 560171 29616 983226655921010
30-34 years190 837133 36452 289563 3571 7650060
35-39 years183 12196 39176 3351417 3662 807313452
40-44 years178 51974 36487 58731012 5243 5756217755
45-49 years192 74766 480100 04855920 5454 89892101087
50-54 years190 72955 051102 7831 00526 9054 720125181139
55-59 years169 40739 77496 0011 54727 7934 028139109718
60-64 years154 80627 09194 7952 78127 0382 903115105815
65-69 years137 03515 87091 0334 47823 3602 1569413211
70-74 years127 40010 12488 7367 91619 0261 4776342925
75-79 years83 2465 15258 2758 70110 32075236172
80-84 years49 5222 68933 0558 4934 92733913024
85-89 years27 4871 51916 2317 7781 8171353013
90-94 years10 9236164 9904 818477220000
95-99 years2 3101196841 4327320000
100 years or older19015301331110000
 
Females
Total2 660 3801 321 637885 881175 413245 11331 1625446152544
0-4 år140 650140 65000000000
5-9 years153 715153 71500000000
10-14 years158 179158 17900000000
15-19 years154 894154 819720300000
20-24 years164 299159 3604 64151251660101
25-29 years181 109147 69430 551801 6341 1490100
30-34 years183 040105 58068 3002616 1642 7241091
35-39 years172 84172 65883 51460412 0383 963182431
40-44 years168 75356 69188 0371 08618 1054 688544862
45-49 years183 27052 51496 6451 86526 9475 1316513864
50-54 years181 12242 63196 9373 25233 6264 45686191114
55-59 years162 44829 91889 9505 05733 9523 35211610894
60-64 years152 39319 18189 2648 73932 8352 240784466
65-69 years138 21710 94483 06213 77328 8381 497563395
70-74 years132 0487 09576 28423 33524 2601 013422107
75-79 years93 1304 20745 89928 12514 35450923265
80-84 years64 1902 45922 37231 6687 4861984003
85-89 years44 2751 7738 30130 8943 244620001
90-94 years23 5271 1081 85119 3941 161121000
95-99 years7 3514011906 45630220000
100 years or older92960118193900000

Table 3 
Foreign citizens by citizenship and sex. 1 January

Foreign citizens by citizenship and sex. 1 January
Citizenship2020
Males and femalesMalesFemales
Total604 516327 130277 386
Of this(15 largest):
Poland108 56569 06339 502
Lithuania46 86826 95219 916
Sweden44 23923 10521 134
Syria31 95818 66213 296
Germany25 28713 32611 961
Denmark22 85112 45910 392
Eritrea18 86611 0817 785
United Kingdom17 20811 2455 963
Romania16 6049 5117 093
Philippines12 8412 9499 892
Latvia12 0876 9695 118
Thailand12 0431 82510 218
Somalia11 9846 1935 791
Russia11 7724 0247 748
United States9 8834 8545 029

About the statistics

The statistics shows the population in Norway and in all the Norwegian counties and municipalities. The population figures at the end of the year shows figures for age, sex, marital status and citizenship. Population changes for births, deaths, immigration, emigration and net migration are published quarterly.

Definitions

Definitions of the main concepts and variables

Mean population: Average population at the beginning and end of the year.

Resident: Who is regarded as a resident of Norway and where in Norway a person shall be counted as a resident, is stipulated in the Population Registration Act of 16 January 1970. The regulations to the act were amended effective 1 February 1980.

The following main points from the registration rules decide who is regarded as a resident of Norway:

Persons from countries outside the Nordic countries are regarded as residents of Norway when they have lived here or intend to live here at least 6 months, even though the stay is temporary. The same six-month rule applies to migration from Norway to a country outside the Nordic countries.

The aforementioned six-month rule does not always apply to migration between Norway and another Nordic country. In Denmark, for example, a person is registered as a resident if the person intends to stay in the country at least 3 months. The same limit is used for out-migration. In Sweden and Finland the limit is one year. For persons who come/move to Norway from another Nordic country, the six-month rule is still valid, as residence is decided by the country of immigration's rules, cf. the Nordic agreement on inter-Nordic migration dated 8 May 1989. This agreement replaced a similar agreement from 5 December 1968.

People living in Svalbard, on Jan Mayen or in Norwegian dependencies who on departure were registered in the population register of a Norwegian municipality shall still be counted as residents of that municipality. The same rules apply to people on the Norwegian continental shelf.

Norwegian foreign and consular service staff and Norwegian military personnel posted for duty abroad are counted as residents of Norway. The same applies to their families.

Foreign staff at foreign embassies and consular services and foreign personnel attached to NATO are not counted as residents of Norway. The same applies to their families.

The main rule for where in Norway a person is regarded as a resident is that the person resides where he/she has their regular daily rest (night's sleep).

If the daily rest is taken in shifts at one or more places, the person is regarded as residing where, overall, they can be said to live on a regular basis. Spouses with a joint home and persons sharing a joint home with their children are regarded as residing in this home without regard to where they have their daily rest.

Single persons who attend school in another municipality are as a main rule still regarded as resident of the place they lived before starting school (the residence of their parents). Similar registration principles also apply to conscripts serving their initial military service, alternative national service conscripts, prisoners, and people admitted to hospitals.

Persons admitted to or placed in other institutions or private care are as a main rule regarded as residents when the stay is intended to last, or turns out to last, at least 6 months.

From March 1987 to January 1994 asylum seekers were usually counted as immigrants and hence also as residents even though the processing of their application for residence had not been completed. Before and after this period, only asylum seekers with residence permits have been registered.

Births: Live births

Excess of births over deaths: The difference between births and deaths also called "net natural increase in the total population". A minus sign means an excess of deaths over births.

In-migration, out-migration: Migration is the relocation of one person between two Norwegian municipalities or between a Norwegian municipality and abroad. People who move several times during a single calendar year are counted each time they move. In the migration statistics for counties, moves between the municipalities in the county are not included.

Net migration: The difference between in-migration and out-migration. A minus sign means net out-migration.

Population: All numbers cover the de jure population.

Population growth: There are two ways of calculating population growth; 1) the total of excess of births over deaths and net migration, or 2) the difference between the population on 1 January in year n+1 minus the population on 1 October (or 1 January in year n). Ideally the two methods should give the same result, but experience shows that there is always discrepancy between the two, due to revisions, annulments, delayed reports etc.

In all the quarterly statistics up to the fourth quarter of 2005 and all preliminary figures of change for the whole year up until and including 2004, the population growth has been calculated as the total of births over deaths and net migration, and provided a basis for preliminary population figures. The population on 1 April, 1 July and 1 October will continue to be calculated this way. Because preliminary figures have been replaced by final population figures as of 1 January 2006 the population growth for one year will be calculated as the population on 1 January in year n+1 minus the population in year n, and correspondingly the population growth for the fourth quarter will be calculated as the population on 1 January in year n+1 minus the population on 1 October.

Clearing-up in The Central Population Register: Persons who stay in the country for less than for six months are not registered and are not included in the figures. The Tax Administration undertakes an ongoing clear-up of the Central Population Register of out-migrated persons who no longer live in Norway. In recent years, clearing-up the Central Population Register has been standard practice.

Standard classifications

Country and citizenship in population statisticsMarital status, Municipalities

Administrative information

Name and topic

Name: Population
Topic: Population

Responsible division

Division for Population Statistics

Regional level

The nation, county, municipality and basic statistical unit, but for quarterly statistic and estimated populaton regional level is national, county and municipality.

Frequency and timeliness

Annually. The quaterly statistic is published about 6 weeks after referencetime, which is 1 January, 1 April, 1 July and 1 October

International reporting

Not relevant

Microdata

Data files at the individual level that are processed and stored long-term. The statistic about estimated population and the quaterly statistic are only stored on a short-term basis.

Background

Background and purpose

The statistics show the composition of the population (by sex, age, marital status, and residence) over time.

Annual figures for the population by sex, age, marital status and citizenship can be found dating back to 1 January 1976, whereas corresponding figures without citizenship can be found from 1 January 1971. Earlier than that, figures exist from censuses held every ten years, as well as some estimated figures from the intervening years.

The statistic on the estimated population at the turn of the year have been in existence since 1970, but only for Norway as a whole. The first estimates at county and municipal level were created on 1 January 2000. The municipal figures are less certain than the county and national figures, and the estimated population in the smallest municipalities will be more uncertain than the estimates for larger municipalities.

The statistics on quarterly population changes show population changes over a shorter period of time. The changes include events such as births, deaths and migrations, in addition to a population count.

These statistics are connected to the annual statistics on population developments. Starting in 1951, Statistics Norway has produced yearly figures on such developments, based on population register material. We have compiled statistics on the quarterly changes (births, deaths, migrations, and population count) since 1974.

Users and applications

Public administration, research institutes, the insurance industry, the media and private persons

Equal treatment of users

No external users have access to the statistics and analyses before they are published and accessible simultaneously for all users on ssb.no at 08 am. Prior to this, a minimum of three months' advance notice is given inthe Statistics Release Calendar. This is one of Statistics Norway’s key principles for ensuring that all users are treated equally.

Coherence with other statistics

Population projections (prognoses)   Births   Deaths   Migrations   Internal migrations Immigrants and Norwegian-born to immigrant parents

Quarterly figures

Families and households

Cohabitant couples

Legal authority

§§ 2-1, 2-2, 3 – 2

EEA reference

Not relevant

Production

Population

Covers all persons registered as a resident of Norway on 1 January. Definition of the main terms. All figures cover the de jure population.

Persons having migrated to Norway to work for less than half a year are not included in the statistics, and persons having emigrated without having registered this, are likewise not included.

Quaterly statistic

In 1985-1999:

Statistics Norway looked at the population at the beginning and end of the quarter along with data for births deaths and migrations that had brought about this change in the population. The statistics were extracted one month after the turn of each quarter, so that as many events as possible were included in the calculations. Events that pertained to previous quarters in the same year were included in "events so far this year" and were also included in "the population at the beginning of the quarter". Events that pertained to previous years were normally not included in these statistics, but if they were included, it would be noted in a footnote.

Thus, in 1985-1999 the statistics included events that actually took place that year and not reports from previous years that arrived too late to be included in the statistics.

Quarterly figures as of 2000:

As of the first quarter of 2000, delayed reports were also included in the quarterly figures. In addition to events that actually took place in the releveant quarter, all reports received more than one month after the end of the quarter and which applied to events in previous years and previous quarters in the current year were included.

A result of this change was that the figures in the quarterly population statistics became more in line with later published population figures than previously published figures, as the register (DSF) is updated continuously, also with late reports.

Annual preliminary figures for population and figures of change to 2004:

From 2000 to 2004, a total for the four quarterly statistics has been published as preliminary annual figures for births, deaths, migration and population at the start of a new year until final figures have become available. Prior to 2000, corresponding preliminary figures were also published for the whole country, but these were not calculated as the total of the previously published figures for the first to the fourth quarter. The method was slightly different, as the figures published for the first quarter were published first. Later in the year, when figures for the second quarter were published, the figures for the first quarter were updated, and when figures for the third quarter were published, the second quarter figures were updated. Slik blei og tala for tredjekvartal enda meir oppdatert. The total of the fourth quarter and the updated figures for the first to the third quarter were published as preliminary figures for the whole year until 2000.

Final population figures and figures of change as of 2005:

The preliminary population figures at the end of last year and figures of change for 2005 and later years have been replaced by final figures because it is possible to carry out the necessary controls earlier than before.

The population growth from 2005 is set as equal to the difference between the population at 1 January 2006 and 1 January 2005. Correspondingly the population growth in the fourth quarter equals the population difference on 1 January 2006 and 1 January 2005. As preliminary population figures (also quarterly figures including the fourth quarter) were published previously, the population growth was calculated as the total of the excess of births and net immigration, which gave the basis for the preliminary population figures. All later population figures for 1 April, 1 July and 1 October will be calculated this way.)

The two estimation methods mentioned above should ideally give the same result, but based on previous experience there is always some discrepancy due to delayed reports, annulments, revisions etc.

Data sources and sampling

Since 1970 the statistics are based on population register data. Since 1946 each municipality has had a local population registry that registers all residents in the municipality, pursuant to the Population Registration Act and its regulations. In 2005, the work methods of the population registries were changed, and there are now 97 registries with responsibility for population registrations for several municipalities in each county. The population registries receive reports of births, deaths, marriages, divorces, migration etc. from various sources.

The register was built up from 1964 to 1966 on the basis of the 1960 census, at the same time as the 11-digit national identity number was introduced as identification. The Office of the National Registrar, which administrates the register, was transferred in 1991 from Statistics Norway to the Directorate of Taxes.

Updating of the Central Population Register is done in part by the local population registries, which are connected to the DSF via terminals, and in part by the Directorate of Taxes. The basis of the statistics on changes in the population is electronic copies to Statistics Norway of all such register updates. The reports are also used to update a separate Statistics Norway population database kept for statistical purposes, which forms the basis for the statistics on the composition of the population.

Collection of data, editing and estimations

From January 1998 electronic copies of reports have been transferred daily from the National Registration Office to Statistics Norway, Which was previously done monthly. Before May 1995 Statistics Norway received the reports on magnetic tape every month..

In addition to the checks made by the DSF, Statistics Norway performs checks for statistical purposes. For more details of our control routines in the various subject areas, see Interne dokumenter 11/2013 Uttak til befolkningsstatistikk fra populasjonsregisteret BeReg

Population (resident persons) are summed up to basic enumeration unit, partof town municipality level.

Seasonal adjustment

Not relevant

Confidentiality

Not relevant

Comparability over time and space

Due to municipal mergers and divisions and redrawing of borders, it is not always possible to compare figures when, e.g., we want to prepare a time series for a municipality. The changes can also affect county borders and thus also the basis for comparison there.

Accuracy and reliability

Sources of error and uncertainty

Some errors made during the collecting and processing of the data are unavoidable and include coding, revision and data processing errors etc. Extensive efforts have been made to minimize these errors, and we regard these types of errors to be relatively insignificant.

Dropout errors will be found to the extent there are persons staying in Norway not being registered as residents according to the regulations, laid down in the law on population registration of 16 January 1970. 

None because all the material rather than samples is used.

The quality of the basic data from the Central Population Register is generally very good for statistical purposes. One minus is nevertheless residence registration - in part because too many are registered as residents, but also because certain groups are registered as having another domicile than where they actually live. This is particularly true because according to the rules unmarried students are listed as residing with their parent(s).

Registration of residence From a statistical viewpoint, registration of residence can seem to be prone to error. This is particularly true in relation to the ideal situation in which everyone is registered according to the day's-rest principle. Failure to report a change of residence or delay the reporting of it also contributes to such deviations. For many analysis and planning purposes the actual residence is of interest.

A survey undertaken following the Population and Housing census in 1990 concluded that the registered residence was incorrect for 5.5 per cent of the population. Much of the deviation is due to the legal definition of residence used in the Central Population Register, which requires that students and residents of joint households to be registered somewhere else than the place they actually live. Using the place of residence definition, between 1.8 and 3.0 per cent of the people were incorrectly placed. Schjalm: "Kvalitetsundersøkelsen for Folke- og boligtelling 1990" (Quality survey for the Population and Housing Census 1990), Reports 96/10, Statistics Norway.

Out-registrations People who move abroad without reporting their departure have also been a major source of error in recent years. As a result of surveys conducted in 1993, nearly 3 000 foreign citizens who had left Norway earlier without reporting the move were registered as living abroad. Oslo was the most affected by these out-registrations (1 600 persons). Some of this out-migration should have been distributed over several years. Out-registration was also done in 1994, 1995, 1997 and 1998. Oslo registered almost 2 000 foreign citizens as having left the country in 1997 and 1998.

Despite the actions taken to remove from the rolls immigrants who have left the country without reporting their move to the population registries, there will always be a number of persons registered as residents of Norway even though they no longer live here.

Conversely, a number of people are living illegally in Norway at any one time and are therefore not included in the population count. Most of them live in Oslo. Because these two factors pull in opposite directions, they largely cancel each other out

Revision

Not relevant

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