Security Deposits and Guarantees in Norway
Learn the strict Norwegian rules for security deposits under Husleieloven. Why a deposit account in the tenant's name is required by law, and the 6-month limit.
Legal Disclaimer
This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.
Unlike many other European countries where the deposit is just a transfer to the landlord's bank account, Norway has very strict consumer-protecting rules for how a deposit for a rental property should be established and managed. Violating these rules makes the deposit illegal.
Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information. Demanding a deposit to be placed into your private wage account (a so-called "irregular deposit") gives the tenant the right to demand default interest and the amount refunded immediately. Information last verified March 2026.
1. Maximum Amount Limit (6 Months)
According to the Tenancy Act (§ 3-5), the landlord is allowed to demand a deposit as security for owed rent, damage to the premises, and other claims arising from the lease agreement.
- Maximum: The deposit can not exceed an amount corresponding to 6 months' rent.
- Market standard: Although 6 months is the legal maximum, it is most common and commercially accepted to ask for a sum corresponding to 3 months' rent.
2. The Mandatory Deposit Account
This is the most important point in Norwegian law: The money must never be transferred directly to the landlord's private bank account.
- Creation of blocked account: The money must be deposited into a separate deposit account in a financial institution that has the right to offer such services in Norway.
- In the Tenant's Name: The account must be created in the tenant's name.
- Who pays the fee? Banks often charge an establishment fee (typically between 500 – 1500 NOK) for this blocked account. The Tenancy Act is clear: It is the landlord who must pay for the establishment of the deposit account, not the tenant.
- Interest: The interest earned on this blocked account throughout the tenancy belongs to the tenant, and is paid out to them at the end of the tenancy.
3. Guarantee as an Alternative
In addition to a traditional deposit, the Tenancy Act accepts security in the form of a **guarantee** (for example, a NAV guarantee for the socially vulnerable or a commercial rental guarantee/deposit guarantee from an insurance company). The total sum of any deposit and guarantee combined must not exceed 6 months' rent. Many landlords are skeptical of companies' guarantees because they have short deadlines for notification, whereas a bank account is risk-free capital.
4. Payout and Release of the Deposit
When the lease agreement terminates and the keys are returned, the deposit account must be settled. The account is strictly blocked for both parties; the landlord cannot extract money without the tenant's consent.
How the release works:
- No dispute: If the parties agree that the tenant should have the money back (or that a part is used to cover a known damage handed over in the move-out settlement), one of the parties contacts the bank with a joint signature/document, and the money is paid out.
- Claim for Owed Rent (§ 3-5): If the landlord can document in writing that the rent has not been paid for specific months and the tenant has not filed a lawsuit, the bank is obliged to transfer the rent sum to the landlord after sending a notice to the tenant with a 5-week deadline to contradict the claim by filing a case in the Rent Disputes Tribunal (HTU).
- Claim for damages/cleaning: For all other claims beyond pure unpaid fixed rent (such as ruined floors, insufficient cleaning), the landlord must obtain consent from the tenant. If the tenant denies that they have destroyed anything, the bank CANNOT process it. The landlord must then immediately file a lawsuit/complaint to the Conciliation Board (Forliksrådet) or the Rent Disputes Tribunal (HTU) to get a legal judgment on the evidence, and then let the judgment order the bank.
Digitize Your Security with Landager
Manually meeting in a bank branch to sign deposit papers and pay cash fees is an outdated practice that costs Norwegian managers days of extra work. Landager's platform is integrated directly with leading Norwegian banks. Before the lease agreement's handover, the system automatically generates the link for the tenant to sign the establishment with Norwegian BankID, pays the bank's fee automatically via your company API, and locks the status symbol in the dashboard to "Verified" for rental transfusion without a single physical meeting. It secures your claim one hundred percent.
Back to Tenancy Act (Overview).
Sources & Official References
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