Latest Opinion Poll for the Norwegian Election (Norfakta, January 7, 2026)

January 6, 2026 - January 7, 2026

1005 respondents

Next General election in Norway: 2029

The next General election in Norway is expected in 2029.

Norway's Incumbent Government Without a Majority

Based on the Norfakta projection, the incumbent governing parties would currently secure 26.0% of the parliamentary seats.

Quality Check: How Reliable is the Norfakta Projection?

Potential Majorities and Coalition Scenarios

Electoral Threshold

The electoral threshold for Norway's election is 4%.

Fremskrittspartiet + Høyre + Senterpartiet + Kristelig Folkeparti
Centre-Right
53.8%
Arbeiderpartiet + Høyre + Senterpartiet + De Grønne
Centre-Left
53.3%
Arbeiderpartiet + Høyre + Senterpartiet + Kristelig Folkeparti
Centre-Left
53.3%
Arbeiderpartiet + Høyre + Senterpartiet + Venstre
Centre-Left
53.3%
Fremskrittspartiet + Høyre + Venstre + Kristelig Folkeparti
Centre-Right
53.3%
Arbeiderpartiet + Høyre + De Grønne + Kristelig Folkeparti
Centre-Left
52.7%
Fremskrittspartiet + Høyre + Senterpartiet
Centre-Right
49.7%
Arbeiderpartiet + Høyre + Senterpartiet
Centre-Left
49.1%

Projected Parliamentary Composition (Source: Norfakta)

According to :institute, 9 parties are projected to surpass the electoral threshold and enter the Norwegian parliament: Fremskrittspartiet with 45 representatives, Arbeiderpartiet with 44 representatives, Høyre with 31 representatives, Rødt with 11 representatives, Sosialistisk Venstreparti with 9 representatives, Senterpartiet with 8 representatives, De Grønne with 7 representatives, Kristelig Folkeparti with 7 representatives and Venstre with 7 representatives.

Norway's Electoral System

The Norwegian Parliament, the Storting, comprises 169 representatives elected every four years. Norway employs a system of proportional representation across 19 electoral districts, corresponding to its traditional counties (fylker). Of the 169 seats, 150 are directly allocated as district mandates within these constituencies. The remaining 19 seats are compensatory (or leveling) mandates (utjevningsmandater), one for each district, designed to ensure nationwide proportionality between vote share and seat distribution. A unique feature is that the Storting is elected for a full four-year term; the Norwegian Constitution explicitly prohibits early elections.

Electoral Thresholds

Norway does not impose a fixed percentage threshold for winning district mandates; success here hinges on results within individual electoral districts. However, to qualify for the distribution of the 19 compensatory seats, a party must achieve a nationwide threshold of 4%. This hurdle holds immense significance in Norwegian politics, as crossing or failing to meet the 4% mark frequently determines which political bloc (center-left or center-right) can form a majority in the Storting.

Government Formation and Traditions

Norway operates under a system known as 'negative parliamentarism'. This means a government does not require a formal vote of confidence from the Storting upon taking office; it merely needs to avoid an active majority voting against it. This system strongly favors the formation of minority governments, which are highly prevalent in Norway. These governments rely on firm agreements with supporting parties in Parliament to pass budgets and crucial legislation. Norway's political culture is deeply rooted in consensus-building and cross-party cooperation.

Data Sources and Methodology

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