NAV was established on 1 July 2006. The local authorities and central government cooperate to find good solutions for users through 456 NAV offices in municipalities and city boroughs. Each local authority and NAV agree on what local authority services their office should provide. The services provided by a NAV office will thus vary from local authority to local authority.

Organization

NAV, or the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration, employs around 19,000 people. Of these around 14,000 are employed by the central government, the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Service, and around 5,000 are employed by the local authorities.

In addition to the local NAV offices there are more than one hundred special units. The special units perform centralised duties that it would not be appropriate for front line local NAV offices to perform.

NAV's main goals are:

More people active and in work, fewer people on benefits

A well-functioning job market

To provide the right services and benefits at the right time

To provide good services tailored to the users' needs and circumstances

Comprehensive and efficient labour and welfare administration

What does NAV mean?

NAV is the short name for the Norwegian Labour and Welfare Administration. NAV was originally short for the New Labour and Welfare Administration. NAV is now a standalone name and a brand so we write it in capitals.

NAV´s annual reports (text in norwegian).

Most of the information is available here in English. There are also links to other more detailed information; however, some of this information is only available in Norwegian.