Do Hong Kong passport holders need a visa to visit NO?
HKSAR ordinary passport holders can travel to Norway visa-free for up to 90 days within any 180-day period as a short-stay tourist, because Norway is a Schengen state and Hong Kong is on the Schengen visa-exempt list. Norway is part of the Schengen Area, and holders of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) ordinary passport enjoy visa-free entry to the entire Schengen zone, including Norway, for tourism or short visits. The permitted stay is a maximum of 90 days within any rolling 180-day period, and this allowance is shared across all Schengen countries (so days spent in France, Germany, etc. count toward the same total). The HKSAR passport must be valid for at least three months beyond your intended date of departure from the Schengen Area. No prior application is required for this short-stay channel; you simply present a valid passport, proof of onward/return travel, accommodation details and sufficient funds at the border. Note the upcoming ETIAS travel authorisation: as of 30 May 2026 it is NOT yet in force. The European Commission confirms ETIAS is scheduled to begin in the last quarter of 2026, with a transitional (non-mandatory) period before it becomes obligatory in 2027. Until ETIAS launches, no pre-travel online authorisation is needed. Travellers holding a Hong Kong Certificate of Identity or Document of Identity (rather than the HKSAR passport) do NOT qualify for visa-free entry and must obtain a Schengen visa. Separately, the EU's Entry/Exit System (EES) biometric border registration is being rolled out, which affects how entry/exit is recorded but does not change the visa-free status.
VISA-FREETOURISMMULTIPLE ENTRYLast verified 2026-05-30
For guidance only — visa rules change with little notice. Always confirm directly with the destination's embassy or foreign ministry before booking non-refundable travel. Information here applies to ordinary (non-diplomatic) passports unless noted.
Hong Kong (PR)Living in Hong Kong as a permanent resident? See PR-specific guidance→