Norway ・ Police

The end of unarmed policing

18 July 2025

Norwegian police have a long tradition of being unarmed on ordinary duty, just one of four European countries that practice this. Since 1 July, those days are over.

Following the country’s security services’ evaluations, which raised concerns over terrorism and general crime, the police themselves argued for easier access to firearms. While a large majority of officers once opposed carrying guns on duty, with only around 20% supporting it in 2011, that number flipped to around 80% in 2017.

This change in police opinion helped push major political parties, many of which had long been against routine armament, to change their stance. The shift hasn’t happened overnight. For over a decade, Norwegian police have been granted temporary access to firearms during special threat situations. These "temporary armament" periods gradually normalised the armed policing and lowered both the political and public threshold for accepting weapons during ordinary patrols.


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