Thai Police Clearance for Norwegian Nationals | Use in Norway · NYC Legal
Norwegian nationals who have lived in Thailand for more than 6 months are almost always asked to submit a "Thai Police Clearance Certificate" when returning to Norway for skilled migration, family visa, permanent residency, citizenship, or when moving from Thailand to a third country. NYC Legal manages the full document chain — CID application in Bangkok, Norwegian certified translation, Ministry of Foreign Affairs authentication, and either Apostille (effective 14 February 2026 for Hague-member destinations) or Norway embassy legalisation, with international courier direct to your address abroad.
Who needs Thai PCC when relocating to Norway
Any Norwegian national who held a Non-B / Non-O / Retirement / Elite / LTR / DTV visa or Work Permit in Thailand for 6 months or more will typically be required to submit a Thai Police Certificate when applying for a new visa, employment, permanent residence, or naturalisation in Norway. Immigration authorities in Norway routinely request a police check from every country of residence since age 16 — Thailand always falls under this rule for former residents.
Step-by-step process for Norwegian applicants
1) Prepare documents: current + all previous passports showing Thai stamps, copies of every Thai visa/work permit, name-change deed poll (if any), passport-sized photos. 2) Fingerprinting by Thai police (FD-258 US card or Norway-specific template if the destination requires). NYC Legal provides certified fingerprinting at our Bangkok office. 3) File the CID application at the Royal Thai Police HQ. 4) Result: 5-15 working days. 5) Certified Norwegian translation. 6) MFA authentication — from 14 February 2026 this becomes an Apostille for Hague member states. 7) Norway embassy legalisation only if Norway is not a Hague member or requires super-legalisation.
Impact of Thailand joining the Hague Apostille Convention (14 Feb 2026)
From 14 February 2026 Thailand becomes a full member of the Hague Apostille Convention. The MFA Consular Department will issue an Apostille certificate that is directly recognised in over 125 member states. For Norwegian nationals: if Norway is a Hague member, you skip the embassy step entirely — saving 5-10 working days and THB 1,500-4,000 in embassy fees. If Norway is not a member, the traditional legalisation chain still applies. NYC Legal confirms the correct route before we start, so there are no surprises.
Certified Norwegian translation accepted by Norway authorities
Thai PCC is issued in Thai. To be used in Norway it must be translated by a translator recognised by the destination authority (NAATI for Australia, sworn translator for EU, Certified Translator for US/UK/Canada, etc.) and then re-certified by MFA / notary / embassy depending on the route. NYC Legal's in-house Norwegian translation team has worked with CID and MFA for 15+ years and delivers layout that matches Norway authority expectations (Buddhist Era vs Gregorian dates, Thai numerals converted, special characters, endorsement stamps).
Common Norwegian scenarios
Case A: Norwegian professional returning to Norway after a Bangkok posting — HR requires police checks from every country of 12+ months residence. Case B: Norwegian sponsoring a Thai spouse for family reunion in Norway — both partners' PCCs required. Case C: Norwegian applying for Norway citizenship after long stay in Thailand — Ministry of Interior requires foreign police clearances. Case D: Norwegian relocating from Thailand to a third country (Singapore, UAE, Australia, Canada) for work or investment — the new country's employer or immigration department requires Thai PCC.
Indicative Pricing
| Item | Fee (THB) | Turnaround |
|---|---|---|
| Thai PCC + Fingerprinting | 4,500 - 6,500 | 15-20 working days |
| Certified Norwegian translation | 500 - 1,500 | 2-3 working days |
| MFA authentication / Apostille | 800 - 1,500 | 3-5 working days |
| Norway embassy (if required) | 1,500 - 4,000 | 5-10 working days |
| International courier (DHL/FedEx) | 2,500 - 5,000 | 3-7 days |
* Excludes VAT · Actual fee depends on page count and destination
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: How long is a Thai PCC valid for Norway authorities?
A: Most Norway authorities accept a Thai PCC issued within the last 6 months (3 months for citizenship/immigration in some jurisdictions). NYC Legal recommends starting the process no more than 4 months before your submission deadline.
Q: Do I need to travel back to Thailand personally?
A: Not required. With a Power of Attorney legalised at the Thai embassy in Norway, NYC Legal acts as your representative — from CID filing to MFA/embassy chain to international courier delivery straight to your Norway address.
Q: What is the total cost?
A: A full package (CID PCC + Norwegian certified translation + MFA/Apostille + Norway embassy if needed + international courier) runs approximately THB 8,500 - 15,000 depending on speed: Standard 15-20 working days ~ THB 8,500 / Express 7-10 days ~ THB 12,000 / Rush 3-5 days ~ THB 15,000+.
Q: Is Norway a Hague Apostille member?
A: Yes — Norway is a Hague Apostille member. Once Thailand becomes a full member on 14 Feb 2026, you benefit immediately: no more embassy step required.
Q: What if my old passport is lost?
A: Still possible. You will need a Statutory Declaration notarised by a Thai Notarial Attorney plus a copy of the police report for the lost passport. NYC Legal's in-house Notarial Attorney provides the declaration on the same day.
Ready to start your Thai PCC?
NYC Legal handles the full chain — from CID filing to courier delivery in Norway.