Most Expensive International Schools in Oslo 2026
Most Expensive International Schools in Oslo 2026
Oslo is one of the world’s wealthiest cities and home to a significant international community — concentrated in the oil and gas sector, shipping, technology and diplomatic missions. Norway’s strong economy and high standard of living attract well-paid expat packages, and the international school market reflects this.
Fee Overview — Oslo’s Premium International Schools
| School | Curriculum | Annual Fees (NOK) | Annual Fees (USD approx) |
|---|---|---|---|
| International School of Oslo | IB | ~NOK 175,000–235,000 | ~$16,000–$21,500 |
| Oslo International School | IB/American | ~NOK 165,000–220,000 | ~$15,000–$20,000 |
| Bjørnsletta Skole (bilingual) | Norwegian/English | ~NOK 30,000–70,000 | ~$2,700–$6,400 |
| Lycée français René Cassin | French national | ~NOK 25,000–55,000 | ~$2,300–$5,000 |
| Deutsche Schule Oslo | German national | ~NOK 20,000–50,000 | ~$1,800–$4,600 |
Fees are indicative for 2025/2026. USD equivalent approximate.
International School of Oslo (ISOs)
The International School of Oslo is the city’s leading full IB school, offering PYP, MYP and Diploma Programme. It serves a highly international community with families from the energy sector, diplomatic corps and international business. The school has strong IB results and places graduates at universities worldwide.
Annual fees are approximately NOK 175,000–235,000 (~$16,000–$21,500) — reflecting Oslo’s very high cost of living and the premium for English-medium international education in a country where state schooling is free and of high quality.
Oslo International School
A slightly smaller school with American curriculum and IB Diploma options. Annual fees approximately NOK 165,000–220,000 (~$15,000–$20,000). Popular with North American families and those targeting US college admissions.
Why Oslo’s International School Fees Are High
Norway’s cost of living. Oslo consistently ranks among the world’s most expensive cities. Teacher salaries, facilities and operational costs are all significantly higher than in most other countries.
Strong competition from free state schools. Norwegian state schools are excellent and free — even for international families. This limits the addressable market for international schools and keeps the sector small, which means less economies of scale.
Strong currency. The Norwegian krone is relatively stable and strong, meaning fees that seem reasonable in NOK translate to significant USD amounts.
The State School Alternative
Norwegian state schools deliver very high quality education, and Norwegian is learnable for most children within 1–2 years. Families planning a 3+ year stay frequently choose the state system, particularly given the Norwegian government’s policy of integrating international children into local schools.
For shorter postings, or for families whose children are older and unlikely to adapt quickly to Norwegian, the international schools are the practical choice.
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