Household disposable income per capita in Norway

In 2022, household net adjusted disposable income per capita in Norway was 47,497 $, down from 49,002 $ in 2021. Explore the historical series and compare Norway with other economies below.
Household disposable income per capita
Net adjusted disposable income, constant international dollars
Norway
Year$
202247 497
202149 002
202047 442
201947 803
201847 313
201747 277
201646 814
201547 480
201446 035
201345 588
201244 709
201143 650
201042 762
200942 165
200841 008
200740 326
200638 821
200541 062
200438 531
How Norway compares
Household disposable income per capita compared with other countries
Household disposable income per capita
About this indicator
Household disposable income per capita measures the average income available to each person for consumption or saving. It is a key indicator of average material living standards (what households can actually spend or put aside after taxes and public benefits).
Income includes wages and salaries, earnings from self-employment, income from assets (such as rents and dividends), and cash benefits (such as pensions). Taxes on income and wealth paid by households are subtracted. The measure is adjusted because it also includes public services received in kind, such as health care and education provided free or at subsidised prices. The measure is net of depreciation on household capital assets.
This indicator is expressed in constant 2022 international dollars per capita. Constant means that the values are adjusted for inflation, allowing meaningful comparisons over time by reflecting changes in real income rather than price changes. International dollars mean that the values are expressed using Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) based on the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar. PPP adjusts for differences in price levels across countries, so that one international dollar has the same purchasing power in any given country as one U.S. dollar has in the United States. As a result, household disposable income per capita in constant international dollars allows more meaningful comparisons of living standards across countries and over time.
Sources and updates

Data sources

The data for this indicator are drawn from the OECD Well-being database.

Last update

This indicator was last updated on Econorama on 18 June 2026 and reflects the latest data available from the underlying sources at that time.