Best donation crowdfunding platforms in country.norway
Which platform delivers the most of every krone to Norwegian recipients — and what Skatteetaten expects from donors and fundraisers.
On kr100 via Vipps, 4fund.com delivers kr100.00 to the recipient.
“For a Norwegian cause, the strongest pick pairs cheap Vipps-friendly collection with clean receipts for approved organisations and EEA-only data residency — so more of each krone reaches the cause and donors can claim their deduction.”
Giving in country.norway
Dominant payment methods, the local currency, regulators, and the tax regime — the context that decides which platform actually serves a campaign here.
Norway is a near-cashless, mobile-first giving market, and one app anchors it: Vipps. The merged Vipps MobilePay covers roughly 70% of online transactions and is installed by more than four million of Norway's 5.4 million people — so for charities and informal fundraisers alike, a Vipps number is the default way to collect a gift. Because Vipps settles on cheap domestic rails, platforms that lean on it deliver more of each krone to the recipient than those routing donations over international card schemes.
Spleis, owned by the bank DNB, is the dominant donation-crowdfunding platform — free for private fundraisers and charging organisations a percentage of what they raise — with Bidra and others alongside it, plus international names like GoFundMe. The donor and recipient sides of the tax question are quite different in Norway, which is why this guide splits them below.
Payments are supervised by Finanstilsynet, while fundraising quality is watched by Innsamlingskontrollen and non-profits register in the Frivillighetsregisteret. Norway is in the EEA, so donor data falls under the GDPR, enforced by Datatilsynet — platforms with EEA-only data residency carry a lighter compliance burden than those storing donor data in the US.
Top platforms for country.norway
Ranked by how much of every 100 donated reaches the recipient under the local method (switch it to see the ranking move). We exclude platforms without Trustpilot reviews; the full catalogue is on the index.
| # | Platform · best for | Recipient gets · per 100 | Trustpilot | Countries | Residency |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | | kr100.00 card rate* | 3.9/5 | 30 ctry | — |
| 2 | | kr98.35 card rate* | 4.9/5 | 115 ctry | EEA |
| 3 | | kr96.80 card rate* | 3.3/5 | 20 ctry | US |
| 4 | | kr94.55 card rate* | 4.0/5 | 23 ctry | — |
| 5 | | kr92.80 card rate* | 4.0/5 | 56 ctry | — |
| 6 | | kr92.20 card rate* | 4.8/5 | 29 ctry | — |
| 7 | | €90.85 † card rate* | 4.2/5 | 36 ctry | EEA |
| 8 | | €87.10 † card rate* | 2.6/5 | 32 ctry | — |
Donation & taxes
The two questions readers most want answered — laid out as separate tracks so a donor and a fundraiser each find their own.
Tax is the reason many people land here. We split it cleanly: what a donor can deduct, and what a fundraiser might owe.
Draft · pending verificationIs my gift tax-deductible?
Gifts to organisations on Skatteetaten's approved list are deductible from your taxable income. Gifts to individuals or unapproved causes are not.
- Only approved organisations. The recipient must be a voluntary or religious/belief-based organisation on the Tax Administration's approved list — including EEA organisations it has approved. Gifts to individuals are never deductible.
- At least NOK 500 a year. You need to give at least NOK 500 to a single organisation during the year for it to count.
- Capped at NOK 25,000. The maximum deduction is NOK 25,000 per year (income year 2025), down from NOK 50,000 before 2022. It reduces your general income, which is taxed at 22%.
- Over NOK 10,000 must go via bank. Total gifts above NOK 10,000 in a year must be paid through a bank — not cash — to qualify. Approved organisations usually report your gift so it pre-fills in your tax return.
| Gift | Deductible? | Condition |
|---|---|---|
| Gift to an approved organisation | Yes | ≥ NOK 500/yr, up to NOK 25,000 |
| Gifts over NOK 10,000/yr | Yes | Must be paid via bank |
| Gift to an individual / unapproved cause | No | — |
- Minimum per organisation
- NOK 500
- Maximum deduction
- NOK 25,000/yr
- Over NOK 10,000 must go via
- bank transfer
Do I owe tax on what I raise?
Norway abolished gift and inheritance tax in 2014, so a genuine donation campaign is generally tax-free for the person receiving it — but rewards, trading and investment crowdfunding follow different rules.
- No gift tax since 2014. Norway abolished inheritance and gift tax with effect from 1 January 2014, so gifts you receive pass to you tax-free.
- Donations aren't income. Skatteetaten treats donation-based crowdfunding as gifts — generally not taxable income for an individual running a genuine cause.
- Rewards change it. If donors get goods or services in return, you may be selling something — that value can be taxable income, and VAT can apply at scale.
- Investment and lending differ. For investment- or loan-based crowdfunding, dividends, gains and interest are taxable and must go in your tax return.
| Your situation | Likely treatment |
|---|---|
| Individual · genuine donation campaign | Untaxed — no gift tax |
| Rewards or goods given in return | May be income / VAT |
| Approved organisation | Tax-exempt; can issue deductible receipts |
| Investment or lending crowdfunding | Returns are taxable |
- Inheritance & gift tax
- Abolished 1 Jan 2014
- Genuine gifts received
- Tax-free
This isn't tax advice. Crowdfunding situations vary — rewards, trading and large arrangements can change the answer, so confirm your case with Skatteetaten before you file.
Local payment methods
How donors in country.norway actually pay — and why the method matters as much as the platform.
The Norwegian default. A Vipps number is how most charities and informal fundraisers collect gifts — more than four million Norwegians use it, and thousands of donations flow through it every day.
The national debit scheme, usually co-branded Visa or Mastercard. Percentage-based fees online, so larger gifts cost more in absolute terms.
Mostly international donors and larger gifts — the most expensive path per krone on percentage fees.
Growing on mobile checkout — wraps a card, so card fees apply.
Used for larger or recurring gifts; low cost but slower to set up than a tap in Vipps.
Method choice shapes how much of each krone reaches the cause: a Vipps gift settles cheaply on domestic rails, while routing donations over international card schemes is materially more expensive per krone.
Frequently asked
Platform and tax questions, together — because most people arrive with one of each.
Which platforms work in Norway?
The platforms in the table above operate in Norway. Spleis (owned by DNB) is the best-known domestic donation-crowdfunding site, alongside Bidra and international names like GoFundMe and WhyDonate. What separates them on recipient-gets is how cheaply they collect — Vipps-friendly platforms keep more of each krone with the cause.
Are donations tax-deductible in Norway?
Yes, if you give to an organisation on Skatteetaten's approved list. You must give at least NOK 500 to that organisation in the year, the deduction is capped at NOK 25,000 (income year 2025), and total gifts above NOK 10,000 must be paid via bank. Gifts to individuals or unapproved causes are not deductible.
Will I be taxed on money I raise?
Usually not. Norway abolished gift tax in 2014, and Skatteetaten treats donation-based crowdfunding as gifts — generally not taxable income for an individual running a genuine cause. It changes if donors get goods or services in return, or for investment- or loan-based crowdfunding, where returns are taxable.
What's the cheapest way to receive donations here?
A platform that collects through Vipps. It settles on cheap domestic rails and is installed by most of the country, so it beats routing donations over international card schemes — where percentage fees take a bigger bite of each krone.
Other countries
Same methodology, different jurisdiction.
Rankings are produced by a public editorial methodology — open to peer review. We disclose ownership, scoring weights, and every change.