The Norwegian Directorate of Immigration has announced a significant change in Norway’s policy toward Ukrainian refugees.
An official statement posits that Ukrainian men aged 18 to 60 (eligible for drafting) will no longer be eligible for “collective protection”, a temporary status that — up to now — allowed Ukrainians fleeing the war to receive fast-track residence permits without undergoing a full individual asylum assessment.

Since the outbreak of the war in Ukraine, Norway, like many European countries, granted collective protection as an emergency measure. This system was designed to respond quickly to mass displacement, bypassing typical asylum procedures, which are slower and more cumbersome. Under this framework, Ukrainians were treated as a group in need of protection, rather than being required to prove individual risk on a case-by-case basis.
Under the new rules, however, men of military age will no longer benefit from this simplified process. Instead, they will need to apply through the standard asylum system, where each case is assessed individually.
In short: less certainty is guaranteed.
The Norwegian government justifies this shift by pointing to a recent increase in the number of Ukrainian men arriving, particularly since late 2025, as well as the broader need to keep migration levels “controlled and sustainable.”
At the same time, authorities emphasize that those who have already been granted protection will not lose their status, and that exceptions, like medical or caregiving circumstances, may still apply.
This policy change also reflects a broader European trend. While Norway is not part of the European Union, it closely aligns with many EU migration practices. Across Europe, governments are gradually moving away from the initial emergency approach of open, collective protection toward more restrictive and regulated systems.