Norway vs Iceland
Side-by-side comparison of how these places approach childhood.
Norway
In Norway, all children have a legal right to attend kindergarten from age 1 — and 92% do.
Since 2009, every Norwegian child has a statutory right to a kindergarten place. With fees capped at roughly $300/month and heavy public subsidies, near-universal attendance from age 1 is the norm.
Iceland
Icelandic teens went from the heaviest drinkers in Europe to the sobriest in 20 years.
The 'Icelandic Model' replaced teen substance use with organized sports, music, and family time.
Norway
Children start school at age 6 with a year of play-based learning. Formal academic instruction begins at age 7. No grades until year 8. Education is free through university. Small class sizes and high teacher autonomy are hallmarks.
Iceland
Iceland's 10-year compulsory school (grunnskóli) runs from age 6 to 16 with no separation into tracks. There are no standardized national exams. Schools emphasize creativity, outdoor education, and wellbeing alongside academics.
Planning a move from Norway to Iceland?
Get a personalised Family Integration Playbook — your parenting style mapped to your destination's culture.
Get your playbook — $99