Is it legal to possess a taser at home in Norway?
This rebuilt rule page keeps the answer, scope, and future source links in one obvious place, without pretending the row is fully researched before official sources are attached.
Quick answer
Legal position
Current starter summary
Norway’s weapon rules treat pepper spray and electroshock weapons as prohibited civilian self-defence weapons. The weapons regulation forbids acquiring, owning and possessing electroshock weapons, pepper spray and similar means.
Conditions
What would need to be true
Do not buy, carry, keep or store these items unless a specific official exemption applies.
Exceptions
Known carve-outs or edge cases
The official sources reviewed here do not establish a general civilian exception.
Penalties
Penalty snapshot
No penalty summary has been entered yet.
Enforcement
How this may be enforced
The police say you can be punished for having illegal weapons, and the regulation directly forbids these self-defence weapons.
More rules in Norway
Use the reset build to keep country pages useful even before every row is fully sourced.
download pirated movies
Norway’s copyright preparatory works say it is not permitted to download copyrighted material that has not been lawfully posted online. Downloading from an unlawful source infringes the rightholder’s exclusive rights.
gamble online
Norway currently uses an exclusive-rights gambling model. The government says the biggest forms of gaming are offered within that model, with Norsk Tipping and Norsk Rikstoto holding the key rights.
stream pirated content
Norway’s official copyright materials say making material available for streaming without clearance violates the Copyright Act, and the government has also described illegal-source streaming as unlawful.
use a vpn
No Norwegian official source reviewed here bans ordinary VPN use, and the National Security Authority actively discusses VPN solutions as normal cyber-security tools.
Compare this activity in other countries
This makes the rule page useful for comparison without creating a second data source.
Australia
Australia does not have one uniform civilian Taser rule. Victoria Police classifies a Taser or stun gun as a prohibited weapon, and Victoria Police approval material says prohibited weapons generally require Chief Commissioner approval or an applicable exemption for purchase, possession, carriage or transport. Australian Border Force customs material treats handheld electric-shock devices, including Tasers, stun guns and stun batons, as arms.
Belgium
Belgian Justice lists portable devices that use electric shocks to neutralise persons as prohibited weapons. Prohibited weapons cannot lawfully be possessed, bought, transported or carried by civilians.
Canada
Keeping a Taser at home is not lawful in Canada for the public because the device is treated as a prohibited weapon or prohibited firearm.
Colombia
Colombia authorizes electric less-lethal devices only within the framework of Decreto 1563 de 2022. Electric devices are only authorized if they meet the decree’s technical specifications, and the civilian possession and carry framework requires marking and a permit process for less-lethal items.
About this row
Canonical dataset status
Official sources
Source URLs attached
Reset rule
Why the page is intentionally light
The new site should show a stable layout, a stable route, and clear source slots before the dataset is scaled up again. That keeps management simple and makes later official-source population safer.