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IPTV Norway 2026 – Watch Swedish TV, SVT & TV4 in Norway
IPTV Norway – watch SVT, TV4, Allsvenskan and SHL in Norway without a VPN. How Swedish IPTV works in Norway in 2026 and what it costs.

If you want IPTV Norway — that is, Swedish TV such as SVT, TV4 and Allsvenskan while you live or work in Norway — the answer is a Swedish IPTV subscription that streams the full channel lineup over the internet, no matter which Norwegian IP address you're on. Unlike SVT Play, which checks whether you're inside Sweden before the player starts, IPTV doesn't care where in the Nordics you are: a single login works identically in Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim and Stavanger as it would back home in Stockholm. A paid subscription costs between 179 SEK and 799 SEK, needs no separate VPN, and installs in five minutes on Apple TV, Fire TV Stick, Smart TV or mobile. This guide covers how Swedish IPTV in Norway works, which channels you get, what it costs, and how to avoid the most common pitfalls.
Quick summary
IPTV Norway means streaming the full Swedish channel lineup — SVT, TV4, TV3, Kanal 5, Viaplay and V Sport — at home in Norway, without SVT Play or TV4 Play checking your IP address. A single Xtream Codes login works the same in Oslo and Stockholm because the stream comes from the provider's server, not directly from SVT. A paid Swedish IPTV subscription costs 179–799 SEK, replaces a fragile SVT Play-plus-VPN setup, and delivers a stable FHD/4K picture on Apple TV, Fire TV Stick, Smart TV and mobile.
What matters most about IPTV in Norway in 2026
- SVT Play does not officially work in Norway. A VPN works some days and fails the next — Swedish IPTV is a stable replacement that sidesteps detection entirely.
- Channels: SVT1, SVT2, SVT24, Kunskapskanalen, Barnkanalen, TV4, TV4 Play, TV3, TV6, Kanal 5, Viaplay, V Sport, C More, plus 50,000+ international and Norwegian channels including NRK and TV2 Norge.
- Sport: Allsvenskan, SHL, HockeyAllsvenskan, Champions League and Premier League with Swedish commentary — and the same kick-off time as Sweden, because Norway shares the same time zone.
- Devices: Apple TV, Fire TV Stick, Samsung Tizen, LG webOS, Android box, iPhone, iPad. One subscription, every screen.
- No VPN needed. Swedish IPTV doesn't care that your IP address sits in Norway.
- Price: from 179 SEK/month down to roughly 67 SEK/month on the yearly plan (799 SEK), no contract.
Updated: July 1, 2026 · By Nordisc IPTV
On this page:
- What IPTV in Norway means for Swedes
- Why SVT Play and TV4 Play are geo-blocked in Norway
- How to watch Swedish TV in Norway — step by step
- What channels you get with IPTV in Norway
- Allsvenskan, SHL and sport in Norway — same kick-off time
- Best devices for IPTV in Norway
- IPTV in Norway vs SVT Play with a VPN
- Norwegian internet providers and streaming
- Troubleshooting IPTV in Norway
- Pros and cons
- How much does IPTV in Norway cost?
- Frequently asked questions about IPTV in Norway

Norway has one of Europe's largest Swedish diasporas — tens of thousands of Swedes live and work in Oslo, Bergen, Trondheim and along the fibre-rich western coast. Most of them discover the same thing the first weekend after moving: SVT Play won't start, TV4 Play says "this content is not available in your region," and Allsvenskan kicks off without you being able to watch. Norwegian cable gives you NRK and TV2 Norge, but not the Swedish TV you grew up with. A Swedish IPTV service built for the Nordics is the solution made for exactly this: a paid subscription that delivers the full Swedish lineup over the open internet, with no IP check and no fight against streaming services that don't want you as a customer.
What IPTV in Norway means for Swedes
IPTV in Norway is an internet-delivered television service that streams Swedish broadcast channels — SVT1, SVT2, TV4, TV3, Kanal 5, Viaplay and V Sport — directly to your device wherever you are, regardless of which country your IP address points to. The technology is plain HTTP video streaming over an Xtream Codes login, so one subscription works identically in Oslo and in Stockholm.
This is fundamentally different from SVT Play, which uses geo-restriction (it reads your IP address before letting the player start), and from generic VPN workarounds that fight a losing battle against detection. IPTV runs on the same protocols that replace traditional cable inside Sweden — M3U/M3U8 playlists, the Xtream Codes API and XMLTV programme guides — just made available to subscribers who happen to sit on the other side of the Kölen mountains. If you want to understand the underlying technology first, our explainer on what IPTV is and how it differs from regular TV walks through it. For the Swede in Norway, the key point is simple: IPTV reproduces the Swedish TV experience exactly as it was at home — turn on the TV, pick a channel, watch.
One thing that makes Norway special compared to diaspora hubs like London or New York is distance. The network route from a Swedish or Nordic server to a fibre connection in Oslo is short, and Norway sits in the same time zone (CET/CEST) as Sweden. That means both low latency — the picture rarely buffers — and that every kick-off time, news bulletin and programme schedule matches home to the minute. No time-zone maths, no EPG offset to recalculate.
Why SVT Play and TV4 Play are geo-blocked in Norway
SVT Play and TV4 Play are geo-blocked in Norway because Swedish broadcast rights are sold by territory. SVT's public-service remit is funded by Swedish tax money and covers Sweden first; TV4 and Viaplay sell on-demand rights to the Swedish market and then re-sell the same content internationally. Letting Norwegian IP addresses stream freely would conflict with those deals.
The technical mechanism is simple: SVT Play checks the IP address of your device against a database of Swedish IP ranges. If you're on a Norwegian Telenor or Altibox connection, the check fails and the player returns the region error. A VPN routes your traffic through a Swedish server to spoof a Swedish IP, but SVT's anti-VPN system maintains lists of known commercial VPN exit-IP addresses and blocks those too. Detection has also grown more sophisticated over the years, which is why even premium VPNs often fail precisely on the big match nights when the most people try to connect at once.
For the Swede in Norway, the consequence is that the "free" options don't hold up. SVT Play with a VPN works on Tuesday and dies on Sunday just before kick-off, and illegal social-media link streams give you 480p, intrusive overlay ads, and a URL that changes every week. If you want Swedish TV the way you're used to it — stable, in HD, with a programme guide — the realistic choices collapse in practice to a paid IPTV subscription. We map the whole legality picture and the wider market in our overview of how the IPTV world looks in 2026.
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How to watch Swedish TV in Norway — step by step
Setting up Swedish IPTV in Norway takes about five minutes and needs no VPN, no router settings and no Norwegian bank card. After purchase you receive your Xtream Codes — a server URL, a username and a password — by email. You install a free IPTV app, paste the three credentials and start watching. Here is the full flow, device by device.
- Pick a serious Swedish provider. Confirm SVT1, SVT2, TV4 and V Sport are in the channel list, and that the provider runs a traceable business with clear terms and 24/7 support. Our guide to choosing a safe IPTV subscription covers what to look for.
- Install an IPTV app. On Apple TV and iPhone, IPTV Smarters Pro is the universal choice; on Fire TV Stick and Android boxes, TiviMate is the polished favourite; on Samsung Tizen and LG webOS, IPTV Smarters Pro, IBO Player or Smart IPTV all work. Always download from the official store — never as an APK from a random site.
- Open the app and choose "Add new user" or "Add playlist". Select "Login with Xtream Codes API" if it's offered — it's more stable for live channels and EPG than a raw M3U URL.
- Paste your Xtream Codes. Server URL, username and password from the welcome email. No VPN, no Swedish IP address. The credentials work the same on your connection in Oslo as they would in Sweden.
- Wait 30–60 seconds for the sync. The channel list, the 7-day EPG and the VOD library load on first launch. Don't close the app while it syncs.
- Open a Swedish channel and press play. Try SVT1 or TV4. For 4K on a big TV we recommend wired Ethernet over Wi-Fi.
If you want to pick the right player for your specific device before you start, we compare the options in our guide to the best IPTV app for expats abroad. The point to remember: the app is only a player — the subscription is what delivers the channels.
What channels you get with IPTV in Norway
A real Swedish IPTV subscription for Norway covers four channel tiers: SVT public-service, the TV4 Group's commercial channels, the TV3/Viaplay family, and the sport-dedicated V Sport channels — plus an international layer of 50,000+ channels that usually includes NRK and TV2 Norge as well. So you get both your Swedish TV and your Norwegian local lineup in the same app.
The Swedish core looks like this: SVT gives you SVT1, SVT2, SVT24, Kunskapskanalen, Barnkanalen and SVT Play content on demand. TV4 Group gives you TV4, TV4 Play, Sjuan and TV12, plus C More Sport packages where licensed. TV3/Viaplay gives you TV3, TV6, TV8, TV10 and the Viaplay channels. Sport is gathered in the V Sport stack — V Sport Premium, V Sport Live, V Sport Football, V Sport Hockey and V Sport Motor — with a Swedish studio and commentary. It's precisely that Swedish commentary and the pre- and post-match analysis that most expat Swedes miss, not the match itself.
The international layer adds Premier League and Champions League on English feeds, La Liga, Serie A and Bundesliga in their home broadcasts, plus the major news channels (BBC, CNN, Sky News, NRK, TV2 Norge), documentary (Discovery, National Geographic, Eurosport) and streaming mirrors where licensing allows. For a Swedish family in Norway that means one subscription both keeps the Swedish TV and gives the kids NRK Super in Norwegian — without juggling several services. If you want to read more about how the breadth looks for Swedes abroad generally, we have an in-depth guide to Swedish IPTV abroad.
Allsvenskan, SHL and sport in Norway — same kick-off time
Live sport is the strongest reason to get Swedish IPTV in Norway, and Norway has a unique advantage: the same time zone as Sweden. An Allsvenskan match that kicks off at 17:30 Swedish time kicks off at 17:30 in Oslo too — no time-zone maths, no risk of missing the whistle because you miscounted the hours the way a Swede in New York or Bangkok has to.
Allsvenskan broadcasts in Sweden on TV4, V Sport Premium and V Sport Football depending on the fixture — a Swedish IPTV subscription gives you all three with Swedish commentary. SHL is on V Sport Hockey and TV4 Sport for selected games, and HockeyAllsvenskan, Damallsvenskan and Svenska Cupen round out the domestic lineup. International sport runs on the same infrastructure: Premier League and Champions League with Swedish commentary on V Sport, La Liga and Serie A on Eurosport and C More, plus NHL and Formula 1 on V Sport Motor.
What decides quality on a big match night is server capacity. At 17:00 on a derby Saturday, every Swedish IPTV server outside Sweden is under load — but Norway's short network route and strong fibre roll-out (Altibox, Telenor fibre) make it one of the easiest places in the whole diaspora to stream stable live sport from. Combine a serious provider with reserved sport capacity and a wired Apple TV, and you'll avoid frozen frames in the 89th minute. Unlike most VPN guides, we won't pretend a VPN is a durable solution for live sport — it works for casual viewing, but not when the whistle is fixed and you get one shot.

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Best devices for IPTV in Norway
The best device for IPTV in Norway is Apple TV 4K for most households, with the Fire TV Stick 4K Max as the budget pick and a modern Samsung Tizen or LG webOS TV as the smoothest "nothing extra needed" option. All three play SVT, TV4 and V Sport in FHD and 4K — the difference is app support, stability and price.
Apple TV 4K is the single strongest recommendation. It runs tvOS, which keeps the App Store available regardless of country (no need to switch your Apple ID to a Norwegian or Swedish region), has IPTV Smarters Pro in the store, hardware-decodes H.265/HEVC and HDR, and uses the same remote and interface your kids already know. It also won't be affected when a Smart TV maker occasionally drops IPTV apps after a firmware update.
Fire TV Stick 4K Max is the budget pick and ships in every country Amazon operates in. It runs Fire OS (Android underneath), has both TiviMate and IPTV Smarters Pro available, and works well on a Norwegian fibre connection. The trade-off is Amazon's ad-heavy home screen. Smart TVs (Samsung Tizen, LG webOS) work fine with IPTV Smarters Pro or IBO Player — just check the model year is 2020 or newer. Android boxes and Google TV (NVIDIA Shield, Xiaomi Mi Box) are the most flexible but need a bit more setup. What you specifically do not want for the Norway scenario is a MAG box tied to a provider portal. If something goes wrong on your specific device, we have a separate guide on what to do when IPTV is not working.
IPTV in Norway vs SVT Play with a VPN
For the Swede in Norway, the choice is usually between paying for Swedish IPTV or trying to make SVT Play work with a VPN. The two paths look superficially similar — pay per month, stream Swedish channels — but the day-to-day experience differs a lot across reliability, channel breadth, device support and total cost.
| Swedish IPTV in Norway | SVT Play + VPN | Illegal link streams | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reliability for live sport | Stable, dedicated server capacity | Dies on big match nights when SVT tightens VPN detection | Random, often goes down mid-match |
| Channel breadth | SVT, TV4, TV3, Kanal 5, Viaplay, V Sport, C More, NRK, international | SVT only (no TV4, no Viaplay, no V Sport) | One channel at a time, no EPG |
| Picture quality | FHD 1080p, 4K UHD on premium channels | FHD on SVT Play | 480p–720p with overlay ads |
| EPG / programme guide | Full XMLTV guide 7+ days | SVT Play schedule view only | None |
| Devices | Apple TV, Fire Stick, Smart TV, mobile, computer | Apple TV (SVT Play + VPN on router), mobile, computer | Usually browser on a computer only |
| Setup time | 5 minutes, once | 30+ minutes (VPN install, router config) | None, but the URL changes weekly |
| Monthly cost | From 179 SEK, down to ~67 SEK on the yearly plan | Around 100 SEK for a premium VPN (SVT Play is free) | 0 SEK |
| Risk of missing kick-off | Low | Moderate–high | Very high |
The cost line is worth reading correctly: SVT Play is free, so a VPN route costs only the VPN itself — but then you get SVT alone, no TV4, no Viaplay and no V Sport, and you pay for a moving target of detection workarounds that still fail on match night. A Swedish IPTV subscription costs a little more per month but covers the full lineup and skips the detection arms-race. IPTV therefore wins on both reliability and breadth.
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Norwegian internet providers and streaming
Norway is one of Europe's best-connected countries, which makes Swedish IPTV unusually smooth to run there. Fibre from Altibox, Telenor and Telia Norge reaches a large share of households, and most plans handle 4K streaming without trouble. There are still a few provider-specific details worth knowing.
Altibox and local fibre companies (Lyse, NextGenTel) give excellent bandwidth and low latency to Nordic servers — in practice the best foundation for stable live sport in the whole diaspora. Telenor and Telia Norge work well on both fibre and cable; on mobile broadband, evening traffic can drag the speed down, so a fixed connection is preferable for match nights. The requirement is modest: 25 Mbps keeps HD stable and 50 Mbps is plenty for 4K, figures Norwegian fibre clears by a wide margin.
Two practical tips. First: run a speed test at 21:00 on a Saturday, not in the middle of the day — it's the evening traffic that decides whether sport buffers, not the daytime figure. Second: connect your Apple TV or Fire Stick with an Ethernet cable if you want to be completely safe during a decisive match. Payment is usually straightforward even for expats — most Swedes in Norway keep a Swedish card, and the subscription is billed in kronor. If you have questions about payment, activation or terms, the answers are gathered in our frequently asked questions.
Troubleshooting IPTV in Norway
Most problems with Swedish IPTV in Norway come down to the connection or an app setting — rarely the subscription itself. Here are the most common faults and a concrete fix for each.
"The picture buffers every ten seconds on match night." Almost always evening congestion on the local connection, not the server. Switch from Wi-Fi to an Ethernet cable on Apple TV or Fire Stick, drop the player from 4K to 1080p for the evening, and restart the router — that clears short-term DNS problems that masquerade as buffering. On mobile broadband, a fixed fibre connection is the real fix.
"Some channels won't load, others work." Usually a stale EPG cache or a channel that's been moved to a new server. Force-quit the app and reopen it, or in IPTV Smarters Pro go to Settings → Reload Channels. If it persists, send the channel name and a screenshot to support — it's usually fixed within minutes on the provider's side.
"It worked yesterday but I can't log in today." Most often a renewal or an expired subscription. Open the welcome email and check the end date. On Apple TV, tvOS occasionally clears the cached login after an update — just re-enter your Xtream Codes.
"The channels are there but the EPG shows the wrong time." Rare in Norway precisely because the country shares a time zone with Sweden — if the time is still wrong, go to Settings → Player Settings → EPG in IPTV Smarters Pro and set the time-zone offset to Europe/Stockholm (the same as Europe/Oslo). For deeper troubleshooting on more symptoms, see our guide to the best rated Swedish providers and how they compare on stability in our best rated IPTV in Sweden roundup.
Pros and cons
As with any streaming choice, there are trade-offs with Swedish IPTV in Norway. Here's an honest breakdown — the pros weigh heavily for anyone who genuinely wants Swedish TV, but it's fair to know the cons before you choose.
Pros
- The full Swedish lineup: SVT, TV4, TV3, Kanal 5, Viaplay and V Sport in one app — not just SVT the way a VPN setup leaves you.
- No VPN and no IP fight: the stream comes from the provider's server, so SVT's geo-block is never triggered against your Norwegian IP address.
- Same kick-off time and schedule as home: Norway shares a time zone with Sweden, so nothing has to be recalculated.
- Short network route and strong fibre: Norway's infrastructure gives low latency and a stable 4K picture even on match nights.
- One subscription on every screen: Apple TV, Fire Stick, Smart TV, tablet and mobile — and it follows you if you move back or onwards.
- Reasonable price, no contract: from 179 SEK/month down to roughly 67 SEK/month on the yearly plan.
Cons
- It isn't free: unlike illegal link streams, a serious subscription costs money — but you get stability and support in return.
- Quality depends on the connection: a weak or mobile connection can buffer, in which case you need a cable or a better fibre plan.
- The market has bad actors: anonymous resellers reachable only by chat and demanding crypto up front should be avoided — choose a traceable provider.
- Verify your own channels: confirm the exact channels and sport you want are included during the trial before committing to a longer plan.
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How much does IPTV in Norway cost?
Swedish IPTV in Norway costs the same as in Sweden because the subscription is billed in Swedish kronor regardless of where you live: 179 SEK for 1 month, 379 SEK for 3 months, 499 SEK for 6 months and 799 SEK for 12 months. There is no contract, activation is instant, and the price per month falls the longer the plan you choose — from 179 SEK down to roughly 67 SEK per month on the yearly plan.
Because the channel lineup is identical across every plan, you only pay for time, not for more channels. Most expat Swedes therefore start short — or with a free trial — to verify stability on their Norwegian connection and their own devices, then extend to 6 or 12 months once they're confident. Compared to the alternatives this is competitive: SVT Play is free, but a VPN on top of it still covers only SVT — no TV4, no Viaplay and no sport — and often fails on match night, while a traditional Swedish cable or satellite subscription requires a Swedish address and so isn't even possible for someone registered as resident in Norway. The full lineup, all plan lengths and payment terms are laid out openly on our subscription and pricing page — no registration needed to look.
A quick note on legality and portability: Norway is part of the EEA, and the EU's cross-border portability regulation (2017/1128) has been incorporated into the EEA agreement. It lets you take a Swedish subscription with you during temporary stays in Norway, but does not cover permanent residence — if you live in Norway full-time, a dedicated Swedish IPTV subscription is the clean solution. We keep the legality assessment qualitative and always recommend a provider with a clear billing identity over an anonymous reseller.
Frequently asked questions about IPTV in Norway
What is IPTV?
IPTV (Internet Protocol Television) is television delivered over the internet instead of via terrestrial aerial, cable or satellite. Channels and video are turned into digital IP packets, sent over your broadband and reassembled by an app on your screen in real time. For you in Norway it means you can stream Swedish channels like SVT and TV4 exactly the way you stream Netflix — over the internet, regardless of which country you're sitting in.
How does IPTV work in Norway technically?
You receive Xtream Codes — a server URL, username and password — that you paste into an IPTV app. The app fetches the channel list and EPG from the provider's server, then plays each channel as an HLS or MPEG-TS video stream over the open internet. Because the stream is an ordinary HTTPS connection from the server to your device, the broadcaster's IP-based geo-restriction is bypassed entirely — they see the server's IP address, not your Norwegian one.
Which IPTV is best for Swedes in Norway?
The best IPTV service for Swedes in Norway is the one that actually carries the Swedish channels you want (SVT1, SVT2, TV4, V Sport), runs a traceable business with 24/7 support, and offers a free trial so you can test it on your own connection before paying. Always test your specific device and your specific sport during the trial — it's the only honest way to evaluate a streaming service.
How do I get IPTV in Norway?
You choose a serious Swedish provider, pay for a plan (or start a free trial), and receive your Xtream Codes by email. Then you install a free app like IPTV Smarters Pro or TiviMate on your Apple TV, Fire TV Stick or Smart TV, log in with the credentials and start watching. The whole process takes about five minutes and needs no VPN and no Norwegian payment card.
Do I need a VPN to watch Swedish TV in Norway?
No. Swedish IPTV bypasses the geo-blocking problem entirely because the broadcaster's IP check is never run against your Norwegian IP address — the stream comes from the provider's server, not directly from SVT or TV4. The whole point of a Swedish IPTV subscription for you in Norway is to retire the VPN. If a provider tells you that you need a VPN, that's a red flag.
How much does IPTV in Norway cost per month?
The price starts at 179 SEK for one month and falls to roughly 67 SEK per month if you choose the yearly plan at 799 SEK. In between there's 379 SEK for three months and 499 SEK for six months. There's no contract, and because the lineup is the same across every plan, you only pay for length, not for more channels.
Can I watch Allsvenskan and SHL live in Norway?
Yes. Allsvenskan broadcasts on TV4 and V Sport Premium/Football in Sweden, and SHL on V Sport Hockey and TV4 Sport — all included in a real Swedish IPTV subscription with Swedish commentary. Because Norway shares a time zone with Sweden, matches start at exactly the same clock time as home, so you never miss kick-off because of a time difference.
Conclusion: Swedish TV in Norway, just like home
Swedish IPTV in Norway replaces the fragile SVT Play-plus-VPN setup with a stable, paid service that delivers SVT, TV4, V Sport, Allsvenskan and SHL exactly as you watched them when you lived in Sweden. The price is reasonable and contract-free, and unlike a VPN route — which gives you only SVT and still fails on match night — it covers the full Swedish lineup with no detection arms-race — and Norway's short network route and strong fibre make it one of the easiest places in the whole diaspora to stream stable live sport from. Setup takes five minutes on Apple TV, Fire TV Stick, Smart TV or mobile, and the same login follows you if you move on.
If you've been on the SVT Play/VPN treadmill for a couple of years and Allsvenskan always starts before the VPN connects, a free trial with Nordisc IPTV is the cheapest way to find out whether the stable path actually works on your specific Apple TV, in your specific city and on your specific Norwegian connection — before you pay anything. To compare plan lengths directly, everything is on the pricing page.
Nordisc IPTV has helped households in Sweden and Swedes abroad watch SVT, TV4, Allsvenskan and SHL since 2022. Our support team is available 24/7 for setup, troubleshooting, and subscription questions.