Side-by-side comparison

Norway vs Russia driving rules

Compare the main cross-border differences before driving between Norway and Russia.

Rule Norway Russia
Built-up areas50 km/h60 km/h
Outside built-up areas80 km/h90 km/h
Motorways / expressways100 km/h110 km/h
Standard drivers0.2 mg/ml0.3 mg/ml
Novice drivers0.2 mg/mlNot stated in the standardized source
Professional drivers0.2 mg/mlNot stated in the standardized source
Daytime lightsMandatory all dayMandatory all day
Winter tyres / equipmentRequired when conditions demand winter gripMandatory during a defined season
Mandatory equipmentwarning triangle, reflective vest, fire extinguisherwarning triangle
Low-emission zonesCheck the current national or local official sourceCheck the current national or local official source
Fines and enforcementCheck the current national or local official sourceCheck the current national or local official source
Emergency numberNot verified112

Norway

Winter tyres / equipment: Passenger cars must use winter tyres, chains or similar whenever needed to ensure sufficient road grip.

Mandatory equipment: The source limits the fire-extinguisher requirement to buses.

Russia

Typical passenger-car speed limits: 110 km/h on motorways, 90 km/h on other roads for cars up to 3.5 t; regional authorities may raise limits by signs.

Blood alcohol limits: Defined in the administrative code as 0.3 g per litre of blood or 0.16 mg per litre of exhaled air.

Winter tyres / equipment: December – February on all wheels for passenger cars and light vans; studded tyres prohibited June – August.

Mandatory equipment: The current traffic-rules annex no longer lists a first-aid kit or fire extinguisher for passenger cars; requirements may still follow from the customs-union technical regulation.

This is a planning summary, not legal advice. Road signs and current national rules take priority. Always check the linked official source before departure.