1993–2001: Beginnings as a regional airline Norwegian Air Shuttle (NAS) was founded on 22 January 1993 to take over the
regional airline services produced by
Busy Bee for
Braathens in Western Norway. Busy Bee, founded in 1966, was a subsidiary of Braathens that operated a fleet of
Fokker 50 aircraft on
charter services. This included the network of regional services between cities on the west coast of Norway operated on
wet lease for the mother company. Following Busy Bee's bankruptcy in December 1992, NAS took over three leased
Fokker 50 aircraft, and started operating from
Bergen Airport, Flesland to
Haugesund Airport, Karmøy, as well as from
Bergen to
Molde Airport, Årø or
Kristiansund Airport, Kvernberget, and onwards to
Trondheim Airport, Værnes. The company was established and owned by former Busy Bee employees and initially had a workforce of fifty. It was based in Bergen, but later established a technical base in
Stavanger. From 1 April 1994, the airline also began service from Bergen to
Ålesund Airport, Vigra. In 1995, the company received its fourth Fokker 50s, and had a revenue of NOK 86.6 million and a profit of NOK 2.9 million. It flew 50 daily services. By 1999, the company had six Fokker 50s and flew 500,000 passengers on 20,000 flights. The company had a revenue of NOK 172 million and a profit of NOK 13 million. On 2 June 2000, NAS bought the helicopter operator
Lufttransport from
Helikopter Service.
2002–2009: Emergence as a low-cost carrier series (MD-82 and MD-83) aircraft. On 7 January 2002, NAS took over the route from Stavanger to Newcastle, flying two round trips per day; this was the first route on which the airline did not wet lease the aircraft to Braathens, but operated the route in its own right. After Braathens was bought by
Scandinavian Airlines System (SAS) in November 2001, all contracts that Norwegian had with Braathens for the routes on the Norwegian west coast were cancelled by SAS, as it wanted its subsidiary
SAS Commuter to take the routes over. NAS had an 18-month cancellation period in its contract with Braathens; however, this was not respected by SAS - the contracts were terminated without notice. Following the purchase of Braathens by SAS, and the subsequent termination of its contracts, NAS announced in April 2002 that it would start domestic scheduled services as a low-cost carrier on the busiest routes. From 1 September 2002, the airline re-branded as Norwegian. The airline opened its second hub at
Warsaw Frederic Chopin Airport in Poland, flying to Central European destinations. There were two
Boeing 737 operating from Warsaw. (The base was closed in 2010.) Norwegian announced on 24 April 2007 that it had bought 100% of the Swedish low-cost airline
FlyNordic from
Finnair plc, becoming the largest low-cost airline in Scandinavia. As payment for the shares in FlyNordic, Finnair received a 5% share stake in Norwegian. Norwegian's early success was based on very low cost tickets compared to tickets from other airlines in the same region e.g. SAS. The fleet consisted of rather old Boeing 737-300s, an aircraft type introduced already in 1984, which meant that Norwegian's planes were 10-20 years old. On 30 August 2007, Norwegian ordered 42 new
Boeing 737-800 aircraft, with
options for 42 more, an order worth US$3.1 billion. This order was later increased by six aircraft in November 2009. In July 2010 15 of the options were converted to orders, and in June 2011 15 more options were converted, bringing the total order of new, owned 737-800s to 78 aircraft with 12 remaining options. Additionally, Norwegian introduced leased Boeing 737-800 aircraft into the fleet. The first leased 737-800 arrived at
Oslo Airport, Gardermoen, Norway, on 26 January 2008. In April 2010, Norwegian started flights from
Oslo-Gardermoen and
Stockholm to
Helsinki-Vantaa Airport. During early 2011, Norwegian had three aircraft stationed in Helsinki, and introduced domestic flights to
Oulu Airport and
Rovaniemi Airport on 31 March 2011. In May, flights to nine additional international destinations began.
2010–2017: Rapid expansion, and long-haul operations In October 2009, Norwegian had announced that it intended to start flights from Oslo to New York City and Bangkok, for which new intercontinental aircraft were required. In 2010, it said it was considering up to 15 intercontinental destinations from Scandinavia, and would also consider services to South America and Africa. On 8 November 2010, Norwegian announced that it had contracted to lease two new
Boeing 787 Dreamliners with delivery in 2012; and that it was negotiating the leasing of additional aircraft. On 25 January 2012, Norwegian announced the largest orders of aircraft in European history. The orders consisted of 22 Boeing 737-800 and 100
Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft with options for another 100 of the latter; and for 100
Airbus A320neos with options for another 50. In late October 2012, the airline announced a new base at
London Gatwick from spring 2013 with three Boeing 737-800s to be used on new international routes from London to leisure destinations in Spain, Portugal, France, Italy and Croatia. All announced routes were to be flown in competition with airlines such as
British Airways,
easyJet and
Thomson Airways. In 2016, Norwegian won its first charter contract in the United States, flying three Boeing 737-800s out of
Chicago/Rockford International Airport and
General Mitchell International Airport in Milwaukee to Mexico and the Caribbean from December 2016 to April 2017 for
Apple Vacations and Funjet Vacations. By February 2017, Norwegian had expanded to the point that it became Scandinavia's largest airline. On 20 April 2017, Norwegian announced its second long-haul destination in
Asia, with flights between London's
Gatwick Airport and
Singapore Changi Airport, using Boeing 787s operated by
Norwegian Air UK. (These flights ended on 11 January 2019.) On 29 June 2017, Norwegian took delivery of its first Boeing 737 MAX, which featured
Freddie Laker on its tailfin and was registered to
Norwegian Air International. The parent company, Norwegian Air Shuttle, would later accept its first Boeing 737 MAX on 13 August 2018, the aircraft featuring
Oscar Wilde on its tailfin.
2018–2021: Restructuring and changes in strategy To finance its aggressive growth involving the inauguration of many new routes, the hiring and training of new employees, and the accepting of aircraft deliveries, Norwegian sold some of its shares in
Bank Norwegian in June and December 2017, and participated in the sale and
leaseback of its owned aircraft. Norwegian changed its strategy from growth to profitability in 2018, On 12 March 2019, the group
grounded all of its Boeing 737 MAX aircraft, on the advice of the
EASA, after the
Ethiopian Airlines and
Lion Air crashes. On 11 July 2019, the company's founder and CEO
Bjørn Kjos stepped down as CEO. Chief Financial Officer Geir Karlsen stepped in as interim CEO.
2020: COVID-19 pandemic and seeking of government aid In 2020, the
COVID-19 pandemic impacted Norwegian's finances and operations, and its value on the open market dropped nearly 80% in the weeks leading up to
Black Thursday. On 16 March 2020, the airline announced it was cancelling 85% of its flights and laying off 7,300 workers. On 20 April 2020, the airline reported the bankruptcy of various staffing subsidiaries and the termination of agreements with OSM Aviation, each of which were responsible for staffing the airline's flights from its crew bases outside of Norway, France, and Italy, affecting 4,700 workers. On 27 April 2020, Norwegian outlined its plans to qualify for a governmental loan from the Norwegian state, including the conversion of its debt and leasing commitments to
equity, its intention to reduce its active fleet to seven Boeing 737-800 aircraft operating solely on domestic routes within Norway, and to postpone operations outside of Norway (including to the rest of Europe and intercontinental long-haul flights) until March 2021. The airline presented these plans as creating a "New Norwegian", further planning to reinstate additional aircraft and operations as demand would allow, and to ultimately operate between 110 and 120 aircraft, down from the 160+ aircraft it operated before the crisis. Shares in the airline continued to decrease in value in anticipation of the airline converting its debt to equity, which occurred on 20 May 2020, resulting in companies leasing aircraft to the airline (including
AerCap and
BOC Aviation) becoming the airline's largest shareholders. On 17 June 2020, Norwegian began adding additional flights for the month of July from Norway to Denmark and Sweden, as well as from Scandinavia to other European countries including Italy, Portugal, Spain, and the UK among others as demand recovered and countries reopened. On 29 June 2020, the airline announced it had cancelled all of its remaining orders from Boeing, consisting of 92 Boeing 737 MAXes, five Boeing 787s, and service agreements related to both aircraft types. After receiving aid from the Norwegian government, Norwegian had also sought a credit guarantee for a loan through the Swedish government, which the government described as being eligible for airlines with a Swedish operating permit and its main operations or headquarters in Sweden through the start of 2020. The Swedish government had allocated a total of 5 billion
SEK in credit guarantees for potential candidate airlines, intending the candidates to be financially viable and essential to the Swedish aviation infrastructure, and noted that it had allocated 1.5 billion SEK to
Scandinavian Airlines, which is headquartered in Sweden. Also in August 2020, Norwegian warned that the company would run out of cash by the first quarter of 2021 if it had not received further funding. In November 2020, the Norwegian government stated it would not extend further government aid to the airline, amidst fears the airline would use the funding to grow its operations that were based outside of Norway. On 18 November 2020, Norwegian sought for bankruptcy protection in Ireland, where most of its remaining fleet was held, in an attempt to restructure the organization which was expected to last five months. During part of this period, Norwegian once again reduced its network to mostly domestic operations within Norway with an active fleet of eight Boeing 737-800s.
2021: Reduction of fleet and closure of long-haul operations In 2021, restructuring continued in order to formulate a sustainable business plan that would allow the airline to both receive further governmental aid and investment from private enterprise. In January 2021, Norwegian and its subsidiaries began to reduce their fleets by returning several aircraft, including long-haul
Boeing 787s, to their respective
lessors. On 14 January 2021, Norwegian announced the end of all long-haul services to focus on a reduced European route network. On 24 February 2021, Norwegian announced that it had cancelled orders for 53
Airbus A320neos and 30
Airbus A321LRs. On 4 March 2021, CFO Geir Karlsen confirmed that the airline's Boeing 737 MAX operations would not resume and that the airline had sought to sell its 737 MAX fleet. On 11 March 2021, the Irish high court approved Norwegian's termination of a further 25 aircraft leases. Norwegian Air Shuttle filed for US
Chapter 15 bankruptcy the next day, March 12. On 26 March 2021, approved its restructuring plan as part of its bankruptcy protection procedures. This was followed by the high court in Norway approving the restructuring plan on 10 April 2021. To further simplify and streamline its operations, Norwegian retired its Irish AOC held by
Norwegian Air International, and began the process of reregistering NAI's remaining Irish-registered fleet to Norway and the transferral of its EU-based flight and base operations to
Norwegian Air Sweden in mid April 2021. Norwegian's plans also included the operation of 50 Boeing 737-800s during 2021 in order to operate a single fleet type, to later increase to 68 aircraft in 2022, consisting of 40 based in Norway and the remaining 28 to be based elsewhere in Europe. Despite previously stating that its Boeing 737 MAX operations would not resume and that its
Airbus A320neo family orders were cancelled, its plans acknowledged the possible returns of the 737 MAX and A320neo. In April 2021, Norwegian announced plans to lay off 85 percent of its staff based in Spain due to the closure of all Spanish bases formerly operated by the defunct
Norwegian Air International, except Alicante and Málaga which would be kept by
Norwegian Air Sweden. In May 2021, Norwegian exited bankruptcy protection and its Irish examinership with the completion of its restructuring, following no objections from either of the high courts based in Ireland and Norway.
2021–present: Post-restructuring Following Norwegian's emergence from bankruptcy protection and restructuring, the airline's board of directors fired CEO Jacob Schram, promoting CFO Geir Karlsen to CEO. During restructuring, two new operating subsidiaries, each with its own AOC, had been established:
Norwegian Air Shuttle AOC AS and
Norwegian Air Sweden AOC AB. This was followed by the transfer of the fleet to the new certificates. The operation of flights under the two AOCs began on 31 October 2021, using their respective
ICAO airline designator codes (NOZ and NSZ) and callsigns (NORSEMAN and NORLIGHT), retiring the previous NAX/NSW codes and NOR SHUTTLE/NORDIC callsigns. Also by the end of the month, the airline agreed to lease an additional 13 Boeing 737-800s to be delivered in time for the 2022 summer season. On 1 December 2021, the airline announced it would resume the operation of the Boeing 737 MAX 8, with two aircraft starting in 2022, after previously retiring all of its aircraft of the type during restructuring. The airline ordered a further ten Boeing 737 MAX 8s in February 2022. In March 2022, Norwegian Air Shuttle changed its operating callsign from NORSEMAN to NORDIC (previously
FlyNordic's and later Norwegian Air Sweden's original callsign), and Norwegian Air Sweden changed its callsign from NORLIGHT to REDNOSE (previously
Norwegian Air UK's callsign). In May 2022, the airline announced plans to purchase 50 Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft. In September 2025, the airline confirmed another order for an additional 30 Boeing 737 MAX 8 aircraft. In 2023, Norwegian announced its intent to acquire
Widerøe, the largest regional carrier in Norway, for (roughly ). In December, the
NCA greenlighted the purchase. The acquisition was completed in January 2024. ==Corporate affairs==