Public servants •
Johannes Steen (1827–1906), educator, politician, Mayor of Tromsø from 1856-1862, and
Prime Minister of Norway from 1891-1893 •
Oscar Nissen (1843–1911) , physician, newspaper editor, and politician •
Paul Steenstrup Koht (1844–1892), educator, politician, city mayor, and member of the
Storting •
Hans Jacob Horst (1848–1931), politician who was a member of the
International Court of Arbitration (1906-1929) and a member of the
Norwegian Nobel Committee (1903-1931) •
Just Knud Qvigstad (1853–1957), philologist, linguist, ethnographer, cultural historian, headmaster, politician, and Mayor of Tromsø •
Dorothea Schjoldager (1853–1938), feminist proponent for women's rights, school teacher, and social worker •
James Trane (1857–1936), Norwegian-American inventor and industrialist who co-founded
Trane •
Einar Hoidale (1870–1952), lawyer, newspaper editor, and
politician from
Minnesota •
Arnold Holmboe (1873–1956), politician for the Liberal Party and Mayor of Tromsø •
Halvdan Koht (1873–1965), historian, politician, and former head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs •
Kirsten Sand (1895–1996), first fully technically qualified female Norwegian architect •
Einar Johansen (1915–1996), engineer and decorated
resistance member during WWII •
Martin Siem (1915–1996), businessperson and
WWII resistance member •
Daniel Carleton Gajdusek (1923–2008), American physician, medical researcher, and co-recipient of the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work on
prion disease •
Hermod Skånland (1925–2011), economist and Governor of the
Central Bank of Norway 1985 to 1993 •
Gerd Fleischer (born 1942), human rights activist •
Svein Ludvigsen (born 1946), former politician and convicted sex offender •
Mads Gilbert (born 1947), physician, humanitarian, activist, and politician •
Herman Kristoffersen (born 1947), former long-serving Mayor of Tromsø who was known as
Red Hermann •
Hans-Tore Bjerkaas (born 1951), former
Director-General of the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation The arts •
Jorgen Dreyer (1877–1948), American sculptor of
monuments who emigrated in 1903 •
Cora Sandel (1880–1974), writer and painter •
Peter Wessel Zapffe (1899–1990), metaphysician, author, lawyer, and mountaineer •
Lars Berg (1901–1969), teacher, novelist, short story writer, and playwright •
Egil Rasmussen (1903–1964), author, literature critic, and pianist, grew up in Tromsø •
Kristian Kristiansen (1909–1980), novelist, playwright, and writer of short stories •
Rønnaug Alten (1910–2001), actress and stage instructor •
Yngvar Ustvedt (1928–2007), writer, biographer, critic, and radio personality •
Per Bronken (1935–2002), poet, novelist, actor, film director, and stage producer •
Arthur Arntzen (1937–2025), journalist, humorist, actor, and writer •
Kirsti Sparboe (born 1946), musical performer and actress •
Jorun Thørring (born 1955), specialist in gynaecology and author •
Geir Jenssen (born 1962), electronic musician whose stage name is
Biosphere •
The Pussycats (band 1964), pop-rock band •
Erik Skjoldbjærg (born 1964), writer and film director •
Helge Andreas Norbakken (born 1965), drummer •
Anneli Drecker (born 1969), singer, actress, and frontwoman for
Bel Canto •
Dag-Are Haugan (born 1970), musician with the group
Alog •
Espen Lind (born 1971), record producer, songwriter, singer, and multi-instrumentalist •
Espen Sommer Eide (born 1972), composer and musician with
Alog •
Thomas Thormodsæter Haugen (born 1974) stage name
Samoth, multi-instrumentalist in the
black metal band
Emperor •
Lisa Stokke (born 1975), actor and singer •
Svein Berge (born 1976) and
Torbjørn Brundtland (born 1975), musicians in the duo
Röyksopp •
Ewa Da Cruz (born 1976), Norwegian-American television, soap opera, and film actress •
Lene Marlin (born 1980), singer-songwriter and musician •
Dagny Norvoll Sandvik (born 1990), singer, pop musician, and songwriter •
Neograss (formed 2010), a
progressive rock band.
Sport •
Per-Mathias Høgmo (born 1959), football manager, former manager of both the
men and
women's national football teams •
Bjørn Johansen (born 1969), former Norwegian footballer with over 400 club caps •
Roger Nilsen (born 1969), football coach and former player with 329 club caps and 32 for
Norway •
Bjarte Engen Vik (born 1971), former Norwegian Nordic combined athlete, multiple medallist at the
1994 and
1998 Winter Olympics •
Ole Martin Årst (born 1974), retired footballer who grew up in Tromsø and earned 414 club caps, 22 for
Norway •
Ailo Gaup (born 1979), former Freestyle Motocross rider who invented the Underflip •
Morten Giæver (born 1982), football midfielder with over 430 club caps, brought up in Tromsø •
Ruben Yttergård Jenssen (born 1988), footballer with over 350 club caps and 39 for
Norway •
Guro Pettersen (born 1991), football goalkeeper for the
Norway national team •
Vilde Nilsen (born 2001), paralympic cross-country skier and biathlete, team silver medallist at the
2018 Winter Paralympics •
Elling Carlsen (1819–1900), skipper, seal hunter, and explorer •
Richard With (1846–1930), ship's captain, businessman, and politician •
Henry Rudi (1889–1970), trapper and polar bear hunter •
Nikolai Schirmer (born 1991), freeride skier, filmmaker and climate activist ==Twin towns – sister cities==