We are entering into agreements with several major taxi companies to provide you with the best possible taxi services via the Vy app. New places and companies are continuously added to the app. This will enable you to easily compare prices and choose the company you prefer.

The app will display a maximum price from the taxi company. We will place a hold on this amount in your account when you confirm the booking. Once the trip is complete, whichever of the maximum price or the final meter price is lower will be deducted from your account.


Taxi Norway


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You should call the taxi company you selected and request the taxi you have booked. The phone number for the company can be found in the app or in the list with contact information for all the taxi companies.

We are committed to ensuring you can rely on the service you request through the Vy app being of a high quality. Your taxi should arrive within a reasonable time, the driver should drive safely and provide you with good service.

Our agreements with the taxi companies enable us to exclude companies or individual drivers from accepting bookings via the Vy app. We monitor feedback we receive from our customers on an ongoing basis, in addition to information about cancellations and failures to collect customers.

It is therefore important that you submit feedback by email to taxi@vy.no if you have a poor experience, so that we can take steps to improve the service. You can also submit feedback via the review feature we display in the app as soon as your trip is over. This allows you to award a score for the quality of the company/driver, and you can add further information into the text field if you wish.

We ask for feedback after the taxi ride has been completed. It is important that as many customers as possible give their feedback. In this way, we can keep a close watch on the quality of the companies and you as a customer can use the score to choose a company.

Overcharging by taxis is not a big problem judging by the few complaints on the forum and I have never had a problem. Taxi companies set their own prices so there is a difference between companies, but they display their prices on the vehicle. Prices vary according to time of day and weekday/weekend/holiday so one company is not necessarily the cheapest for all journeys. You do not need to take the first taxi in a line - choose the cheapest. If calling for a taxi choose the cheapest. Even if you pay cash (which is rare nowadays) you should still receive a detailed receipt with all time and stance charges - certainly react if you can't get a printed receipt. We don't generally tip taxi drivers.

Of course you can do something about it - complain to the taxi company. You should have got a detailed printed receipt. If this was a trip from the airport then it sounds like you were either not offered the fixed rate or asked for the meter rate. This could easily be the meter rate on a weekend evening.

It is very difficult to screw up at the airport - at the taxi stand there are screens where you order a taxi to your destination - you are then presented with a choice of available taxi companies and their price. Choose the cheapest (or whichever you want) - you get a receipt from the machine with the agreed price. Always pay in the taxi by card and ensure that you get the printed receipt.

Planning a trip for my family (4 adults, 2 children) to Norway next June and trying to figure out how we will get up to the Stegastein View Point. We will actually be passing through in a rented car, but I hear the drive up to the view point is tricky and not advisable for all drivers. I have heard that taxi is a more flexible option than getting a Norway's Best bus tour from Flam or Aurland, but in trying to find more information about the local taxi company (there is reportedly only one), I came across a slew of bad reviews about poor reliability. Does anyone have any experience with Aurland Taxi or have other taxi/driver recommendations?

Four of us will be on the Prinsendam Celtic & North Cape Explorer cruise. We've heard you can reserve ahead of time a taxi to tour Tromso. Who do we contact in Norway before we leave? I saw $108 quoted somewhere for the 4 of us to share a taxi but, of course, can't find my notes. If anyone knows anything, please reply. Thanks.

:confused: Is it possible to rent a taxi to get up to Mtn. Dalsnibba and later be dropped off so we can hike to the Falls and walk back to the city of Geiranger. We will be in port May 14th. We are just very concerned about the gates at the Mtn. top being closed to taxis. Bev

We are in Geiranger port the day prior to you. I've contacted Geiranger taxi company but not confirmed...another CC member indicated that this company wanted a wire transfer pre-payment in which case I'll pass.

If you want to run a taxi business, you must have a taxi licence and be self-employed. When you're self-employed, you can choose to start a private limited liability company (AS) or a sole proprietorship. You should check which legal structure is the right one for you.

Enterprises running a taxi business must have a taxi licence. The county where the enterprise is registered will process applications for licences and provide further information about licencing rules.

When you buy or import a taxi buss, you can get a reduction in the one-off registration tax. Previously this also applied to taxis, but it now only applies to taxi busses. If you stop using the vehicle before the three-year period has elapsed, you'll have to pay the remaining one-off registration tax. You must then notify the Tax Administration.

Intermediaries can be taxi centrals, digital service intermediaries (for example mobile applications) or similar units organising taxi transportation. The duty of disclosure applies to any intermediary of taxi services conducted in Norway, regardless of the location of the intermediary.

The wireless chargers can help solve that problem by allowing drivers to juice up while they are waiting for passengers at busy pickup points. The induction plates will start automatically when a taxi drives over them, and fast charging technology will keep the cars on the road longer.

The widespread deployment can offer a model to other cities that have eyed electric taxi fleets. Cities including Columbus, OH and New York City have purchased electric vehicles (EVs) to integrate into existing taxi fleets; Shenzhen, China boasted earlier this year that it had converted 95% of its fleet to electric taxis. It also comes as cities have experimented with other innovative charging possibilities, like converting light poles into chargers or an autonomous robot that can charge cars in parking lots.

There are several efficient and easy alternatives for how to get from Bergen Airport Flesland to Bergen city center. Bergen has good public transport services with both the Airport Bus Flybussen and the Bergen Light Rail (called Bybanen in Norwegian), as well as taxis going between the airport and the city center. If you have a Bergen card you travel for free with Bybanen and all Skyss buses and you also get a 20 % discount on Flybussen. You can easily book the Bergen card online or buy it at The Tourist Information in Bergen.

There are several taxi companies in Bergen, and you can freely choose who you want to travel with, regardless of their position in the taxi line. You do not have to choose the first taxi in the queue. We recommend 07000 Bergen Taxi and Taxi 1 AS.

You can look for them in the taxi rank or order on their app or phone. 07000 Bergen Taxi recommends ordering when you have received your luggage and the car will meet you in front of the regular taxi queue. They also have a guaranteed maximum fare for all rides between Flesland and the center of Bergen.

Taxis are by far the easiest method to get from place A to place B if you want to travel in Norway without renting a car, but the easiness also comes with a few downsides. Like most places in the world, there are plenty of taxis in Norway, and we will be looking closer at everything you need to know about riding taxis in Norway in this article.

There are lots of taxis in Norway, even in rural areas, but the main problem is that they are extremely expensive. Expect to pay several hundred NOK for a short 15 minute trip! I advise tourists to stay away from taxis if possible, unless you have a big travel budget and want to get to your destination as easily as possible. 

Riding taxis is typically seen as a kind of luxury for most people in Norway, and not something you do without a special reason to do. That said, taxis do have their uses, and can be pretty great for when you need to get to your hotel at night after the last bus has departed, or when you need to bring lots of luggage with you from one place to another.

The booking itself should be easy enough, and the people at the other end of the telephone line will most certainly speak English. Just let them you where you are, how many are travelling, when you want the taxi, and where you are going. It is not common to get a price quote when booking the taxi.

You can also let the hotel call for a taxi for you. Just go to the clerk at the reception and let them know that you need a taxi. They will help you out with finding the local taxi company as well as booking the ride for you. They might even share some local tips on which taxi companies to avoid, or what you can expect to pay.

Taxi companies are free to choose their own prices in Norway, and you can even haggle for a deal if you want. I advise you to agree on a price before driving, especially when driving from places like the airport to the city center. This will usually save you a few hundred crowns, but be aware that taxi drivers might not want to haggle. e24fc04721

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