Lakes in Norway


There are at least 450,000 freshwater lakes in Norway. Most were created by glacial erosion.

Types of lakes

Various Sami and Norwegian language terms distinguish different types of lake, and often feature in place names:
Fewer than 400 of Norway's lakes have an area of more than. The total collective area of these lakes is estimated at and the total volume at.
The following list shows the top ten lakes in Norway in terms of surface area.
No.NameCountyArea
1MjøsaAkershus, Hedmark, Oppland362
2RøssvatnetNordland218.61
3FemundHedmark, Sør-Trøndelag203.52
4RandsfjordenOppland139.23
5TyrifjordenBuskerud138.56
6SnåsavatnetNord-Trøndelag121.58
7TunnsjøenNord-Trøndelag100.18
8LimingenNord-Trøndelag93.50
9ØyerenAkershus, Østfold84.74
10MøsvatnTelemark84.48

Deepest lakes

Europe's four deepest lakes are in Norway, namely Hornindalsvatnet, Salvatnet, Lake Tinn and Mjøsa. The following list ranks the top ten lakes in Norway in terms of depth.
No.NameCountyDepth
1HornindalsvatnetSogn og Fjordane514
2SalvatnetNord-Trøndelag482*
3Lake TinnTelemark460
4MjøsaAkershus, Hedmark, Oppland444
5FyresvatnTelemark377
6SuldalsvatnetRogaland376
7BandakTelemark325
8LundevatnVest-Agder, Rogaland314
9Storsjøen Hedmark309
10TotakTelemark306

* Sources provide both 464 m & 482 m for the greatest depth.