Nordic Council

Nordic Council
Member states shown in dark blue; and regions of member states shown in light blue.
Secretariat Headquarters Copenhagen
Official languages
TypeInter-parliamentary institution
Membership5 sovereign states

2 autonomous territories


1 autonomous region

Leaders
Kristina Háfoss (2021–)
 President
Jorodd Asphjell (2023)
 Vice-President
Helge Orten (2023)
Establishment
 Inauguration of the Nordic Council
12 February 1953
1 July 1962
 Inauguration of the Nordic Council of Ministers
July 1971
Area
 Total
6,187,000 km2 (2,389,000 sq mi)
Population
 2025 estimate
28.3 million
 Density
4.4/km2 (11.4/sq mi)
GDP (PPP)2018 estimate
 Total
US$1.6 trillion
 Per capita
US$62,900
GDP (nominal)2018 estimate
 Total
US$1.7 trillion
 Per capita
US$65,800
Currency

The Nordic Council is the official body for formal inter-parliamentary Nordic cooperation among the Nordic countries. Formed in 1952, it has 87 representatives from Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway, and Sweden as well as from the autonomous areas of the Faroe Islands, Greenland, and Åland. The representatives are members of parliament in their respective countries or areas and are elected by those parliaments. The Council holds ordinary sessions each year in October/November and usually one extra session per year with a specific theme. The council's official languages are Danish, Finnish, Icelandic, Norwegian, and Swedish, though it uses only the mutually intelligible Scandinavian languages—Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish—as its working languages. These three comprise the first language of around 80% of the region's population and are learned as a second or foreign language by the remaining 20%.

In 1971, the Nordic Council of Ministers, an intergovernmental forum, was established to complement the council. The Council and the Council of Ministers are involved in various forms of cooperation with neighbouring areas in Northern Europe, including the German state of Schleswig-Holstein, the Benelux countries and the Baltic states.