Norwegian Second Division
The Norwegian Second Division, also called 2. divisjon is the third-highest level of the Norwegian football league system.
There are 28 teams divided into two groups, and at the end of the season the winner of each group earns promotion to the second-highest division, 1. divisjon. The teams finishing in second place in their respective group will qualify for the promotion play-offs, where they will face each other. The winner will play against the 14th placed team in 1. divisjon for promotion. The bottom three teams in each group are relegated to 3. divisjon.
2. divisjon is the highest league a reserve team can participate in, and only reserve teams from the Eliteserien clubs are allowed to enter. The participation of reserve teams stirs debate from time to time.
History
Between 1963 and 1990, 2. divisjon was the second highest level of the Norwegian football league system, therefore the name of the third highest level was 3. divisjon. When the highest level was rebranded in 1991, this level changed its name to 2. divisjon. From 2009 to 2011, the official name of the league was Fair Play ligaen, and from 2012 to 2015 the name was Oddsen-ligaen. The league was from 2016 until 2025 branded as PostNord-ligaen, sponsored by PostNord.Current members
The following 28 clubs are competing in the 2025 Norwegian Second Division.;Group 1
- Arendal
- Brann 2
- Brattvåg
- Eik Tønsberg
- Fløy
- Jerv
- Lysekloster
- Notodden
- Pors
- Sandnes Ulf
- Sandviken
- Sotra
- Træff
- Vard Haugesund
- Alta
- Asker
- Eidsvold Turn
- Follo
- Grorud
- Hønefoss
- Kjelsås
- Levanger
- Rana
- Stjørdals-Blink
- Strindheim
- Strømmen
- Tromsdalen
- Ull/Kisa
Winners
1991–1995
All group winners, excluding second teams of top division teams, were promoted to 1. divisjon.| Season | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | Group 4 | Group 5 | Group 6 |
| 1991 | Odd | Bærum | Vard Haugesund | Brann 2 | Rosenborg 2 | Bodø/Glimt |
| 1992 | Lillestrøm 2 | Skeid | Åssiden | Åsane | Nardo | Mjølner |
| 1993 | Jevnaker | Åndalsnes | Stabæk | Vidar | Stjørdals-Blink | Alta |
| 1994 | Sarpsborg FK | Odd Grenland | Sandefjord BK | Haugesund | Aalesund | Stålkameratene |
| 1995 | Elverum | Ullern | Mjøndalen | Vidar | Byåsen | Harstad |
1996–2000
Each group winner played qualification play-offs to decide which teams promote to 1. divisjon. Teams in bold promoted to 1. divisjon through qualification play-offs.| Season | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | Group 4 | Group 5 | Group 6 | Group 7 | Group 8 |
| 1996 | Sarpsborg FK | Skjetten | Runar | Vigør | Rosenborg 2 | Finnsnes | ||
| 1997 | Kjelsås | Raufoss | Ullern | Vidar | Fana | Kolstad | Strindheim | Lofoten |
| 1998 | Liv/Fossekallen | Skjetten | Ørn-Horten | Vidar | Fyllingen | Clausenengen | Rosenborg 2 | Lofoten |
| 1999 | HamKam | Asker | Sandefjord | Vidar | Fyllingen | Aalesund | Strindheim | Tromsdalen |
| 2000 | Skjetten | FF Lillehammer | Ørn-Horten | Mandalskameratene | Hødd | Aalesund | Stålkameratene | Lofoten |
2001–2016
All group winners, excluding second teams of top division teams, were promoted to 1. divisjon.| Season | Group 1 | Group 2 | Group 3 | Group 4 |
| 2001 | Skeid | Åsane | Oslo Øst | Lørenskog |
| 2002 | Fredrikstad | Bærum | Mandalskameratene | Alta |
| 2003 | Pors Grenland | Kongsvinger | Vard Haugesund | Tromsdalen |
| 2004 | FK Tønsberg | Follo | Løv-Ham | Alta |
| 2005 | Sparta Sarpsborg | Oslo Øst | Viking 2 | Tromsdalen |
| 2006 | Notodden | Skeid | Mandalskameratene | Raufoss |
| 2007 | Nybergsund | Hødd | Sandnes Ulf | Alta |
| 2008 | Mjøndalen | Skeid | Stavanger | Tromsdalen |
| 2009 | Strømmen | Follo | Sandnes Ulf | Ranheim |
| 2010 | Asker | Hødd | Randaberg | HamKam |
| 2011 | Ullensaker/Kisa | Bærum | Notodden | Tromsdalen |
| 2012 | Elverum | Kristiansund | Vard Haugesund | Follo |
| 2013 | Bærum | Alta | Nest-Sotra | Tromsdalen |
| 2014 | Jerv | Levanger | Åsane | Follo |
| 2015 | KFUM | Raufoss | Ullensaker/Kisa | Kongsvinger |
| 2016 | Tromsdalen | Elverum | Florø | Arendal |
2017–
Teams in bold were promoted to 1. divisjon.Teams in italics were relegated to 2. divisjon.
| Season | Group 1 | Group 2 | Play-off teams |
| 2017 | Ham-Kam | Nest-Sotra | Fredrikstad, Raufoss, Notodden |
| 2018 | Raufoss | Skeid | Åsane, Fredrikstad, KFUM Oslo |
| 2019 | Stjørdals-Blink | Grorud | Notodden, Kvik Halden, Åsane |
| 2020 | Fredrikstad | Bryne | Stjørdals-Blink, Skeid, Asker |
| 2021 | Kongsvinger | Skeid | Stjørdals-Blink, Hødd, Arendal |
| 2022 | Moss | Hødd | Skeid, Arendal, Ull/Kisa |
| 2023 | Egersund | Levanger | Hødd, Lyn, Tromsdalen |
| 2024 | Hødd | Skeid | Mjøndalen, Jerv, Tromsdalen |
| 2025 | Sandnes Ulf | Strømmen | Moss, Brattvåg, Grorud |
Reserve teams
of clubs from the two top divisions can participate in the 2. divisjon. Reserve teams of clubs from the 1. divisjon can not play in the 2. divisjon, so if a team is relegated from the 1. divisjon, the club's reserve team will be relegated to the 3. divisjon regardless of their final position in the league.Sponsorship
From 2016 until 2025 the 2. divisjon had its title sponsorship rights sold to PostNord.| Period | Sponsor | Name |
| 1963–1990 | No sponsor | 3. divisjon |
| 1991–2008 | No sponsor | 2. divisjon |
| 2009–2011 | No sponsor | Fair Play ligaen |
| 2012–2015 | Norsk Tipping | Oddsen-ligaen |
| 2016–2025 | PostNord | PostNord-ligaen |
| 2026– | No sponsor | 2. divisjon |
Records and statistics
Team records
2001–2016
2017–
| Record | Team | Season |
| Most points | 65 | 2017 |
| Fewest points | 13 | 2017 |
| Most goals in one season | 66 | 2019 |
| Fewest goals in one season | 21 | 2017 |
| Most goals conceded in one season | 69 | 2017 and 2018 |
| Fewest goals conceded in one season | 18 | 2017 |
| Most goals in one game | 5–5 | 2019 |
| Biggest win | 8–0 | 2017 |