What the program is, how the biweekly arrangement works, and what it actually costs
A piano teacher in Hamar has suggested that an 11-year-old student could apply to Barratt Due in Oslo and attend every second week. This briefing covers what Barratt Due is, which program is the realistic fit, the audition, the timeline, the real all-in cost, and where it leads.
Barratt Due Musikkinstitutt in Oslo is Norway’s flagship private music institution — the country’s primary pre-conservatory pipeline for classical music. It runs three tiers under one roof:
The teacher is almost certainly pointing at Unge Talenter, as a special-case younger admit. That’s the only program that fits the “Oslo, biweekly” description for an 11-year-old in Hamar.
Unge Talenter publishes its age range as 13–19, but the program page is explicit: “i særskilte tilfeller kan yngre elever søke om plass” (in special cases younger students may apply). One third-party source even states the age range as 10–19, suggesting under-13 admissions are routine when a sponsoring teacher endorses the candidate.
Full UT students nominally attend weekly. For students living far from Oslo, individual arrangements are negotiated with the hovedinstrument-lærer. Biweekly is a common compromise. Hamar to Oslo S is ~1h20m by Vy train, so biweekly is realistic for an 11-year-old with a parent. The Asimut scheduling platform Barratt Due uses lets teachers block longer “double” sessions on attendance days to compensate.
A UT day in Oslo typically combines:
For a biweekly student, the day is usually packed — half a day to a full day. Theory and ensemble work is partly carried via assignments between visits.
Two contrasting works, from different style periods (Baroque, Classical, Romantic, Modern), totaling up to ~10–15 minutes.
Intonation/sound, rhythm, technical schooling, klang, musicality, style understanding, formidling (stage presence). The jury explicitly weighs “alder, erfaring og instrumentets egenart” (age, experience, and the instrument’s nature) — so an 11-year-old is not judged against 18-year-olds.
The next admissions window opens this autumn, for the 2027–2028 academic year.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1 November 2026 | Application form opens |
| 15 December 2026 | Application deadline |
| ~1 February 2027 | Auditions in Oslo |
| March / April 2027 | Results, offers |
| August 2027 | Starts — academic year 2027–28 |
| Item | Amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Semester fee, hovedtilbud | ~11,300 NOK | After Wilhelmsen scholarship (2025–26 figures) |
| Full list price before scholarship | ~14,000 NOK | Wilhelmsen Foundation grant auto-applied to every admitted student |
| Application fee | 500 NOK | Non-refundable |
| Annual tuition (2 semesters) | ~22,600 NOK | 2026–27 likely slightly higher |
| Travel Hamar ↔ Oslo (Vy) | ~600 NOK per round trip | ~17 trips per year × child + parent |
| Estimated annual travel | ~10,000–15,000 NOK | Depends on adult fare and number of overnights |
| Realistic total per year | ~35,000–40,000 NOK | Tuition + travel, biweekly model |
Not trivial — but not prohibitive compared with international pre-conservatory equivalents (UK junior departments run £6,000–9,000/year in tuition alone).
Barratt Due is explicit that the program “krever full deltakelse” (requires full participation) and that obligatory lessons take precedence over other extracurriculars. They aim to “sikre en optimal arbeidsmengde, i balanse mellom egenøving, skole, restitusjon og fritidsaktiviteter” — a calibrated workload balancing practice, school, rest, and free time.
For an 11-year-old at UT, expect:
UT students are typically practicing 2–4 hours/day by mid-teens. The program is “leading to the conservatory” by design — this is the part to be candid with him about before applying.
These are not mutually exclusive with UT — worth raising with the teacher:
Talent Innlandet (Talent Norge + Sparebankstiftelsen Hedmark) is the regional umbrella. Its piano component — the GLØD program — is anchored in Kongsvinger via Pianoforte, not Hamar. Closer to home, cheaper, but a step down in intensity from UT Oslo.
A year too young now, but eligible from age 12. Independent of UT — can be done alongside or instead. Travel-cost coverage is a real benefit. See programme details.
Only realistic if the family considered moving or daily commuting; intakes are grade 5 and grade 8. Probably not relevant from Hamar. Admission details.
Norges musikkhøgskole runs a parallel pre-college program, also in Oslo. Worth knowing it exists; some families compare audition outcomes between the two.
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