41-year-old American makes $46,000 a year tending bar in the Arctic Circle: ‘I feel so welcome’


Robert E. Yarber is on top of the world — literally. The 41-year-old American currently resides in Tromso, Norway, a town you’ll find at just about the tippy top of your map. It’s about 220 miles north of the Arctic Circle.

And given his troubled past — and the peace he’s found in his new home — it’s an apt description of his emotional state as well.

“I sat in a prison cell, a six-by-nine cell, with another grown man for five years of my life,” Yarber says. “I wanted to see Paris, London, Berlin, and swim in the Mediterranean, check out the Dead Sea. I wanted to see all that stuff with my eyes. I didn’t want to watch it on TV.”

Shortly after he got out of prison for good in 2014, Yarber embarked on a European adventure, one that’s seen him travel to 44 countries and establish a new home for himself abroad. “I just bet it all on myself and went for it all,” he says.

Robert E. Yarber, 41, works as a bartender and bar manager in Tromso, Norway.

Ismaele Tortella for CNBC Make It

So far, so good.

Yarber currently works as a bartender and bar manager and makes about $26 an hour for an annual income of about $46,000. It’s not a fortune, but it’s more than enough to live a comfortable life among people he says have truly embraced him.

“It’s so much love, and I feel so welcome. I mean, Norway is my home,” he says. “When I’m in the States, I feel like a fish out of water, almost. And now here in Norway, I’ve been able to move and groove a little bit.”

Bad decisions and imprisonment

Heading north and ‘just trying to figure it out’

Life in Norway: ‘The country really cares about its people’

Looking ahead

In short, Yarber feels like he’s found a home. He’s practicing for his Norwegian language test — part of the process of becoming a permanent resident. He rates his current proficiency at about a five out of 10. He can carry a conversation and order at a restaurant, he says.

“Could I get up and do a TED talk in Norwegian? No.”

All in due time. Yarber hopes to eventually stash some of his money away in order to buy a car (he currently relies on public transportation) and a house in his new hometown. Until now, he hasn’t saved much, opting instead to use any extra funds to travel.

“I should be having savings but, and maybe it’s this trauma from being in prison for so long and just wanting to see the world, I’ve now traveled to 44 countries,” he says. “I spend my money on traveling. If I got extra money, I’m traveling. I just want to see the world.”

It’s a sentiment that puts him right at home in the land of Norse explorers. “I’m a Black Viking in heart,” he says.

Conversions from NOK to USD were done using the OANDA conversion rate of 1 USD to 9.85 NOK on Sept. 19, 2025. All amounts are rounded to the nearest dollar.

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