Abstract Well penetrations on the UK East Shetland Platform (ESP) prove 1–8 km-thick Devonian post-orogenic extensional collapse-related successions. Conversely, extremely thick (1–6 km) Permo-Triassic basin-fills without Devono-Carboniferous units were in the past interpreted west of the Utsira High, on the Norwegian Horda Platform and Stord Basin, albeit Pre-Triassic well penetrations are here very rare. In this work, the nature and age of Paleozoic–Triassic strata and structures in these underexplored platform regions are tentatively constrained by performing cross-border regional seismic interpretations east and west of the Viking Graben. We highlight cross-border analogies in structural style and seismic facies, with a similar evolution dominated by polyphase inversion tectonics and structural grain preservation. In the Norwegian study areas, much of the half-graben sedimentary fills may be interpreted as Devonian–?Carboniferous in age as in the ESP, rather than overly thick Permo-Triassic successions. Major graben-bounding extensional faults are low angle ( c. 25°–33°), approximately north-striking and are likely to be rooting downwards into reactivated Caledonian shear zones. Rifting development occurred in multiple episodes, possibly creating different traps. Prior to Permian–Jurassic rifting, many low-angle Caledonian thrusts were subject to extensional inversion in the Devonian and then to Variscan compressional reactivation, causing vertical extrusion and deformation of Devonian synrift wedges.