Machado, 58, was due to receive the award at a ceremony at Oslo City Hall in the presence of King Harald, Queen Sonja and Latin American leaders including Argentine President Javier Milei and Ecuadorean President Daniel Noboa.
The ceremony is on Wednesday afternoon (11pm AEDT).
Machado was due to receive the award in defiance of a decade-long travel ban imposed by authorities in her home country and after spending more than a year in hiding.
"She is unfortunately not in Norway and will not stand on stage at Oslo City Hall at 1pm.when the ceremony starts," Kristian Berg Harpviken, the director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute and the permanent secretary of the award body, told broadcaster NRK.
Asked where she was, Harpviken said: "I don't know."
The ceremony will still go ahead.
When a laureate is unable to attend, a close family member usually steps in to receive the prize and deliver the Nobel lecture in place of the laureate.
In this case, it would be Machado's daughter, Ana Corina Sosa Machado, Harpviken said.
When she won the prize in October, Machado dedicated it in part to US President Donald Trump, who has said he himself deserved the honour.
President Nicolas Maduro, in power since 2013, says Trump is trying to overthrow him to gain access to Venezuela's vast oil reserves and that Venezuelan citizens and armed forces will resist any such attempt.
The Nobel Institute did not immediately reply to a request for further comment.
In 2024, Machado was barred from running in the presidential election despite having won the opposition's primary by a landslide.
She went into hiding in August 2024 after authorities expanded arrests of opposition figures following the disputed vote.
The electoral authority and top court declared Maduro the winner, but international observers and the opposition say its candidate handily won and the opposition has published ballot box-level tallies as evidence of its victory.