Profession guides
Working in Europe by profession
Understand the EU regulation status of your profession, which countries require qualification recognition, and which permit routes are available to you.
Professions
9 profession guides
Select your profession to see regulation status, best destination countries, and relevant work permit routes.
Software Engineer
UnregulatedSoftware engineering is unregulated across Europe. No qualification recognition is required — your EU Blue Card or skilled-worker permit is the main pathway.
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Nurse
Regulated EUNursing is one of 7 professions covered by automatic EU recognition for EU/EEA-trained nurses. Non-EU nurses must complete a national recognition procedure.
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Doctor
Regulated EUMedicine is covered by automatic EU recognition for EU/EEA-trained doctors. Non-EU doctors face a national recognition procedure through state or national medical chambers.
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Architect
Regulated EUArchitecture is covered by the EU general system and automatic recognition for EU/EEA architects. Non-EU architects must go through national chambers.
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Civil Engineer
Regulated (varies)Civil engineering regulation varies by country. Some EU member states require chamber registration for the protected title; others treat it as unregulated.
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Teacher
Regulated EUTeaching is a regulated profession in all EU countries. Recognition goes through state education authorities. Non-EU teachers face the general-system procedure.
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Researcher
UnregulatedResearchers have a dedicated EU permit route under the Researcher Directive 2016/801. A hosting agreement with a recognised institution is the key requirement.
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Accountant
Regulated (varies)Accountancy regulation varies across the EU. Statutory audit and certain signing rights require registration. General accounting roles are often unregulated.
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Lawyer
Regulated EULaw is the most restricted regulated profession in Europe. Non-EU lawyers cannot practise local law in most EU countries without a separate national admission process.
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