Profession guide
Working in Europe as a Researcher
Researchers have a dedicated EU permit under the Researcher Directive 2016/801. A hosting agreement with a recognised institution is the key requirement — professional registration is not needed.
EU regulation
Regulation status in Europe
Not a regulated profession
No qualification recognition procedure is required before working in this profession across the EU. You need a valid work permit — typically the EU Blue Card or a national skilled-worker route — but formal professional registration is not a prerequisite.
Research is not a regulated profession — no professional body licensing procedure applies. Academic qualifications are assessed informally by the host institution. The key legal framework is EU Directive 2016/801, which provides a dedicated researcher permit route available to non-EU nationals with a valid hosting agreement from a recognised research institution.
Permit routes
Relevant permit routes
The researcher permit often carries superior terms to standard work permits: enhanced family reunification rights, the right for accompanying partners to work in many countries, and an intra-EU mobility provision for research assignments across multiple member states. Processing is usually faster where the host institution is already recognised under the Directive.
Related guides
Related scenario and best-for guides
Scenario guide
Research appointment
Researcher routes tied to a host institution, contract, or formal hosting agreement.
Open scenario guide →
Best countries
Best countries for research appointment
Researcher routes tied to a host institution, contract, or formal hosting agreement.
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