Profession guide
Working in Europe as a Lawyer
Law is the most restricted regulated profession in Europe. Non-EU trained lawyers cannot practise local law in most EU countries without a separate national admission process. EEA-trained lawyers may use their home title for 3 years.
EU regulation
Regulation status in Europe
Law is the most tightly restricted regulated profession across the EU. Non-EU trained lawyers cannot practise local law in most EU countries based on a foreign law degree alone — a full national admission process, typically requiring re-qualification or an extensive aptitude assessment, is required. EEA-trained lawyers can use their home-country title during a three-year integration period under EU Directive 77/249/EEC, but advising on the host country's local law remains restricted during that period.
Countries where this profession is regulated (14)
Permit routes
Relevant permit routes
Work permit pathways (EU Blue Card, skilled-worker permit) are available to lawyers for roles that do not require local bar admission — such as international arbitration, EU law advisory, legal compliance, or in-house counsel. For roles requiring local bar admission, the professional recognition procedure must be completed first, which can take years.
Qualification recognition
Country-level recognition guides
The following countries have detailed qualification recognition information in their country guides.
Alemania
national only
Austria
national only
Bélgica
national only
Chipre
national only
Dinamarca
general system
Eslovaquia
national only
España
national only
Finlandia
national only
Francia
national only
Irlanda
national only
Italia
national only
Lituania
general system
Países Bajos
national only
Rumanía
national only
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