Profession guide

Working in Europe as an Architect

Architecture is an automatic-recognition profession for EU/EEA-trained architects. Non-EU architects go through the general-system procedure administered by national chambers.

Regulated in the EU

EU regulation

Regulation status in Europe

Covered by EU Directive 2005/36/EC

This profession is one of the seven listed under the automatic recognition regime. EU and EEA-trained professionals receive recognition on production of qualifying certificates — no substantive assessment is required. Non-EU professionals must go through the general-system or national procedure.

Architecture is a regulated profession across the EU and is included in the automatic recognition provisions of EU Directive 2005/36/EC. EU and EEA-qualified architects receive recognition on production of qualifying certificates. Non-EU architects typically apply through the national architects' chamber under the general-system procedure, which may require an aptitude test or adaptation period.

Permit routes

Relevant permit routes

The EU Blue Card is available in most countries for architects. The professional recognition procedure runs in parallel with — and sometimes ahead of — the work permit application. Title protection and the scope of reserved activities (such as signing off planning applications) differ between countries.