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.

Regulated in the EU

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.

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.