Sweden will raise the bar for labor immigration this summer, setting a higher salary threshold and tighter employer checks from June 17, 2025, while preparing broader reforms for 2026 that promise easier job changes and longer protection after layoffs. The new package affects most non‑EU and non‑EEA applicants seeking a work permit in Sweden, and it marks a shift toward higher pay standards paired with more flexible rules on mobility. Officials say the changes align with the revised EU Single Permit Directive and aim to protect wages, curb abuse, and keep Sweden competitive for global talent.
June 17, 2025 — immediate salary threshold and scope
Under the first phase, any new work permit application lodged on or after June 17, 2025 must show a monthly salary of at least SEK 29,680, which equals 80% of Sweden’s updated median wage of SEK 37,100. The rule applies broadly to third‑country nationals; EU citizens, seasonal workers, and researchers fall outside this framework.

The Swedish Migration Agency will assess salaries against collective agreements or industry norms, and employers will be responsible for offering terms that match those standards. Applications submitted before the June date will still be judged under the previous minimum of SEK 28,480 per month — an important detail for applicants already in the pipeline who are tracking processing milestones and contract timing.
Important: Officials have flagged the possibility that the salary threshold could rise again later in 2025 to the full median wage of SEK 37,100, with a grace period for permit renewals until June 2026 if implemented.
Exemptions for shortage occupations
To balance the higher bar, Sweden will carve out exemptions for occupations facing labor shortages. The government has signaled that professions with well‑documented needs—commonly healthcare and IT—may be exempt from the new salary rule. Details are expected by August 1, 2025.
Applicants and employers should not assume an exemption until the list is published; the Migration Agency will expect proof of salary that meets current rules unless an exemption clearly applies.
Employer responsibilities and documentation
Employer compliance sits at the center of the June package. Companies must ensure job offers meet the threshold and align with collective agreements or the normal pay in the field. Authorities will expect documented proof, typically:
- Signed employment contracts stating monthly salary, hours, and duties
- Any evidence that shows the offer aligns with collective agreements or normal pay
- Supporting documents applicants attach that match employer promises
The Swedish Migration Agency can ask for more information if any part of the offer is unclear or below standard. These documentation steps will carry greater weight now that the salary floor is higher and linked to national wage data.
May 21, 2026 — mobility, protections, and processing improvements (subject to final approval)
The second phase—planned for May 21, 2026, pending final approval—focuses on easing life after arrival. Key elements include:
- Job mobility: Work permits will no longer be tied to a single employer or a fixed profession. Permit holders can change jobs or switch fields by notification to authorities rather than a full new application.
- Longer protection after layoffs: Anyone with more than two years of employment will have up to six months to secure new work (current rule: three months).
- Maintenance requirement: After three months of unemployment, permit holders will need to show they can support themselves financially to keep their status during the remaining job‑search window.
- Faster processing: Standard government times for single‑permit applications will drop from 120 days to 90 days.
- Fee protections: Employers will be barred from asking foreign employees to reimburse the application fee for a single permit.
- Longer permit durations: Authorities will be able to grant work permits for up to two years, reducing renewal frequency.
These changes aim to reduce stress for families, simplify internal moves and promotions, and strengthen worker protections against unfair conditions.
Practical implications for employers
Immediate tasks for HR and recruiters:
- Review and update salary bands to meet SEK 29,680 per month (or plan for the potential rise to SEK 37,100 later in 2025).
- Ensure posted hours and duties keep the offer above the minimum each month.
- Prepare documented proof that offers align with collective agreements or industry norms.
- Monitor the August 1, 2025 shortage‑occupation list if recruiting in healthcare, IT, or other critical sectors.
- Time job ads and contract dates carefully — applications filed before June 17, 2025 follow the older minimum of SEK 28,480.
- If using staffing agencies, verify their compliance and ensure worker contracts match filings to the Migration Agency.
Practical implications for applicants
What applicants should do now:
- Secure a clear, signed contract showing monthly pay, work hours, and a role description.
- Keep copies of any pay addenda and ensure consistency across all submitted documents.
- Monitor the government’s shortage‑occupation list expected by August 1, 2025.
- If laid off after arrival, be aware that the longer six‑month grace period is planned for 2026; until then, act quickly under current rules.
- Plan savings for possible maintenance‑proof requests after three months of unemployment once the 2026 rules take effect.
Sectoral impacts and reactions
- Labor unions and worker advocates support a clear floor to prevent wage undercutting.
- Critics warn that smaller firms and startups may struggle to meet higher pay levels for junior roles, potentially narrowing entry paths for global graduates.
- Exemptions for shortage occupations are intended to soften these effects where Sweden faces clear gaps.
- Universities and research institutes: researchers are not subject to the threshold in the same way, but non‑research academic roles and post‑study employment generally must meet the new pay level unless exempted.
SME considerations and role design
Small and medium‑sized enterprises may need to rethink role design or benefits to ensure monthly totals clear the threshold. Options include:
- Combining responsibilities
- Adjusting hours and benefits packages
- Offering a higher salary to remain competitive and avoid follow‑up queries from officers
The Migration Agency will still require offers to match collective agreements or normal pay in the field.
Timeline (key dates)
Date | Change |
---|---|
June 17, 2025 | Minimum salary for most new work permit applications becomes SEK 29,680 per month. Applications filed before this date follow the previous minimum of SEK 28,480. |
August 1, 2025 | Government expected to publish details on shortage‑occupation exemptions. |
Later in 2025 | Possible rise of the threshold to SEK 37,100 (full median wage), with a grace period on renewals until June 2026 if adopted. |
May 21, 2026 (subject to final approval) | Permits no longer tied to an employer/profession; six‑month grace after layoffs (for >2 years service); processing times target 90 days; employers cannot pass the single‑permit fee to workers; permits may be granted for up to two years. |
Practical checklist
- Confirm new offers for non‑EU/EEA hires meet SEK 29,680 monthly and align with collective agreements.
- If filing before June 17, 2025, verify the contract clears SEK 28,480 and that all documents are ready.
- Monitor the shortage‑occupation list expected by August 1, 2025 — do not assume exemption before it’s official.
- Keep a clean paper trail: signed contract, salary terms, hours, and consistent job description.
- For 2026 planning, budget for staff moves without new applications and update internal policies for “notification‑only” job changes.
- Advise foreign staff about the planned six‑month grace period and the requirement to show financial means after three months of unemployment.
- Set internal reminders to review processing times and onboarding dates against the projected 90‑day standard in 2026.
Human impacts: examples
- Example 1: A software engineer hired at SEK 30,000 per month in July 2025 clears the June threshold; if restructured in 2027, the engineer (with >2 years’ service) would have up to six months to find new work and could switch employers with only a notification.
- Example 2: A nurse recruited from abroad may fall under a shortage exemption if healthcare appears on the list; the exemption could allow hiring that reflects hospital pay scales without the constraint of the standard floor.
Not every case will be simple. Entry‑level hires at startups may face choices: the company could raise the offer, adjust the role, or the applicant might wait to see if an exemption is published.
Enforcement, fairness, and broader context
- Blocking employers from passing the single‑permit application fee to employees aims to remove a cost burden and reduce worker dependency on employers.
- Faster processing and longer permits seek to smooth transitions for families and employers.
- Sweden’s approach mirrors a broader EU trend: set a clear entry standard then ease mobility once workers are inside the system.
For official guidance, dates, and live policy text, consult the Swedish Migration Agency’s guidance on working in Sweden: https://www.migrationsverket.se/English/Private-individuals/Working-in-Sweden.html.
Key takeaway: 2025 brings a higher salary threshold and stronger employer documentation. 2026 aims to deliver greater job mobility, longer post‑layoff protection, faster processing, and other worker protections — a combination that raises the entry bar while reducing friction once workers are in Sweden.
This Article in a Nutshell
Sweden will increase the salary threshold for most non‑EU/EEA work permit applications to SEK 29,680 per month starting June 17, 2025, aligning with 80% of the updated median wage. Employers must document offers that match collective agreements or industry norms; applications filed before June 17 will be assessed under the previous SEK 28,480 minimum. Authorities may raise the threshold to the full median of SEK 37,100 later in 2025, with a potential renewal grace through June 2026. Subject to final approval, changes planned for May 21, 2026 would allow job changes by notification, extend post‑layoff protection to six months for workers with over two years’ service, require maintenance proof after three months of unemployment, shorten processing times to 90 days, prevent employers from charging single‑permit fees to employees, and permit work authorizations up to two years. The package aims to protect wages, curb abuse, and improve mobility while employers and applicants should update contracts, documentation, and recruitment planning accordingly.