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Send Workers to Europe

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Recruitment for Europe Jobs with Visa & Work Permit Support

Europe is facing one of the most severe labour shortages in its modern history. From construction sites in Germany to logistics hubs in Poland and care facilities in the Netherlands, employers across the continent are actively seeking skilled and semi-skilled workers from outside the EU. For recruitment agencies in Asia, Africa, and other non-EU countries, this represents a significant and legally accessible business opportunity.

EU Helpers is built specifically for recruiters who want to send workers to Europe in a structured, compliant, and profitable way. As a registered partner, your agency gains access to verified European employers, a streamlined work permit process, and dedicated support at every stage of placement.

Get started today at euhelpers.com. Approval typically takes 48 hours.

How Recruiters Can Legally Send Workers to Europe

Sending workers abroad is not simply a matter of finding jobs and booking flights. It requires navigating immigration law, bilateral labour agreements, employer documentation, and country-specific permit categories. Recruiters who approach this without structure face legal exposure, failed placements, and damaged reputations.

The right approach is to work within the established legal framework — and that is exactly what EU Helpers enables recruitment partners worldwide to do.

Step-by-Step Recruitment Process

1. Register as a Partner on EU Helpers

Complete the online registration at euhelpers.com. Your agency profile is reviewed within 48 hours, and you receive verified partner status upon approval.

2. Access the Employer Job Board

Browse open positions from verified European employers across Germany, Poland, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, and Austria. Positions are updated regularly and include job descriptions, salary ranges, and permit categories.

3. Submit Worker Profiles

Upload CVs, qualifications, language assessments, and candidate documentation through the partner dashboard. EU Helpers matches candidates to employer requirements.

4. Work Permit and Visa Coordination

EU Helpers coordinates the full documentation process, including Single Permit applications, employer declarations, and scheduling embassy appointments. Your agency is guided at every step.

5. Pre-Departure Preparation

Placed workers receive orientation covering the destination country, employer expectations, accommodation, and rights under EU labour law. This reduces dropout rates and improves placement success.

6. Placement Confirmation and Fee Collection

Once the worker starts employment, your placement fee is confirmed. EU Helpers provides invoicing support and transparent fee agreements in advance.

7. Ongoing Renewals and Rehires

Track active placements, contract renewal dates, and seasonal rehire opportunities through the dashboard. Repeat placements generate consistent income with minimal additional effort.

Legal Requirements and Compliance for Recruiters

Every recruiter operating internationally must comply with both their home country's labour export regulations and the destination country's immigration law. Failure to do so can result in denial, fines, or criminal liability in some jurisdictions.

Key Legal Requirements

  • A valid recruitment licence or agency registration in your home country
  • Written agreements with both the employer and the worker outlining terms, fees, and responsibilities
  • No charging of excessive or illegal fees to workers, in compliance with ILO fair recruitment standards
  • Compliance with the EU Single Permit Directive and country-specific labour migration frameworks
  • Transparent disclosure of working conditions, salary, and accommodation to candidates

EU Helpers only works with agencies that meet these standards. Our partner agreement includes compliance clauses that protect both your agency and your workers.

Candidate Sourcing Strategies by Region

The most successful recruiters maintain a consistent pipeline of qualified candidates. Effective sourcing strategies vary by region.

South and Southeast Asia

India, Bangladesh, Nepal, the Philippines, Pakistan, and Sri Lanka are strong source markets. Demand is highest for construction trades, manufacturing operatives, hospitality staff, and care workers. Language training programmes and skills certification are key competitive differentiators.

Sub-Saharan Africa

Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Ethiopia, and Uganda offer a growing pool of healthcare workers, logistics operatives, and agriculture candidates. Biometric passport infrastructure is improving rapidly, making cross-border deployment smoother.

Eastern Europe and Central Asia

Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova, and Uzbekistan have a high availability of skilled tradespeople. Geographic proximity to EU countries supports faster processing timelines and lower travel costs.

Middle East and North Africa

Egypt, Morocco, Tunisia, and Jordan have many experienced workers seeking to transition from Gulf contracts to more stable European employment. Strong motivation, multilingual skills, and proven adaptability make them attractive candidates.

High-Demand Jobs in Europe for Foreign Workers

Understanding which roles are hiring — and in which countries — is essential for matching your candidate pool to live opportunities.

Top Industries Hiring Foreign Workers

Construction

Germany, the Czech Republic, Austria, and Poland all face acute shortages of construction workers, from general labourers to skilled tradespeople such as electricians, plumbers, and steel fixers. Salaries range from €1,800 to €3,500 per month, depending on skill level and country.

Healthcare and Elder Care

Germany alone needs an estimated 500,000 additional care workers over the next decade. Nurses, care assistants, and medical technicians are in critical demand. Language skills (at least B1 German) are often required but can be acquired during the placement process.

Logistics and Warehousing

The growth of e-commerce across Europe has created massive demand for warehouse operatives, forklift drivers, and delivery personnel. The Netherlands, Germany, and Poland lead in this sector. Language requirements are minimal for most warehouse roles.

Agriculture

Seasonal agricultural work across Poland, the Czech Republic, and Germany provides an accessible entry point for workers. Contracts typically run 3–9 months with accommodation provided. High volume and repeat placement potential make this sector ideal for new recruiter-partners.

Manufacturing

Automotive, electronics, and food processing factories across Germany, the Czech Republic, and Slovakia actively source foreign workers. Roles include machine operators, quality control technicians, and production line workers.

Hospitality

Hotels, restaurants, and resorts across Austria, the Netherlands, and Germany hire internationally for kitchen, housekeeping, and front-of-house roles. Seasonal demand peaks during summer and winter tourist periods.

Country-by-Country Job Demand Overview

Country Top Sectors Permit Type Processing Time
Germany Healthcare, Construction, IT Skilled Worker Visa 6–12 weeks
Poland Logistics, Agriculture, Manufacturing Work Permit Type A 4–8 weeks
Netherlands Logistics, Tech, Agriculture Single Permit (GVVA) 8–12 weeks
Czech Republic Manufacturing, Construction Employee Card 4–8 weeks
Austria Healthcare, Hospitality, Construction Red-White-Red Card 8–14 weeks

Work Permit and Visa Process Explained

One of the most common reasons recruiters avoid the European market is the perceived complexity of work permits and visa applications. In reality, the process is structured and manageable when approached systematically.

Types of European Work Visas

Seasonal Work Permit

Valid for 5–9 months. Available in most EU countries for roles in agriculture, hospitality, and construction. Does not require a long-term labour market test. The easiest entry point for new recruiter-partners.

Single Permit (Combined Work and Residence)

The most common permit for non-EU workers taking up long-term employment. Combines the work permit and residence permit into one document. Governed by the EU Single Permit Directive.

National Skilled Worker Visa (Germany)

Introduced under the German Skilled Immigration Act. Allows qualified professionals to enter Germany for employment, with simplified processes for occupations in shortage. Requires recognised qualifications.

EU Blue Card

For highly skilled workers earning above a salary threshold (approximately €43,000–€56,000 per year). Provides a pathway to permanent residence after 33 months.

Country-Wise Visa Rules

Germany

Workers must have recognised qualifications (or equivalent). A valid job offer, proof of health insurance, and a language certificate are required. The Federal Employment Agency (BA) conducts a labour market test for most roles, which is waived for shortage occupations.

Poland

One of the most accessible EU labour markets for non-EU workers. Employers can issue work declarations for certain nationalities without a full permit. For long-term placements, a Type A or B work permit is required and is processed through the regional governor's office.

Netherlands

The Single Permit (GVVA) is the primary route. The employer must be a recognised sponsor with the IND (Immigration and Naturalisation Service). Processing time is 8–12 weeks. An MVV visa is required for workers from most non-EU countries.

Czech Republic

The Employee Card is the standard permit that combines residence and work authorisation. Applications are submitted at the Czech embassies in the worker's home country. Processing typically takes 4–8 weeks.

Documents Required for Workers and Recruiters

For the Worker

  • Valid passport (minimum 12-month validity)
  • Educational certificates and notarised translations
  • Employment contract signed by the European employer
  • Accommodation proof
  • Health insurance valid in the destination country
  • Criminal background check from the country of origin
  • Language certificate (where applicable)

For the Recruiter

  • Agency registration documents from your home country
  • Signed a recruitment agreement with EU Helpers
  • Signed candidate consent forms
  • Completed job order documentation from the European employer
  • Fee disclosure documentation

How Recruiters Earn — The Business Model

International recruitment is a legitimate and profitable business when structured correctly. Here is how the revenue model works for EU Helpers partner agencies.

Typical Recruiter Fee Structures in Europe

European employers typically pay the recruiter fee, not the worker. This is an important distinction from Gulf recruitment markets and is consistent with ILO fair recruitment standards. Recruiter fees are negotiated with the employer and generally range from one to three months of the placed worker's gross salary.

For a construction worker placed in Germany earning €2,200 per month, a recruiter fee of 1.5 months' salary amounts to approximately €3,300 per placement. Place 20 workers in a year, and the estimated gross revenue is approximately €66,000 from a single-employer relationship.

Additional income streams include contract renewal fees (typically 50% of the original placement fee), document preparation service fees, and language training partnerships.

Real Placement Revenue Examples

Logistics Workers to Poland

A recruiter agency in India partnering with EU Helpers to place logistics workers in Poland at an average salary of €1,600 per month, with a 1.5-month placement fee, earns approximately €2,400 per worker. With 30 placements per year, the estimated gross revenue is approximately €72,000.

Care Workers to Germany

A healthcare recruiter placing care workers in Germany at an average salary of €2,800 per month with a 2-month fee earns approximately €5,600 per placement. With 15 placements per year, the estimated gross revenue is approximately €84,000.

Construction Workers to the Czech Republic

A construction recruiter placing skilled trades in the Czech Republic at an average salary of €2,000 per month with a 1.5-month fee earns approximately €3,000 per placement. With 25 placements per year, the estimated gross revenue is approximately €75,000.

Note: income examples are illustrative only and not guaranteed. Actual results depend on the terms of agreement, employer relationships, and placement success rates.

Why Choose EU Helpers as Your European Recruitment Partner

There are recruitment platforms and immigration specialists. EU Helpers is both — under one roof.

Verified European Employers

Every employer on our platform is verified, recognised by their national immigration authority, and committed to ILO-compliant hiring.

End-to-End Visa & Permit Coordination

We don't just send leads. We coordinate Single Permit applications, embassy appointments, and pre-departure logistics — so your agency focuses on what it does best: sourcing great candidates.

Transparent Fee Structure

No hidden costs. Our fee structure is published in the partner agreement before you ever submit a candidate.

Replacement & Renewal Support

If a placement ends prematurely within the agreed terms, we help you place a replacement quickly. Renewal opportunities are flagged automatically in your dashboard.

Dedicated Account Manager

Once approved, you get a dedicated account manager who knows your agency, your candidate pipeline, and your target sectors.

Read more about EU Helpers or contact our partner team.

Get Started Today

Becoming a verified EU Helpers recruiter partner takes less than 10 minutes.

Register at euhelpers.com

Your application is reviewed within 48 hours. Once approved, you gain instant access to live employer job orders, candidate submission tools, and the full visa coordination process.

Frequently Asked Questions

Everything recruitment agencies need to know about sending workers to Europe — visa rules, work permits, legal compliance, and how to partner with EU Helpers.
What is the most common work permit for non-EU workers placed in Europe?

The Single Permit, also known as the Combined Work and Residence Permit, is the most widely used route across EU countries. It combines both the right to reside and the right to work in a single document. Processing times vary by country, typically ranging from 4 to 12 weeks.

Can a recruiter apply for a work permit on behalf of a worker?

In most EU countries, it is the employer — not the recruiter — who formally submits the work permit application to the immigration authority. However, the recruiter plays a critical role in preparing documentation, coordinating between the candidate and employer, and ensuring all paperwork meets the required standards. euhelpers.com supports recruiters throughout this process.

How long does it take to get a European work visa approved?

Processing times vary by country and permit type. Poland typically processes work permits in 4–8 weeks. Czech Republic processes Employee Cards in a similar timeframe. Germany and the Netherlands can take 8–14 weeks due to additional labor market assessments. euhelpers.com tracks each application and follows up proactively.

Which European countries are easiest for non-EU workers to get work permits?

Poland and Czech Republic are generally considered the most accessible EU labor markets for non-EU workers, with straightforward permit categories, lower language requirements for most roles, and faster processing. Germany has a highly structured system but strong demand for qualified workers.

Do workers need to speak the local language?

Language requirements depend on the industry and country. Warehouse, logistics, and agriculture roles in Poland and Czech Republic often have minimal language requirements. Germany requires a minimum B1 German certificate for healthcare and care roles. euhelpers.com can advise on language training providers for your candidates.

Is it legal for a recruiter agency in Asia or Africa to place workers in Europe?

Yes, provided the recruiter holds the required domestic license for overseas employment, complies with ILO fair recruitment principles, does not charge illegal fees to workers, and works with a verified employer in the destination country. euhelpers.com only onboards compliant partner agencies.

What are the legal obligations of a recruiter under EU labor law?

Recruiters must ensure candidates receive accurate information about job terms, salary, working hours, and accommodation before departure. Contracts must be in a language the worker understands. Recruiters must not withhold passports or identity documents, and must not charge excessive fees to workers contrary to the ILO General Principles on Fair Recruitment.

Can a recruiter be held liable if a worker's visa is rejected?

Visa and permit decisions are made by government immigration authorities and are not within the recruiter's control. However, a recruiter can reduce rejection risk significantly by submitting complete, accurate documentation. euhelpers.com's compliance process is designed to minimize rejection rates. No party can guarantee permit approval.

How does euhelpers.com work as a partner platform?

euhelpers.com is a Europe-focused recruitment infrastructure platform that connects verified international recruiters with European employers. Partner agencies register on the platform, access live job mandates, submit candidates, and receive support for permit processing, documentation, and employer coordination.

What does the euhelpers.com recruiter registration process involve?

Registration is completed online at euhelpers.com/recruiter/registration. You submit your agency details, country of operation, industry focus, and license information. Our compliance team reviews your application within 48 hours. Approved partners receive access to the employer job board and partner dashboard.

Does euhelpers.com charge recruiters to join the platform?

Please visit euhelpers.com/recruiter/registration for current partnership terms and fee structures. Terms are discussed during the onboarding process based on your agency's volume and market focus.

How are recruiter placement fees structured?

Placement fees are paid by the European employer, not the worker. Fee amounts are agreed in advance between the recruiter, euhelpers.com, and the employer. Typical fees range from one to three months of the placed worker's gross salary, depending on the role and country.

How much can a recruiter agency earn by sending workers to Europe?

Earnings depend on placement volume, fee agreements, and industry. As an illustrative estimate, placing 20 workers per year at an average fee of €2,500 per placement represents approximately €50,000 in gross revenue. Actual earnings vary and are not guaranteed. euhelpers.com can share benchmark data with registered partners.

Can a recruiter work with multiple European countries at the same time?

Yes. euhelpers.com has employer relationships across Germany, Poland, Netherlands, Czech Republic, Austria, and several other EU countries. Registered partner agencies can submit candidates for roles across multiple countries simultaneously, depending on available mandates and candidate qualifications.

What qualifications do workers need to be placed in Europe?

Qualifications vary by role. For skilled trades (electricians, plumbers, mechanics), workers typically need a vocational certificate and evidence of work experience. For care and healthcare roles in Germany, a nursing or care qualification is required. For logistics and agriculture, qualifications are minimal. euhelpers.com provides a qualification checklist for each job category.

What is the minimum age for workers placed in Europe?

Workers must be at least 18 years of age. Some countries, such as Germany, may have specific minimum age requirements for certain permit categories. euhelpers.com does not facilitate placements for workers under 18 under any circumstances.

Do workers need a job offer before applying for a European work visa?

In most cases, yes. The standard Single Permit and national work permit routes require a signed employment contract or formal job offer from an EU employer before the application can be submitted. Germany's new skilled worker immigration pathway allows qualified professionals to enter without a job offer in some circumstances, but this is an exception rather than the standard route.

What happens if a placed worker leaves the employer early?

Early termination policies are governed by the employment contract and the recruiter agreement with euhelpers.com. Placement fees are typically earned upon confirmed employment start. Replacement policies vary and are agreed in advance. euhelpers.com advises all partner recruiters on standard replacement clauses before placement.

Are seasonal workers eligible for repeat placements?

Yes. Seasonal workers who complete their contracts in good standing are eligible for rehire in subsequent seasons. This is one of the most reliable revenue streams for recruiter-partners, as repeat placements require significantly less sourcing and documentation effort than first-time placements.

How can a recruiter agency from India, Nigeria, or Bangladesh get started with euhelpers.com?

The first step is to complete the recruiter registration form at euhelpers.com/recruiter/registration. Include your agency details, the industries you specialize in, and the number of candidates you can source. Our partnership team will schedule an onboarding call within 48 hours of approval.

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Legal Disclaimer

EU Helpers provides recruitment coordination, employer matching, and immigration assistance services to verified partner agencies sending workers to Europe. Work permit and visa approvals are at the discretion of destination-country government authorities and are not guaranteed. Recruitment agencies remain responsible for compliance with their home country's labour export laws, the ILO fair recruitment standards, and the destination country's labour and immigration laws. Income examples are illustrative only and not guaranteed. By using our platform, you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.

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