For Immigration Agencies & Visa Consultants · 2026
Which EU country should you place your clients in?
Read this first.
Portugal vs Czech Republic — the key facts, side by side
Portugal
Western EU · Schengen
60 days
Processing Time
AIMA-compliant applications
€920
Minimum Wage 2026
Salary threshold base
None
Labour Market Test
Most standard roles exempt
Czech Republic
Central EU · Schengen
30–90 days
Processing Time
2026 digital portal upgrade
85K+
Cards Projected 2026
Strong employer demand
2 yrs
Permit Validity
Work + residence in one card
If you are an immigration agent placing workers in Europe, Portugal and the Czech Republic are probably already on your radar. Both countries are running significant labour shortages. Both are actively hiring non-EU nationals. And both have structured work visa pathways for third-country nationals.
But the experience of placing a worker in Lisbon is very different from placing one in Prague. The documentation requirements, sponsor obligations, processing timelines, and salary thresholds all differ. Agents who understand these differences can advise clients better, reduce rejection risk, and build a stronger reputation for getting it right.
In Portugal, the main work visa route for non-EU nationals is the national work visa, processed through AIMA — the agency that replaced SEF in 2023. Employers must be registered, issue a compliant employment contract, and demonstrate the role is genuine. For skilled profiles, the D3 visa applies, with processing typically between 30 and 60 days. Standard temporary work and residence permits run closer to 2 to 4 months from start to finish.
In the Czech Republic, the primary route is the Employee Card — a combined work and residence permit valid for up to two years. It is tied to a specific employer and job position registered in the central vacancies database. Processing has historically been 30 to 90 days, and the Czech government is rolling out a fully digital portal in 2026 expected to streamline timelines further.
- Employment contract (min. 12 months)
- Company registration with AIMA
- Proof of tax and social security compliance
- Job description and salary confirmation
- Accommodation proof for worker
- AIMA employer declaration
- Job registered in Central Vacancy Database
- Labour market test (10–30 days advertising)
- Company registration and good standing proof
- Employment contract meeting CZ labour law
- Proof of accommodation for worker
- Employer declaration to Labour Office
One of the most important practical differences is the labour market test. In the Czech Republic, employers are generally required to advertise the position through the Czech Labour Office for 10 to 30 days before sponsoring a non-EU worker. This adds time to the process if not planned carefully. Sectors with certified shortages — manufacturing, construction, logistics — often have exemptions or faster pathways, but agents need to confirm the specific role and region.
Portugal also requires employers to demonstrate genuine need, but the process is less rigid than a formal labour market test for most standard roles. This can make initial placement faster in Portugal, particularly for unskilled and semi-skilled positions in agriculture, hospitality, construction, and logistics.
Portugal’s minimum wage for 2026 is €920 per month gross. Most standard work visa categories require at minimum the prevailing sector wage. For highly qualified roles under the D3 visa, the threshold rises to 1.5 times the national average — roughly €2,400 per month. For the EU Blue Card, which Portugal also offers, the threshold is similar. For unskilled and general labour roles, agents can typically work within the standard minimum wage band without issue.
In the Czech Republic, salary requirements are tied to the role and sector, not a single national threshold. The Employee Card requires that salary meets Czech minimum wage standards and aligns with the conditions registered in the vacancy system. For the EU Blue Card in Czech Republic, highly qualified workers must earn at least 1.5 times the average salary — though 2026 updates include a reduced threshold of 1.2 times for IT professionals specifically.
Both countries are open to workers from the Philippines, Bangladesh, India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Kenya, Ghana, and other key source markets. There are no blanket nationality restrictions under either the Portuguese or Czech work visa systems. However, consulate capacity and appointment availability in specific countries can affect timelines significantly. Agents placing workers from South or Southeast Asia into Czech Republic roles, for example, should plan for potential consulate delays in Manila, Dhaka, or Karachi.
Portugal’s AIMA has expanded consular cooperation in several African markets, which can be an advantage for agents working with Nigerian, Kenyan, or Ghanaian applicants. That said, appointment backlogs at consulates have been reported — document readiness before the appointment is critical.
- Valid passport (6+ months validity)
- Signed employment contract
- Police clearance certificate
- Health insurance or NHI registration
- Proof of qualifications (if applicable)
- Passport-size photographs
- Accommodation proof in Portugal
- Valid passport
- Completed Employee Card application
- Criminal record (home country + last 3 years)
- Employment contract or preliminary agreement
- Proof of accommodation in Czech Republic
- Health insurance
- Photographs (biometric)
On paper, both countries can process work permits within 60 to 90 days. In practice, the total timeline — from document preparation to the worker arriving and being cleared to work — is often 3 to 5 months for both destinations. Document errors, missing translations, incomplete employer declarations, and consulate appointment delays are the main causes of extension.
The Czech Republic’s 2026 digital upgrade to its immigration portal is designed to reduce delays, with fully online applications expected to push processing down to the 30 to 90 day window more consistently. Portugal’s AIMA also announced a 7x processing capacity increase as part of its mission restructuring — though agents should verify current turnaround times directly before quoting clients.
There is no universal answer — and agents who present it as simple are doing their clients a disservice. The right recommendation depends on the worker’s profile, the employer’s sector, the timeline, and the source country’s consulate situation.
Portugal tends to be a better fit when the employer is in agriculture, hospitality, construction, or domestic services; when the worker comes from a Portuguese-speaking country or an African market with strong AIMA access; or when the agent needs a relatively streamlined employer sponsorship process without a formal labour market test phase.
The Czech Republic tends to be a better fit when the employer is in manufacturing, logistics, or general labour and has an established hiring relationship with the Czech Labour Office; when the agent is placing multiple workers and needs a system that scales with volume; or when the worker has prior EU work experience and wants a combined work-residence permit valid for two years.
Both Portugal and the Czech Republic offer genuine, scalable opportunities for agencies placing non-EU workers in Europe. The difference is in the detail — and in 2026, getting the documentation right from day one is what separates the agents building sustainable pipelines from those managing constant rejections and delays. Choose your destination based on the facts, prepare the documents properly, and your clients will thank you.

