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What Hungary’s guest worker restriction against Philippines, Georgia, and Arme

What Hungary’s guest worker restriction against the Philippines, Georgia, and Armenia really means

By Minh Nga, June 11, 2026 | 2:58 pm PT
Hungary’s recent restrictions on foreign labor recruitment have been widely portrayed as a complete ban on guest workers, but the reality is more nuanced.

While one key permit category has effectively closed to new applicants, foreign workers can still legally enter the country under alternative visa routes. However, these remaining avenues involve significantly stricter requirements and longer processing times.

The core policy change

The Hungarian government has ended an expedited recruitment process previously used by staffing agencies to hire workers from the Philippines, Georgia, and Armenia. According to government spokesperson Vanda Szondi, these new rules took effect last Friday, as reported by Reuters.

While officials have framed the move as a broad crackdown, the regulation strictly targets the residence permit for guest workers.

Crucially, it does not affect the residence permit for the purpose of employment. This alternative route remains fully available. Furthermore, the new rules do not impact foreign workers already living and working in Hungary under existing guest worker permits, who remain eligible to apply for extensions.

Comparing two immigration pathways

Hungarian law distinguishes between the residence permit for guest workers, and the residence permit for the purpose of employment, according to the National Directorate-General for Aliens Policing (Országos Idegenrendészeti Főigazgatóság – OIF), the government immigration authority responsible for managing the entry, stay, and residency of foreign nationals in Hungary.

The guest worker residence permit is strictly intended to address temporary labor shortages in lower- and mid-skilled roles, primarily within the manufacturing, logistics, and construction sectors. Workers are brought in through licensed temporary work agencies or specific preferential employers.

The visa is restricted to citizens of specifically designated countries and is granted for a strictly limited period with maximum stay requirements. It does not provide any pathway to permanent residency. Historically, this was an expedited and simplified process, making it the primary mechanism for agencies to recruit large volumes of foreign labor quickly.

In contrast, the employment-purpose residence permit is designed for more stable or highly skilled positions. A much broader range of Hungarian employers can sponsor workers under this category, rather than just specialized staffing agencies.

While it is initially issued for a fixed term of up to two years, it can be continually renewed as long as the employment conditions are maintained. Most importantly, years spent living in Hungary under this permit contribute toward eligibility for a permanent national residence card. However, securing this permit is a significantly more complex process that requires extensive documentation and longer processing periods.

A square in Hungary’s capital city of Budapest in 2022. Photo by VnExpress/Duc Hung

Filipino workers to feel the heaviest impact

In practice, these restrictions will disproportionately affect workers from the Philippines.

In July 2024, Hungary designated 10 countries whose citizens were eligible for guest worker permits. By December that year, the government had reduced that list to just three: the Philippines, Georgia, and Armenia.

Because relatively few workers historically arrive from Georgia and Armenia, industry observers say the latest measures almost exclusively block recruitment from the Philippines, according to Daily News Hungary.

Large labor leasing companies heavily relied on this specific pipeline to supply workers to Hungary’s manufacturing sector.

While official statistics cited by Reuters indicate that foreign workers account for just 2% of Hungary’s total workforce, specific sectors like services and manufacturing remain heavily dependent on them.

The government has characterized these recent reforms as merely the first step in a planned long-term labor strategy.

Heavier burden for employers

Recruitment experts interviewed by the Hungarian news outlet Telex emphasized that relying solely on the remaining employment-purpose permit will be incredibly cumbersome for businesses.

Péter Bogdanovits, managing director of the recruitment firm Aarenson Consulting, warned that the standard process can be so lengthy and complicated that employers may find it entirely impractical for addressing immediate labor shortages.

He argued that because Hungary will undoubtedly continue to need foreign workers, the economy would benefit far more from a predictable regulatory framework than from frequent, sweeping policy shifts.

Proponents of the change argue that the stricter screening process, while resulting in more rejected applications, will strengthen national oversight by ensuring applicants genuinely intend to integrate and work in Hungary.

Emil Lazarian: “I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS
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