Snapshot
- In 2025, Lithuania set its annual quota for non-EU/EEA work-based residence permits at 24,830.
- As of mid-October, over 20,500 spots had already been used, with nearly 4,460 applications still under review — triggering a suspension of new applications under the standard quota.
- Despite the quota, Lithuania is signalling that foreign professionals remain welcome—provided they meet higher salary thresholds or work in designated “shortage” occupations.
What exactly has changed?
Reduced quota, removed sector‐splits
For 2025, Lithuania cut its quota from previous years (~40,000) to 24,830 according to Newland Chase. At the same time, the government eliminated sector‐specific quotas: instead of allocating specific numbers to e.g. construction, IT or transport, the quota covers all economic activities in aggregate.
High standards when the quota is reached
Once the quota is (or nearly is) exhausted, employers can still hire non-EU/EEA nationals—but only under stricter terms:
- The worker must earn at least 1.2 × the national average gross salary, or
- The role must be on Lithuania’s “High Added Value / Shortage Occupations” list and the salary meets the national average.
Thus, while the standard quota route is capped, exceptions exist for higher-end hires.
Enforcement & compliance ramp-up
Lithuania has also introduced tougher rules around employer obligations, postings, illegal work and related compliance. Newland Chase
Why this matters now
A labour-market squeeze
With a shrinking working-age population and rising demand in sectors such as ICT, manufacturing and services, Lithuania has a structural need for skilled labour. The International Monetary Fund (IMF) recently noted that immigration can help mitigate labour-force decline and support growth—if the right policies are in place according to IMF.
Talent vs volume
By reducing the quota and emphasising higher salary/skills thresholds, Lithuania appears to be shifting from quantity to quality of migration: fewer but more productive foreign hires. The policy suggests a balancing act: you’re welcome—but under selective conditions.
For employers & professionals, timing is critical
Because the quota is relatively low and fills quickly, those looking to hire or be hired under the standard route must act early. As of 3 November, only ~1,486 quota spots remained.
The “Still hiring” nuance — is Lithuania still hunting talent?
Yes — but with caveats.
- Yes, in that roles in high-value sectors or on the shortage occupations list remain open and welcome.
- But, the standard route for non-EU/EEA workers under the quota is effectively closed once filled — as has happened for 2025.
So while the headline may read “quota finished”, the policy still allows for selective recruitment of professionals with elevated credentials or salary.
What this means for the various players
For talent (non-EU/EEA professionals)
- If your role is on the shortage list (specialist engineer, senior IT, advanced manufacturing, etc.), you have a favourable position — especially if you command the salary threshold.
- If you are applying under the standard quota route, be aware: spots are limited and may be unavailable.
- Ensure your salary expectation and employer commitment meet the elevated threshold (1.2–1.5× average) if hiring beyond the quota.
For employers looking to recruit abroad
Consider alternative routes: e.g., EU/EEA nationals, remote/work-from-Lithuania models, or retention/upskilling of local talent.
Recruit early: once the quota is used, standard hiring channels are closed for the year.
If hiring beyond the quota, ensure the offer meets the salary requirement and/or falls in a recognised shortage occupation.
Build in compliance: stricter rules on employer liability, postings, and worker change of employer apply.



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