Directive (EU) 2024/1233 – Single Permit (Recast): When it takes effect and what changes in EU labor immigration

Directive (EU) 2024/1233 – Single Permit (Recast): When it takes effect and what changes in EU labor immigration
April 22, 2026
6
 min read

In April 2024, the European Union adopted Directive (EU) 2024/1233, known as the Recast of the Single Permit Directive. The goal is to simplify and modernize immigration procedures for third-country workers wishing to live and work in European territory.The Directive is already in force at the European level, but its practical application depends on the transposition into the national law of each Member State. The deadline for this implementation is May 2026.

What is the Single Permit?The Single Permit is a single authorization that combines, in one document, the right of residence and the right to work. It replaces the multiple separate applications previously required in many European countries—centralizing administrative procedures and making the process more coherent for the worker.

What changes with the new Directive?Three changes stand out:

  • Applications from within EU territory: One of the most relevant changes is that holders of a valid residence permit in any Member State may apply for the Single Permit without needing to return to their country of origin. This rule should take effect from May 2026, unless a State implements it sooner.
  • Maximum decision period reduced to 90 days: The response time will become mandatory after national transposition. The 90-day period already includes any labor market tests.
  • Greater legal certainty: The Directive reinforces the principle of equal treatment between foreign and national workers, expands access to essential labor rights, and makes migration status more predictable and continuous.

What the Directive does NOT do:

  • It does not grant European citizenship.
  • It does not eliminate national immigration requirements.
  • It does not automatically regularize undocumented situations.

Each Member State remains competent to define minimum wages, establish working conditions, and evaluate applications individually.

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Hanna Fedalto
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