Denmark Needs 70,000 Foreign Workers in 2026 and Just Rewrote Its Immigration Rules to Get Them

Denmark launched a brand-new immigration scheme in January 2026 to fast-track skilled and unskilled foreign workers from 16 countries. Here is what changed, who qualifies, which sectors are hiring, and how to apply.
Denmark Needs 70,000 Foreign Workers in 2026 and Just Rewrote Its Immigration Rules to Get Them
Denmark does not get talked about as much as Germany or the Netherlands when people discuss moving abroad for work. That is a mistake in 2026, because the country has roughly 50,000 job vacancies for skilled workers right now, expects to need over 70,000 foreign workers annually by the end of this year, and just introduced a new immigration scheme in January 2026 specifically designed to pull skilled and even unskilled workers from abroad faster than before.
The combination of a fast-growing tech sector, an expanding green energy industry, a healthcare system under genuine pressure from an aging population, and one of the highest average wages in Europe creates a job market that is unusually welcoming to international applicants who know how to navigate it.
Here is how the system works, what changed this year, and what you actually need to do.
What Changed in January 2026
Denmark launched a new immigration scheme at the start of 2026 that allows certified employers to recruit foreign workers, both skilled and unskilled, from 16 designated countries. The list includes the United States, India, and Brazil among others. The scheme operates through employers who are certified by the Danish Agency for International Recruitment and Integration, known as SIRI, and it is designed for roles covered by collective bargaining agreements with unions.
This is significant for two reasons. First, it now includes unskilled workers in a formal recruitment pathway, which was not previously a clear option under Danish immigration rules. Second, it allows fast-track authorization so that eligible workers can begin employment while their permits are still being processed, which dramatically reduces the time between hiring and actual start date.
- For certified employers under this scheme, the minimum annual salary is DKK 300,000, and permits issued through it are valid for three years and renewable.
- Outside of this new scheme, Denmark’s existing immigration pathways remain in place and are worth understanding alongside the newer option.
The Three Main Pathways for Foreign Workers
The Positive List for Skilled Work is Denmark’s shortage occupation list, and it is updated twice a year, in January and July, based on current labor market data. If your occupation appears on this list, you can apply for a Danish work and residence permit relatively quickly without needing to pass a full labor market test. The January 2026 update added new roles and removed those no longer in shortage.
The Positive List has two parts. One covers vocational-level roles where you have completed a recognized trade qualification, and the other covers university-level professionals. Fields currently featuring heavily include IT and software development, engineering across multiple disciplines, nursing and allied health, renewable energy, manufacturing trades, and teachers in specific subjects. Checking the current list at nyidanmark.dk is essential before you apply, since job titles must match the listed classifications.
The Pay Limit Scheme is for high-earning professionals in any field. If your job offer includes a gross annual salary of at least DKK 448,000, you do not need your occupation to be on the Positive List and you do not need a labor market test. The permit is valid for two years and renewable. This is the cleanest pathway for senior professionals in technology, finance, consulting, and management who receive high-compensation offers from Danish employers.
The Fast Track Scheme allows SIRI-certified companies to sponsor foreign workers with significantly shorter processing times, sometimes within days rather than months. Only companies with certified status can use this, and certification requires demonstrating that the employer complies with Danish employment law and is able to integrate foreign workers properly. Large multinationals and major Danish employers frequently hold this status.
Who Is Hiring and What It Pays
Denmark’s economy is concentrated around a number of industries that are particularly active right now. The green energy sector is one of the most important. Denmark is home to Orsted, the world’s largest developer of offshore wind energy, and the broader wind, solar, and sustainable technology sector employs tens of thousands. Engineers, project managers, and technicians in renewable energy are consistently among the most needed profiles nationally.
Technology is another major driver. Copenhagen has developed into a genuine European tech hub, with startups and established companies in fintech, medtech, and software all recruiting internationally. The Danish government has invested heavily in digital infrastructure, and the resulting ecosystem creates demand for software developers, data engineers, cybersecurity professionals, and product specialists.
Healthcare pressure is significant. Denmark has an aging population and persistent shortages across nursing, general practice, specialist medicine, physiotherapy, and elderly care. Healthcare roles require recognition of qualifications through the Danish Patient Safety Authority and often require Danish language competency at a functional level for patient-facing work.
Logistics and manufacturing are also active, particularly around the Aarhus and Odense regions, which are industrial hubs with consistent demand for skilled trade workers.
In terms of salary, Denmark pays well by European standards. Average monthly gross salaries range from DKK 35,000 to 55,000 depending on sector and experience, which converts to roughly 4,700 to 7,400 euros per month. Copenhagen is the highest-paying city, though it also carries the highest cost of living. Aarhus, Denmark’s second-largest city, is often described as the better balance between salary, cost of living, and quality of life for people relocating for work.
What You Actually Need to Apply
1. For the Positive List pathway, you need a confirmed job offer from a Danish employer for a role on the current list. The employer must apply for the permit on your behalf through SIRI’s online portal. Your salary and working conditions must meet Danish standards for the role, which generally means your contract needs to reflect collective bargaining agreement rates or national standards for your sector.
2. For the Pay Limit Scheme, the same process applies but the eligibility test is simply whether your salary meets the DKK 448,000 annual threshold. No occupation matching is required, which makes it more flexible for roles that sit outside the shortage list categories.
3. Documents you will typically need include your passport, a complete CV, your educational certificates and transcripts, proof of relevant work experience, a signed employment contract or job offer letter, and in some cases proof of health insurance. For regulated professions, you will also need recognition of your qualifications from the relevant Danish authority before the permit can proceed.
4. Application fees vary by permit type. The Pay Limit Scheme permit costs around DKK 6,000, which is approximately 800 euros. Dependent permits for family members are around DKK 3,000 each.
5. Processing time under standard pathways is generally one to two months once the application is complete. Under the Fast Track Scheme for certified employers, processing can happen in days.
The Language Question
Danish is not required for most permit applications. However, in practice, the language question matters for integration and career progression in ways that are worth being realistic about.
For tech, finance, and international business roles in Copenhagen, English is widely used and many companies operate in English as a working language. Learning Danish in this context is beneficial but not urgent for doing your job. For healthcare, education, public sector roles, and customer-facing work in smaller cities, Danish proficiency is either required or strongly expected.
The Danish government offers language integration support, and many employers contribute to Danish language training costs for incoming staff. Starting with some foundation study before arrival signals genuine commitment to employers and speeds up your ability to function outside the workplace.
Where to Find Roles That Sponsor Visas
~ For roles with Danish employer visa sponsorship, the most useful official resource is workindenmark.dk, which is the Danish government’s own international recruitment portal. It publishes vacancies specifically for international applicants and links directly to the SIRI information for each permit type.
~ The jobnet.dk platform is Denmark’s public employment service portal, covering vacancies across all sectors. LinkedIn with Denmark filters is widely used by Danish employers recruiting internationally, particularly in technology and finance. For healthcare specifically, the Danish Patient Safety Authority at stps.dk manages professional recognition, which is the prerequisite for healthcare permit applications.
~ The Positive List and current shortage occupations: nyidanmark.dk
~ Work in Denmark official portal: workindenmark.dk
~ SIRI official information on permits and certification: siri.dk
A Realistic Note on 2026 Rule Changes
1. Denmark also tightened some of its rules in January 2026. Application fees increased across most permit types. The Positive List for the January 2026 cycle has fewer job titles than some previous updates, because SIRI removed occupations that no longer meet the shortage threshold. Medical doctors and nurses face a specific restriction in 2026: Denmark has suspended new temporary residence permits for foreign doctors and nurses seeking Danish professional authorization until the end of December 2026. This does not affect people who already hold Danish authorization or who qualify through other existing pathways, but it is an important caveat for healthcare professionals planning their timeline.
2. The practical advice is to check the current Positive List before you apply rather than relying on a version you found online previously. The list updates every six months, and a title that was on it a year ago may no longer qualify you for the Positive List scheme today.
Why Denmark Is Worth Considering Seriously
Beyond the salary numbers, Denmark consistently ranks among the highest-quality countries in the world for work-life balance, social welfare, environmental quality, and overall life satisfaction. The country has strong union protections, parental leave that is genuinely used by both parents, subsidized childcare, and universal healthcare. Income taxes are high, but what taxes pay for is visible and functional in a way that is not always the case elsewhere.
For professionals in technology, green energy, engineering, and skilled trades, the combination of a genuine labor shortage, a government actively creating immigration pathways, and competitive compensation makes Denmark one of the stronger options in Europe right now.
The barrier is finding an employer willing to sponsor from outside Denmark, which remains easier for people who can demonstrate specific skills on the shortage list or who can access the new 2026 certified employer scheme through their designated country. Start your search through the workindenmark.dk portal and build directly from there.