Slovenia is rolling out substantial changes to its migration and foreign employment system under amendments to the Foreigners Act (ZTuj-2I) and the Employment, Self-Employment and Work of Foreigners Act (ZZSDT-E). These reforms enter into force gradually throughout 2025, with the most important operational changes kicking in between 21 July 2025 and 21 November 2025.
As one of Slovenia’s leading providers of corporate immigration and business advisory services, SIBIZ outlines the key updates and strategic implications:
Measures Already in Force since 21 May 2025
Extended validity of permits
First Single Permit validity extended from 1 to 2 years
Renewals extended from 2 to 3 years
Lump-sum worker compensation
Employer must pay 3× gross minimum wage if a Single Permit is revoked due to certain breaches
Public register of sanctions
Employers banned from employing foreigners are now publicly listed
Key Legislative Milestones in 2025
21 July 2025
Implementation of new EU Blue Card rules and reforms promoting easier access to highly-qualified employment:
Salary threshold lowered to average gross salary
Minimum employment contract term reduced to 6 months
Professional ICT experience recognised even without a university degree
Start of employment allowed before final permit approval (shortage occupations) upon certificate and Employment Service consent
Simultaneous handling of applications for EU Blue Card and family member
21 November 2025
Launch of Digital Nomad Temporary Residence Permit for third-country nationals working remotely for a foreign employer:
One-year residence with requirement of income ≥ 2× Slovenian average net salary
Re-application possible after 6-month “cool-off”
Applications and fingerprinting permitted directly in Slovenia
Expansion of immediate family reunification rights to:
Digital nomad permit holders
Persons of Slovenian origin (up to 2nd degree)
Beneficiaries of temporary protection (e.g. Ukrainians)
Procedural innovations:
First-time temporary residence applications and fingerprint submission now possible inside Slovenia
EU citizens’ residence registration becomes unlimited (previous 5-year validity abolished)
What Employers Must Watch
Public register of non-compliant employers, with prohibitions on employing foreigners
Mandatory Slovene language training (80 hours) during work hours for fast-tracked workers
Obligation to compensate workers (3× gross minimum wage) if Single Permit revoked due to employer offences
New refusal ground where companies are established mainly to facilitate entry of third-country nationals
Condition that employers must not have dismissed workers due to business reasons in the previous 6 months, unless paying at least the average salary
Why This Matters
These reforms aim to simplify legal pathways for attracting international talent while strengthening controls against abuse. Employers will benefit from faster procedures, in-country filings, and longer permit validity, yet must adapt to new compliance obligations.
SIBIZ advises corporations, SMEs, business professionals and individual investors on all aspects of Slovenian labour migration and permits.
We provide full support in planning, obtaining and maintaining.
For tailored guidance ahead of the 21 July 2025 and 21 November 2025 changes, contact us at www.sibiz.eu
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