Qatar
Qatar's residence system is built on employer or self-sponsorship: the overwhelming majority of expatriates hold a temporary Work Residence Permit (Qatar ID) tied to a sponsor (the kafala system, reformed since 2020) and renewable annually, with family members sponsored separately once an income threshold (commonly cited around QAR 10,000/month) and suitable housing are in place. A small long-term tier exists via Permanent Residency under Law No. 10 of 2018 (children of Qatari women, spouses of Qataris, people of special competence or service, and long-term residents) and via real-estate investment under Law No. 16 of 2018 and Cabinet Resolution No. 28 of 2020, where roughly USD 200,000 grants a renewable property-linked residence permit and USD 1,000,000 qualifies for permanent residency. There is no conventional points-based or standalone freelance route; independent professionals operate through QFC, QFZA or QSTP company structures that allow self-sponsored residence. Naturalisation under Law No. 38 of 2005 is theoretically possible after 25 continuous years of legal residence (with Arabic proficiency, lawful income and a reported annual cap of around 50 grants) but is in practice almost never available to ordinary migrants, and Qatar does not permit dual nationality. In short, permanent residence is attainable for a narrow, high-value or long-resident minority, while citizenship is effectively out of reach for typical migrants.
Imigrācijas ceļi
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The standard route to live and work in Qatar: a Qatari-licensed employer sponsors the worker, secures a work/entry visa, and converts it into a Work Residence Permit (Qatar ID) after arrival, medical and biometrics. Renewable, normally annually or up to the contract term.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Visa approval typically a few weeks; conversion of the entry visa to a Residence Permit usually 2-4 weeks after arrival once medical and biometrics are complete
- Derīgums
- Usually 1 year (up to the employment-contract term), renewable
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 5
- Pastāvīgā dzīvesvieta
- Jā · No automatic PR; long-term residents can apply for Permanent Residency under Law No. 10 of 2018, generally after about 20 years of lawful residence (discretionary)
- Pilsonība
- Jā · Theoretically eligible to apply for naturalisation after 25 continuous years of legal residence (Law No. 38 of 2005); in practice rarely granted
Students accepted by a Qatari educational institution receive an education entry visa that is converted into a Student Residence Permit after arrival. The sponsoring institution manages most of the process.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Typically 2-4 weeks after the institution submits documents; permit conversion within 7-14 days of arrival
- Derīgums
- Duration of the study programme, renewed annually
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 5
Qatar has no dedicated freelance visa; independent professionals work legally by registering an individual entity or professional licence under the QFC or a free zone, which then sponsors their residence. A private employer sponsor is not required.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Several weeks to a few months depending on the jurisdiction and licence type
- Derīgums
- Renewable residence permit tied to the active licence
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 4
Foreigners can set up a company in mainland Qatar (MOCI) or in the QFC / Qatar Free Zones (QFZA) / Qatar Science & Technology Park (QSTP) and sponsor their own residence permit as an investor or key employee, with 100% foreign ownership available in QFC and the free zones.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Company setup and immigration registration typically several weeks to a few months depending on jurisdiction
- Derīgums
- Renewable residence permit tied to the active company licence
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 4
- Pastāvīgā dzīvesvieta
- Jā · No automatic PR; long-term investors/residents may later qualify under Permanent Residency categories (Law No. 10 of 2018)
Foreigners buying approved freehold real estate worth at least USD 200,000 (about QAR 730,000) in designated zones receive a renewable residence permit for themselves and family; this is Qatar's property-based 'golden' residency tier, distinct from full permanent residency (which requires the USD 1,000,000 tier).
- Apstrādes laiks
- Typically several weeks to a few months for a well-prepared application
- Derīgums
- Renewable residence permit tied to continued property ownership
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 6
- Pastāvīgā dzīvesvieta
- Jā · Upgrading to Permanent Residency requires reaching the USD 1,000,000 (~QAR 3.65M) investment tier
An expatriate resident may sponsor a spouse and children for individual Family Residence Visas, provided they meet an income threshold (commonly cited around QAR 10,000/month) and have suitable housing. Each dependant receives a separate residence permit.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Typically a few weeks; family residence permit usually issued 2-4 weeks after submission/arrival
- Derīgums
- Tied to the sponsor's permit (commonly 1 year), renewable
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 7
- Pastāvīgā dzīvesvieta
- Jā · No automatic PR; long-term family residents may fall within Permanent Residency categories (e.g. children of Qatari mothers) under Law No. 10 of 2018
Qatar's permanent residency grants near-citizen privileges (healthcare, education, certain business/property rights) to a narrow set of categories: long-term residents (generally ~20 years) of special value, children of Qatari mothers, spouses of Qataris, those of special service or competence, and high-end (USD 1M) investors. Highly discretionary and administered by a dedicated MOI committee.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Discretionary; can take several months to over a year, subject to MOI committee review
- Derīgums
- Permanent status subject to compliance and periodic MOI eligibility review
- Valodas prasība
- Nav nepieciešams valodas sertifikāts
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 5
- Pastāvīgā dzīvesvieta
- Jā · This is the permanent residency itself
- Pilsonība
- Jā · Does not guarantee citizenship; naturalisation remains governed by Law No. 38 of 2005 (25 years residence, discretionary, rarely granted)
Naturalisation is legally possible after 25 continuous years of lawful residence with Arabic proficiency, good conduct and lawful income, but is reportedly capped (around 50 grants/year), highly discretionary, and in practice almost never available to ordinary migrants. Qatar does not allow dual nationality. Realistically out of reach for typical migrants.
- Apstrādes laiks
- Indefinite and discretionary; grants are rare and reportedly capped
- Derīgums
- Permanent (citizenship) if granted
- Valodas prasība
- Good knowledge of Arabic
- Dokumenti
- Nepieciešami 5
- Pilsonība
- Jā · Eligible to apply after 25 continuous years of lawful residence; in practice almost never granted to ordinary migrants