2025-07-07
If you need to apply for a visa, you can now do so in Islamabad
As of 7 July, you can apply for a Schengen visa in Pakistan for short visits to Sweden by submitting your application in Islamabad.
You have an ICT permit or an ICT permit for long-term mobility in Sweden and want to extend your permit. You can apply for an extension of any family member’s residence permit at the same time.
If you want to continue working in Sweden, you can apply for an extension of your ICT permit.
If anyone in your family already has a residence permit to live with you in Sweden, you can apply together to extend your permits.
If your family wants to move in with you for the first time, they must submit their own application at a later date. In such a case, you must meet a maintenance requirement.
If you have worked in Sweden with an ICT permit or some other type of work permit for at least four years, you can also choose to apply for a permanent residence permit at the same time. You apply for a permanent residence permit when you apply for an extension of your current permit.
If any of your family members has had a residence permit to live with you in Sweden for at least three years, they can apply for a permanent residence permit at the same time as you. The Swedish Migration Agency will then first consider your application for a permanent residence permit. If you are granted a permanent residence permit, your family member’s application will then be examined.
If your family members cannot be granted a permanent residence permit, the Swedish Migration Agency will assess whether they can be granted a temporary residence permit. If they are granted such a permit, they can then apply for a permanent residence permit the next time it is time to apply for an extended permit.
You must have a valid passport
You must have employment that meets the requirements for an ICT permit
Your remuneration, insurance, and other terms and conditions of employment must be at least on par with Swedish collective agreements or in line with the practice that applies in your profession or industry.
You must have employment that meets the requirements for an EU Blue Card
Your salary/wages must be on par with the current salary threshold for the EU Blue Card. Your salary/wages, insurance, and other terms and conditions of employment, as well as any other terms and conditions of your employment contract must be at least on par with Swedish collective agreements or in line with the practice that applies in your profession or industry.
You must have had an EU Blue Card or permit for work for at least four years
You must have had, and met the conditions for, an EU Blue Card or some other type of work permit and have worked in Sweden for four of the past seven years.
You must be able to support yourself financially
To get a permanent residence permit, you must be able to support yourself through income from employment or your own company, or a combination of the two. You may add together income from one or more part-time jobs, provided that all the positions meet the below requirements and the total income is sufficient to be able to support yourself financially.
You must be able to show that you can support yourself financially for a long time to come. If you do not have a permanent position, we always make an individual assessment of whether your income is reliable.
Your employment must be serious. For example, the Swedish Migration Agency can check that your employer is able to pay you the wages/salary you specified in your application.
People who support themselves financially through self-employment must demonstrate that their company has realistic business plans and stable finances, so that you can be expected to be able to support yourself through your profits for a considerable period of time.
Only the income you actually have when we consider your application counts. You cannot get a permanent residence permit based on your chances of getting another job or higher income sometime in the future.
You may only count taxed income from legal employment. This means that you must have permission to work or be exempt from the requirement to have a work permit. You may not count undeclared income, nor income from a profession that you are not licensed to practise.
You may count parental benefits or sickness benefits, provided that you have ongoing employment and your parental leave or sick leave is not assessed to be longer than 12 months.
To count income from your business, you must show that you own at least half of the company and that you have decisive responsibility for its operations. It is also required that you run the company professionally, independently and for profit.
If you wait too long to apply for a permanent residence permit (after your current permit has expired), you will not have the right to work while you wait for a decision and therefore will not meet the maintenance requirement.
Your income after tax must be high enough so that after you pay your monthly housing costs, you still have a certain amount of money left over that can cover the costs of food, clothing, hygiene, telephone, electricity, and insuring yourself, among other things. In 2025, that amount is SEK 6,186 per month for a single adult. If you have a child with whom you do not live and you pay maintenance to the child’s other parent, your wages/salary must also be sufficient to cover their maintenance allowance.
The housing costs that your wages must be sufficient to cover each month depend on the type of home in which you live:
Amortisation of home loans is not included in housing costs.
You only need to be able to support yourself, not your family members. If you live alone or with underage children, you must include your entire actual housing costs in your calculation. However, if you live with one or more other adults, you should divide your actual housing costs by the number of adults in the household and only include your share in the calculation, no matter how much each person actually pays for your housing.
You may not count income from
Pensions do not count as income either, but people who receive a pension may be exempt from the requirement that they must be able support themselves financially.
Exemptions from the maintenance requirement can be made if
If you can submit a decision from the Swedish Pensions Agency that shows that you are entitled to an income-based retirement pension, guarantee pension, or financial support for the elderly, then you are exempt from the requirement to be able to support yourself financially. It is the right to a pension that is crucial, not whether you actually take out a pension or the size of your pension. Both guarantee pensions and financial support for the elderly can be paid out no sooner than the month you turn 66. Income-based old-age pensions can be paid out no sooner than the month you turn 63. If you have reached the age of 63 but not 66, you must show that you have retired and started to take out your income-based old-age pension. It is your age on the date of the decision that matters.
Exemptions from the maintenance requirement may also be made if other special grounds exist which are not temporary. For example, you may be unable to meet the maintenance requirement on the grounds of permanently impaired working capacity, for example due to illness or disability. This can also apply if you are unemployed and so close to retirement age that it is difficult to get a new job. Exemptions can also be granted if it is not reasonable to request that you be able to support yourself financially. For example, such exemptions are granted for monks and nuns.
If you believe that you have special grounds for exemption from the maintenance requirement, please attach documents showing that you have, for example, a permanently impaired ability to work. Such proof may take the form of an investigation by the Swedish Public Employment Service, a decision on entitlement to sickness benefits, sickness benefits or activity compensation from the Swedish Social Insurance Agency, or a medical certificate.
You must live a well-behaved life
In order to get a permanent residence permit in Sweden, it is important that you cannot be assumed to commit a crime in the future. For this reason, it is a requirement that applicants for a permanent residence permit can be expected to live a well-behaved life. To be able to assess this, the Swedish Migration Agency needs to look at how you have lived so far, for example if you have been convicted or suspected of any crime in Sweden or abroad.
There are no detailed rules on the types of crimes or the length of the penalty that may prevent a person from being granted a permanent residence permit. It is not only serious crimes that are taken into account. Even less serious ones can be an obstacle, if you misbehaved in other ways at the same time.
If there is reason to suspect that you will not live a well-behaved life in the future, the Swedish Migration Agency will weigh these concerns against the reasons for granting you a permanent residence permit. We take into account how you have misbehaved and how long ago the events took place.
Exemptions to this so-called “good conduct qualification” are made only for children under the age of 15.
If you do not meet the requirements for a permanent residence permit, you may still be able to be granted an extended ICT permit, if you meet the requirements.
In order for your family members to be granted residence permits on the grounds that they are your close relatives, and you have now been granted a permanent residence permit, you must meet a maintenance requirement.
Maintenance requirement for the person in Sweden
To get a permanent residence permit, each family member must meet the following requirements:
Exemptions to this so-called “good conduct qualification” are only made for children under the age of 15.
Correctly made copies of your passport
If your passport is about to expire, you should extend it, because you cannot get a permit for longer than your passport is valid.
Read more about what the passport copies must show
Your employment contract from your employer in your country of origin
Traineeship/internship agreement
If you are a trainee/intern.
Income information from the Swedish Tax Agency
You must submit a summary of your PAYE tax return from the Swedish Tax Agency for all years that you have worked in Sweden, which shows both your total income and who has paid your salary/wages or other sources of income.
Pay slips
Pay slips for the current year.
Degree certificate/register extract from your university
If you are a trainee/intern.
Insurance company information
Information about the insurance company with which your employer has taken out insurance, your insurance policy number, and the period for which the insurance is valid.
A representative can apply for you, if you grant them power of attorney. To do this, you must attach a copy of the power of attorney to your application.
Correctly made copies of each family member’s passport
Your family member can never be granted a residence permit for longer than their passport is valid.
Read more about what the passport copies must show
Documents showing that you can support yourself and your family financially, if you are applying for an extension and your family is applying for the first time
If you are applying for an extension and your family is applying for the first time, you must show that your income is sufficient to support yourself and your family financially. Examples of documents that can be attached include rental agreements, purchase contracts, and notices, as well as information about your income, such as employment contracts and payslips.
If you are applying for permanent residence and your family is applying for residence at the same time as you, you must be able to show that your income is sufficient to support yourself and your family and that you have a home of sufficient size and standard for you to live in.
Documents showing that you have housing
If you rent your home, you must submit a copy of your rental contract. You must also attach a rental notice for the previous month’s rent (1 month).
The contract must include:
If you sublet your home, you must also submit documents showing that your landlord, tenant-owner association, or local rent tribunal has approved the rental arrangement. When a person in Sweden sublets a rented flat, it is the property owner who is the landlord, not the holder of the first-hand contract. A contract or agreement must be signed.
If you own your home, you must submit a copy of the purchase contract or another transfer document stating that you own the property. If the number of rooms is not stated in the document, you can attach a floor plan, housing specification, or similar document.
You must also submit documents showing what housing costs you have. Regardless of whether you live in a tenant-owned flat, house, or detached house, you must submit documents showing what interest expenses you have and how much mortgage you are paying.
If you live in a tenant-owned flat, you must submit copies of documents showing their monthly fees and other possible operating costs that are not included in the monthly fee, such as heating, electricity, and water bills.
If you live in a house or detached house, you must submit documents showing its operating costs. For example, these may include fees for heating, water, garbage collection, sewerage, community fees, property fees, or other costs tied to the home.
Documents showing that you have an income
If you work, you need to send in a copy of your employment contract. The employment contract must state:
You also need to submit a copy of your latest payslip. It must include:
If your employment lasts longer than a year, you need to send in a copy of your employment contract and latest payslip.
If your employment is hourly or on-demand, you must send in a copy of their employment contract and three most recent payslips.
If your current employment will be terminated within the year and you have previously had fixed-term jobs, you also need to submit your previous employment contracts for the past year.
You can also submit documents showing that you are a member of an unemployment insurance fund (A-kassa) and that you will receive compensation from the fund if you become unemployed.
You need to submit a copy of the decision from the unemployment insurance fund and a statement detailing their payments to you. The documents should specify how much compensation you receive and the period for which you are entitled to compensation.
You need to send in a copy of the decision from the Swedish Social Insurance Agency stating the type and amount of compensation you receive. The documents should state the period during which you are entitled to compensation from the Swedish Social Insurance Agency.
If you only, or in addition to an employment, have a sole proprietorship or is a partner in a trading or limited partnership, your income consists of your share of the surplus from your own company, after deductions for personal contributions. This usually means the surplus from business activity that you declare in your income tax return.
You can show their income by submitting:
If you are a partner in a limited company, you can show that you receive salary or other remuneration from your limited company by submitting the following documents:
You need to submit a copy of the decision showing the type of pension you have and how much pension you receive (annually or monthly). For example, you can do this by providing a copy of a decision from the Swedish Pensions Agency.
You can apply for an extension no more than two months before your current permit will expire. You must apply before your current permit expires.
If you apply too late
If you apply for too late, i.e. after your residence permit has expired, you will not be able to work while you wait for a decision. You also risk losing certain social benefits.
Moreover, if you apply too late, there is a risk your application will be rejected because you will have been in Sweden without a valid residence permit.
If you apply for a permanent residence permit at the same time
The Swedish Migration Agency recommends that you submit your application no more than one month before your current permit expires. This is because we can only make a decision regarding your application for a permanent residence permit after your current permit has expired.
The permit can be extended for up to three years if you work as a manager or specialist, or up to one year if you are a trainee/intern.
A family member can be granted a residence permit for the same period as you if you are granted an ICT permit, but never for longer than their passport is valid.
If you are granted a permanent residence permit, it is valid for as long as you are resident in Sweden.
Employees/self-employed people: SEK 2,000.
Adult family members: SEK 1,500
Children: SEK 750
Citizens of Japan do not pay an application fee.
You will not receive a refund if your application is rejected.
It is not possible to say exactly how long you will need to wait for a decision. There are many things that affect the waiting time, for example whether your application is complete to begin with or whether we need to request more information, or whether we need to check with other authorities when investigating your case.
Here we show statistics on how long it has taken for people who have applied for the same permit as you. The statistics are based on cases decided in the last 12 months.
If you want to continue working in Sweden after your work permit expires, you need to extend it. You can apply for an extension no more than two months before your current permit will expire.
Before you apply for an extended work permit, you need to have an employment agreement signed by you and your employer.
It is the employer who starts the extension application in the e-service.
The employer sends information about the employment to the relevant trade union for the industry to which the employment relates. The trade union is given the opportunity to comment on the terms and conditions of employment.
Once the employer has completed their part, you will receive an email with a link to the e-service, where you must fill in your part of the application. You fill in the application and attach the necessary documents.
It is important that you submit your extension application before your current permit expires. That way, you will have the right to stay in Sweden until we make a decision, even if your current permit expires.
Now follows a period of waiting until the Swedish Migration Agency takes a closer look at your application.
If you applied before your current permit expired, you have the right to continue working for your employer while you wait for a decision.
The Swedish Migration Agency will review all the information about your application and determine whether you can be granted an extended permit.
We will contact you if we need more information.
By logging in to My Page, you can access information about your application and use our services.
To get a new residence permit card, you need to be photographed and fingerprinted. If you did not do this when you submitted your application, you must book an appointment to do so at one of the Swedish Migration Agency’s service centres. If your family is applying with you, they must also book an appointment.
You may need to present your passport before we can make a decision. You only need to do this if we have not already checked it on a previous visit, or if you have received a new passport since you last presented it.
Certain applicants will be offered the option of presenting their passport in a digital passport check conducted via an app.
If you need to present your passport, we will contact you with information about how and when you can do so.
You are waiting for a decision – You have applied for an extension
As soon as we have made a decision, you will receive an email or letter stating whether you have been granted a work permit or if your application has been rejected. When you receive the decision, you can find out the reasons on which we based it. If you are granted a residence permit, you have the right to live and work in Sweden as long as the permit is valid. If your application is rejected and you are currently in Sweden, you must prepare to leave the country.
Before you start your part of the application, you must have assembled the documents you will need to attach.
See which documents you must attach under the Important to know tab
Your employer in Sweden will start your application by submitting information about your employment to the Swedish Migration Agency. To do this, your employer needs information about your name, date of birth, citizenship and email address. Once your employer has completed their part of the application, you will receive a link via email, which you should use to continue with your part of the application. Only once you have completed and submitted your part of the application will it be registered with the Swedish Migration Agency.
Once you have received the email with the link, log in to the e-service and fill in the information about yourself. You must also check that the information about your terms and conditions of employment corresponds to what you and your employer have agreed. Once you have completed your part of the application and have submitted it, it will be registered with the Swedish Migration Agency.
Keep in mind that your application must be registered with the Swedish Migration Agency before your current permit has expired. It is not enough for your employer to have filled in their part.
When you apply in the e-service, you can include your family in your own application.
To apply in the e-service, you must
Employees/self-employed people: SEK 2,000.
Adult family members: SEK 1,500
Children: SEK 750
Citizens of Japan do not pay an application fee.
You will not receive a refund if your application is rejected.
If you are unable to apply in the e-service, your employer must fill in form Information about the employment (232511) Pdf, 818.4 kB., and send it to you. You must then send it in together with your application.
You fill in the form:
Application for an ICT permit to work in Sweden (185011) Pdf, 874.4 kB.
If your family is applying with you, each family member must fill in the form:
You can either submit the application and the attached documents at one of the Swedish Migration Agency’s service centres or send them to:
Migrationsverket
Box 3100
903 03 Umeå
Once we have received your application, we will contact you via email or letter with information on how to make the payment and how much you must pay.
2025-07-07
If you need to apply for a visa, you can now do so in Islamabad
As of 7 July, you can apply for a Schengen visa in Pakistan for short visits to Sweden by submitting your application in Islamabad.
2025-06-30
Payment to bankgiro is no longer possible
The bankgiro account that could previously be used to pay application and processing fees is closed from 30 June.
2025-06-23
What happens if the company you work for goes bankrupt?
If the company you work for goes bankrupt and you have a work permit to work for this employer, you will need to find a new job within three months to stay in Sweden.
2025-06-17
New median wage affects how high a salary you need to get a work permit
Statistics Sweden (SCB) has now updated the median salary in Sweden. As of 17 June, the median salary is SEK 37,100, which means that you must have a salary/wages of at least SEK 29,680 a month in order to be granted a work permit.
2025-06-02
Due to the bankruptcy of Northvolt, the Swedish Migration Agency will be on site in Skellefteå to answer your questions about residence and work permits in Sweden.
2025-05-20
Are you going to visit the National Government Service Centre?
From May onwards, there will be changes to which of the Government Service Centers offer the services of the Swedish Migration Agency.
2025-05-20
One of the requirements for being granted a work permit is that the salary must enable you to make a good living. A new ruling from the Migration Court of Appeal clarifies what counts as a salary.
2025-04-01
From 1 April, the possibility of changing tracks will end
On 1 April, the Swedish Parliament’s decision to remove the possibility of changing tracks will come into force. This affects those who have been granted, or applied for, a work permit after an asylum application has been rejected. Your co-applicant family members will also be affected.
2025-02-07
Bulgaria, Croatia and Romania are now part of the Schengen area. Legal residents of these countries shall, from 24 February 2025 turn to one of the five Schengen hubs for migration related matters.