Immigration
The Armenia Work Permit Process Step by Step
The Armenia work permit and Temporary Residence Card process is integrated into a single workflow on the workpermit.am platform. There is no separate work-permit-then-visa sequence. The employer drives the process, the Ministry of Labor and Social Affairs (MLSA) carries out the labor market test and the application review, and the employee collects a Temporary Residence Card at the end of approximately 30 business days. This page covers the five canonical steps and the practical timing of each.
Our role end-to-end is documented on the parent Immigration and Work Authorization hub. This page is the operational walkthrough.
Step 1 — Employer registration on workpermit.am
The employer — your Armenian entity, or the Employer of Record arrangement under which we hold the employment relationship on your behalf — registers on workpermit.am and creates an authorized account. The registration is digital; physical paperwork is not part of the modern workflow. We handle this on behalf of clients who do not yet have an active workpermit.am account.
Step 2 — Labor market test
The vacancy is posted in the system to allow Armenian citizens to apply. For specialized or senior roles, this is typically procedural and clears in 5–7 days. The labor market test is the mechanism through which the MLSA confirms that a foreign hire is filling a role for which a qualified Armenian candidate is not available. For exempt categories — executives, foreign-payroll employees, EAEU citizens, and others — the test does not apply at all; see the Work Permit Exemptions page for the full list.
Step 3 — Application submission
The employer uploads the employee’s passport copy with notarized Armenian translation, qualification documents, photos, and the signed employment contract. As of January 2026 the employment contract must be created and signed on the unified electronic contract platform with Armenian digital signatures; the Armenian Employment Contracts page covers the platform requirements in detail. Government fees are paid at this stage.
Step 4 — Processing
The MLSA reviews the application. Standard processing takes approximately 30 business days. Straightforward specialist cases with clean documentation may process faster. We monitor the application in the platform and respond to any documentation queries in real time so processing is not paused by a missed correspondence.
Step 5 — Temporary Residence Card issuance
On approval, the employee collects their Temporary Residence Card at the Joint Office of Public Services in Yerevan. The card authorizes both residence and employment for up to one year. It is renewable annually for up to four consecutive years, with eligibility for permanent residence after five years. The renewal mechanics and the dependent permit workflow live on the Temporary Residence Card page.
What the fee structure looks like
| Item | Amount |
|---|---|
| Work permit fee | AMD 25,000 (~$52) |
| Temporary Residence Card fee | AMD 105,000 (~$219) |
| Total government fee per standard application | approximately $270 |
The fees are modest in absolute terms. The work permit application’s government cost is not the driver of the relocation budget. The drivers are document preparation, notarized translation, contract drafting on the e-contract platform, and the time of an HR team that does not specialize in Armenian regulatory procedure. That is the work we absorb.
What can extend the timeline
Three things stretch the standard 30-business-day window. Documentation gaps — for example, a passport whose validity is too short, or qualifications that lack apostille — pause processing while the missing item is sourced. Contract issues on the e-contract platform — typically resolvable in days but requiring back-and-forth — extend timing. Exemption ambiguity — a case that looks borderline between the standard application and an exempt category — may benefit from an exemption analysis pass before filing, which takes 1–2 business days. We treat each of these as preventable rather than acceptable.
Compliance and the next step
Once the Temporary Residence Card is issued, employer-side compliance kicks in immediately. Withheld taxes are remitted by the 20th of the following month and monthly personalized reports go to tax authorities; the Payroll Tax and Compliance page covers the full schedule. Renewal procedures begin 60–90 days before expiration on our standard cadence so there is no compliance gap.
Pricing is indicative and subject to custom quoting based on your requirements.
Frequently asked questions
Does the labor market test always apply?
The labor market test is part of the standard process. For specialized or senior roles it clears in 5–7 days and is typically procedural. For roles where a qualified Armenian candidate could plausibly fill the position, the test may extend the timeline. Exemption categories — executives, foreign-payroll employees, EAEU citizens, and others — bypass the test entirely; see the exemptions page.
What documents does the employee need?
Passport copy with notarized Armenian translation, qualification documents, photos, and a signed employment contract. We prepare the documentation, coordinate the notarized translation, and submit the application through workpermit.am.
When does the employee actually start working?
Legally, the employee may start working when the Temporary Residence Card is issued at the end of the standard 30-business-day processing window. The card authorizes both residence and employment for up to one year. In practice we time the start date around card pickup at the Joint Office of Public Services in Yerevan.
Can the employee be in Armenia during processing?
Yes. Citizens of the United States, EU member states, the United Kingdom, and many other countries can enter visa-free for up to 180 days per year. That window covers in-country processing without a separate pre-arrival visa. Visa-free entry does not authorize work — the employee must wait for the Temporary Residence Card before beginning employment.
What does the fee structure look like?
AMD 25,000 (~$52) work permit fee and AMD 105,000 (~$219) Temporary Residence Card fee. The full government fee load for a standard integrated application is therefore approximately $270 per employee.
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