Afghanistan flagWork & Business Guide · Afghanistan

Work & Business Guide in Afghanistan

Job market, business opportunities, and work permits for expats

Afghanistan's economy is in recovery mode with 4.3% growth projected for 2025 after 2.5% in 2024, led by agriculture (34.7% of GDP), mining, construction, and services. Despite a fragile banking sector, high unemployment (13.3%), and restrictions on women's workforce participation, opportunities exist in agribusiness, mineral extraction, and infrastructure. With 44% of the labor force in agriculture and a young population, entrepreneurs can tap into untapped mineral wealth ($2.5T potential) and returnee-driven demand, though political stability and aid dependency pose risks.
Employment Rate
46.7%

Below-average employment rate with 13.3% unemployment (2021). High youth unemployment and limited women's participation exacerbate challenges. 45% in agriculture, strong labor force of 9.4M, but job creation lags population growth.

Startup Ecosystem
18.0%

Limited startup ecosystem due to regulatory uncertainty, fragile banking, and aid dependency. Minimal VC funding, few incubators, and weak entrepreneurial culture. Opportunities in mining/agri-tech exist but face credit access and market isolation issues.

Average Salary Range

AFN 180,000 - AFN 720,000 annually

Low salaries reflect $19.7B nominal GDP and $1,674 PPP per capita. Agriculture/mining: 180k-360k AFN; skilled services/construction: up to 720k AFN. Low purchasing power amid high poverty/food insecurity; regional variations with urban areas higher.

Work Visa Requirements

EU Citizens:

Visa required for stays over 30 days. Work permits needed via Taliban authorities; humanitarian/NGO roles common but approvals uncertain.

Non-EU Citizens:

Work visa and permit required through Ministry of Labor. Strict processes; skilled workers in aid/mining may qualify, but security checks delay approvals.

Visa policy under Taliban rule is restrictive and opaque since 2021. Applications via embassies or Kabul; timelines 1-3 months. Focus on aid, reconstruction; no digital nomad program. Documentation: invitation letter, contract, security clearance essential.

Business Registration

Timeline:

4-8 weeks

Registration via Afghanistan Investment Support Agency (AISA) or Ministry of Commerce. In-person process requires company docs, lease, IDs; no min capital for LLCs. High tax rate (71.4% profits), corruption risks, poor contract enforcement hinder ease of business.

Remote Work Policies

Legal Status:

No specific remote work laws; standard labor contracts apply under uncertain regulations.

Remote work rare due to poor internet (urban only), power outages, security issues. NGO/consulting sectors use it sporadically; no co-working hubs or nomad visas. Employers prefer on-site amid instability.

Key Industries

Agriculture
Mining
Construction
Services
Textiles
Energy

Job Opportunities by Sector

Agriculture:

79% livelihood-dependent; demand for farm managers, agribusiness specialists. Growth in cereals/fruits; opportunities in export (fruit/nuts). Low skills barrier, rural focus; vulnerable to drought/climate.

Mining:

Untapped $2.5T minerals (copper, rare earths); roles in extraction, geology, logistics. Chinese/Pakistani investments drive demand; high growth potential but security/contract risks.

Construction:

Infrastructure projects need engineers, laborers despite 40% contraction. Returnee demand boosts activity; short-term contracts common, urban opportunities.

Services & Trade:

Retail, transport growing with 2.3% sector rebound; jobs in wholesale, logistics. Aid-dependent but return migration spurs consumption; multilingual skills valued.

NGO & Aid:

World Bank/ADB projects ($2B+ since 2021) hire admins, specialists. Stable demand for internationals/locals in humanitarian, development roles; English/Dari required.