Work & Business Guide in Haiti
Job market, business opportunities, and work permits for expats
Employment Rate
34.0%Low formal employment rate with approximately two-thirds of labor force engaged in subsistence farming and informal economy. Significant underemployment and unemployment, particularly among youth. Services sector (25% of labor force) and agriculture (66% in 2004) dominate employment. Gang violence and political instability have further reduced formal job availability.
Startup Ecosystem
25.0%Severely limited startup ecosystem with minimal venture capital, weak institutional support, and high operational barriers. No established incubators or accelerators. Entrepreneurs face challenges including poor infrastructure, corruption, energy shortages, and limited access to financing. Most business activity remains informal or family-based. Diaspora remittances occasionally fund small ventures.
Average Salary Range
HTG 24,000 - HTG 96,000 annually
Average formal sector salaries range from 24,000–96,000 HTG annually (approximately $2,000–$8,000 USD at 2026 rates). Manufacturing and services sector workers earn toward lower end; skilled professionals and management earn higher. Informal sector wages significantly lower. Purchasing power severely limited by 28%+ inflation (2025). Cost of living high relative to wages.
Work Visa Requirements
EU citizens require a valid passport. Tourist visa (90 days) granted on arrival. Work permits required for employment; must be sponsored by Haitian employer. No special EU work visa program exists.
Passport required; tourist visa (90 days) issued on arrival. Work authorization requires employer sponsorship and approval from Haitian Ministry of Social Affairs. Visa extension and work permit processes are slow and bureaucratic. No digital nomad or special investor visa programs.
Haiti has a relatively open tourist visa policy (90 days on arrival) but work authorization is restrictive and employer-dependent. Both EU and non-EU citizens must secure employer sponsorship. No streamlined pathways for remote workers or entrepreneurs. Processing times are lengthy and unpredictable due to weak institutional capacity.
Business Registration
4–8 weeks
HTG 0
Business registration occurs through the Direction Générale des Impôts (DGI) and requires company name registration, tax identification number (NIF), and business license. No formal minimum capital requirement, but registration is slow and bureaucratic. Corruption and opaque processes common. Online registration limited. Most businesses operate informally to avoid regulatory burden and high compliance costs.
Remote Work Policies
No formal legal framework for remote work. Labor code does not explicitly address remote or work-from-home arrangements. Employment contracts typically require on-site presence.
Remote work remains informal and limited, primarily among diaspora-connected companies and international organizations. Telecommunications infrastructure (internet reliability, power supply) is unreliable in many areas, limiting remote work viability. Growing informally among tech-savvy professionals in Port-au-Prince and Cap-Haïtien. No co-working culture or digital nomad infrastructure.
Key Industries
Job Opportunities by Sector
Haiti's largest export sector (77% of exports to US). Assembly operations employ thousands. Positions include machine operators, quality inspectors, supervisors, and logistics coordinators. Wages: $3,000–$6,000 USD annually. Growth limited by competition and infrastructure challenges. HOPE/HELP trade agreements provide preferential market access.
Coffee, cocoa, mangoes, and vetiver oil production employ majority of workforce. Opportunities in cultivation, processing, export logistics, and quality control. Subsistence farming dominates but commercial export sector growing. Wages: $2,000–$5,000 USD annually. Seasonal employment significant. Climate vulnerability and soil degradation pose long-term risks.
Growing sector (52% of GDP in 2004, 25% of labor force). Opportunities in banking, telecommunications, retail, hospitality, and transportation. Companies like Natcom (telecom) and Unibank (finance) are major employers. Wages: $4,000–$10,000 USD annually for skilled positions. English language skills valued.
Private home building and construction identified as subsector with positive growth prospects. Positions in project management, skilled trades, engineering, and real estate. Wages: $3,500–$8,000 USD annually. Growth driven by diaspora investment and remittances. Infrastructure development projects create opportunities.
Leading industries include beverages, flour, refined sugar, edible oils, and butter production. Major employers include Brasserie Nationale d'Haïti. Positions in production, quality assurance, packaging, and distribution. Wages: $3,000–$7,000 USD annually. Domestic market focus with some export potential.
Significant presence of UN agencies, World Bank, and international NGOs provide employment for skilled professionals. Positions in program management, monitoring & evaluation, logistics, and administration. Wages: $8,000–$20,000+ USD annually (significantly higher than local market). Requires advanced education and English fluency. Competitive hiring processes.
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