Mali flagWork & Business Guide · Mali

Work & Business Guide in Mali

Job market, business opportunities, and work permits for expats

Mali's economy is predominantly agrarian, with agriculture employing around 80% of the workforce and contributing significantly to GDP alongside gold mining, which dominates exports. Despite low GDP per capita and vulnerability to climate shocks, the country offers opportunities in agribusiness, mining services, and basic manufacturing. With a young population entering the labor market annually, job creation in rural development, energy infrastructure, and cotton processing presents potential for workers and entrepreneurs, though informality and insecurity pose challenges.
Employment Rate
97.2%

Very high employment rate reflecting massive informal and subsistence agriculture sector (80% of labor force). Official unemployment low at ~2.8%, but youth job creation lags with 235,000 entering market yearly. Gender gaps persist in rural areas.

Startup Ecosystem
25.0%

Limited startup ecosystem with minimal VC funding, few incubators, and weak government incentives. Focus on agriculture tech and mining services; entrepreneurial culture emerging but hampered by instability, poor infrastructure, and regulatory hurdles. No notable unicorns.

Average Salary Range

F CFA 480,000 - F CFA 2,400,000 annually

Minimum wage ~480,000 XOF/year for formal sector; averages low due to 80% informal employment. Mining/professional roles reach 2-5M XOF. Low purchasing power; rural cost of living minimal but urban Bamako higher. PPP-adjusted GDP per capita ~$2,200.

Work Visa Requirements

EU Citizens:

Visa required for stays over 90 days; work permit needed via employer sponsorship through Mali Ministry of Labor.

Non-EU Citizens:

Work visa and permit required; employer must prove no local available. Processing 1-3 months; long-stay visa for skilled workers in priority sectors like mining/agriculture.

Strict visa policy favoring investment in key sectors. No digital nomad or special skilled visas; applications via Malian embassies with job offer, medical checks. ECOWAS citizens have easier mobility. Timelines 4-12 weeks; insecurity may delay.

Business Registration

Timeline:

2-4 weeks

Registration via APIE (Investment Promotion Agency) or Chambre de Commerce; SARL most common structure, no min capital. Requires statutes, ID, lease; fees ~200,000 XOF. Online portal emerging but often in-person in Bamako. Ease of Doing Business rank low due to bureaucracy.

Remote Work Policies

Legal Status:

No specific remote work law; governed by standard labor code. Cross-border remote work requires work permit.

Remote work rare due to <40% electricity access, poor internet outside cities. Informal tolerance in NGOs/mining firms; co-working limited to Bamako. Post-COVID hybrid minimal; infrastructure prioritizes energy projects.

Key Industries

Agriculture
Gold Mining
Cotton Production
Livestock & Fishing
Services
Construction
Energy Infrastructure

Job Opportunities by Sector

Agriculture:

High demand for farm managers, agronomists, cotton processors; 80% workforce employed. Subsistence dominant but mechanization/agritech growth potential. Low salaries ~500k XOF; rural opportunities abundant.

Gold Mining:

Artisanal and industrial roles: engineers, supervisors, safety officers. 80% exports; foreign firms hire skilled expats. Salaries 2-5M XOF; security challenges in north but steady demand.

Cotton:

Production jobs, ginners, exporters; 40% rural pop involved. Seasonal hiring; opportunities in value-added processing. Government support via CMDT; moderate growth.

Energy & Infrastructure:

Technicians, engineers for solar/hydro projects; gov priority with <40% access. Foreign investment sought; skilled roles 1.5-3M XOF, training programs available.

Services & Trade:

Retail, transport, logistics in Bamako; informal dominant. NGO/admin roles for French-speakers. Steady urban demand; youth entry point.