Syria flagWork & Business Guide · Syria

Work & Business Guide in Syria

Job market, business opportunities, and work permits for expats

Syria's economy is experiencing notable recovery in 2026, with GDP growth projected at nearly 10%, driven by agriculture, services, and industry reconstruction. Employment is concentrated in services (65%), agriculture (12-17%), and industry (22%), employing a labor force of about 6.7 million. Opportunities exist in labor-intensive sectors like agro-processing, construction, and SMEs, supported by post-2024 transition efforts focusing on job creation, refugee returns, and infrastructure rehab. Entrepreneurs face hurdles from sanctions and security but can tap into revitalized local markets.
Employment Rate
90.4%

High employment rate derived from 9.61% unemployment (2022 data). Services dominate with 65% of workforce, agriculture 12%, industry 22%. Youth and gender gaps persist post-conflict; recovery boosting jobs in reconstruction and agriculture.

Startup Ecosystem
25.0%

Emerging ecosystem hampered by sanctions, security issues, and limited funding. Focus on SMEs in agriculture and light manufacturing. Minimal VC or incubators; government pushes incentives for job-creating enterprises via microfinance and eased procedures.

Average Salary Range

SYP 5,000,000 - SYP 20,000,000 annually

Average salaries low due to economic challenges; min ~5M SYP/year in agriculture/services, up to 20M SYP in oil/industry. Hyperinflation erodes purchasing power; reconstruction sectors offer better pay. Regional variations with urban areas higher.

Work Visa Requirements

EU Citizens:

Visa required for stays over 90 days; work permits via Ministry of Interior. Security checks apply due to regional instability.

Non-EU Citizens:

Work visa and permit needed; apply through Syrian embassies. Sponsorship by local employer required; processing 1-3 months amid sanctions.

Strict visa policies due to security and sanctions. Work permits tied to job offers; timelines extended (1-6 months). Limited programs for skilled workers; investors may qualify via economic contributions. Check FCDO/State Dept advisories.

Business Registration

Timeline:

4-8 weeks

Register via Ministry of Industry/Trade; in-person with docs like articles of association, ID. Common structures: LLC or joint-stock. Fees low but bureaucracy slow; sanctions limit foreign investment. Post-recovery easing for SMEs noted.

Remote Work Policies

Legal Status:

No specific remote work law; governed by standard labor contracts under Ministry of Social Affairs and Labour.

Limited remote work due to poor electricity/internet infrastructure. Hybrid possible in urban services; reconstruction prioritizes on-site roles. Co-working scarce; digital nomad options unavailable amid security concerns.

Key Industries

Agriculture
Services
Industry & Manufacturing
Oil & Petroleum
Construction
Food Processing

Job Opportunities by Sector

Agriculture:

High demand for farm workers, irrigation specialists amid recovery efforts. Employs 12-17% workforce; growth via improved seeds/equipment. Stable local jobs with moderate pay.

Construction & Infrastructure:

Boom in rehab projects creating roles for engineers, laborers. Labor-intensive; fastest job growth per UNDP. Good for skilled trades amid electricity/transport restoration.

Services:

65% of employment in government, trade, local services. Opportunities in SMEs, retail; urban focus with post-conflict reconciliation boosting demand.

Light Manufacturing:

Textiles, food processing, cement; reviving SMEs need operators, technicians. Job creation priority with microfinance support; inclusive for displaced workers.

Oil & Energy:

Declining but key; roles in extraction, refining for skilled technicians. Higher salaries; recovery tied to production rebound.