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Access Financial | Qatar

Hire, Place and Work in Qatar - Compliantly

With Access Financial, managing your workforce in Qatar becomes simple and stress-free. Leave local regulations, complex tax requirements, immigration and international payroll to us — so you can focus on growing your business.

Solutions available in this country:

EOR

We are passionate about empowering businesses and contractors to work compliantly - and keep more of what they earn.

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Qatar
Total population:~ 3.17 million (2026)
Capital:Doha
CurrencyQatari riyal (QAR)
Total number of expats:2.3 million
Local Language(s):Arabic
Weather:Arid desert climate with extremely hot summers (daytime highs often 40–45°C) and mild winters (January averages ~18°C, nights can drop below 10°C). Rainfall is scant (~75 mm per year) and sunshine is abundant year-round
Biggest cities:Doha, Al Wakrah, Al Khor

Minimum salary levels

QAR 1,800

Country Overview

Qatar is a small but wealthy Gulf nation known for its modern infrastructure, cosmopolitan capital city Doha, and significant expatriate population. Thanks to vast oil and gas revenues, Qatar offers a high standard of living with excellent healthcare, housing, and public services.

Qatar offers a highly skilled, diverse workforce with strong expertise across Oil & Gas, Financial Services, Construction, Technology, and Healthcare. Expatriates make up over 90% of the labour force, and English is widely used in business and daily life. Qatar operates a sponsorship-based immigration system requiring all non-GCC nationals to hold work authorisation tied to a local employer.

*This guide is intended for general informational purposes only and should not be viewed as legal or tax advice. The information discussed may change frequently, and Access Financial cannot guarantee that all content remains current at all times.

2026 Key Legislative Updates

Non-discriminatory minimum wage maintained at QAR 1,800/month total (QAR 1,000 basic + QAR 500 housing + QAR 300 food). Mandatory health insurance under Law No. 22 of 2021 now a prerequisite for residence permit issuance and renewal. Annual work permit fees standardised at QAR 100. No Objection Certificate (NOC) requirement abolished — workers can change employers freely subject to notice.

Contracts

Qatari employment contracts define the terms of engagement — type, duration, notice, pay, and benefits. While English drafts are widely used, the Ministry of Labour officially recognises the Arabic version of the contract, which must be registered through the E-Contract system.

Contract Types

Contract TypeDurationKey Features
Fixed-Term1–3 years (typical)Tied to work visa duration; renewable; same statutory rights as indefinite contracts
Indefinite (Open-Ended)No set end dateContinues until terminated by either party with proper notice
Temporary / Project3–6 monthsFor project-based work; often used in construction and events
Part-TimeIndefinite or fixedPro-rata statutory benefits; requires Ministry of Labour approval

Job Mobility — NOC Requirement Abolished

Since the 2020 reforms, employees can change employers without obtaining a No Objection Certificate from the current employer. The new employer initiates a transfer via the Ministry of Labour electronic platform — typically processed within 5–15 working days, subject to the contractually required notice period.

What Your Contract Must Include

Mandatory Provisions

  • Job title and description
  • Start date and contract duration (if fixed-term)
  • Basic wage plus housing and food allowances (or in-kind provision)
  • Working hours and location
  • Annual leave entitlement
  • Notice period (both sides)
  • Probation period (if applicable)
  • End-of-Service Gratuity provisions

Common Additional Clauses

  • Confidentiality / NDA provisions
  • Intellectual property assignment
  • Restrictive covenants (non-compete, non-solicit)
  • Air ticket allowance (annual home-country travel)
  • Bonus and commission structure
  • Health insurance details (mandatory under Law No. 22 of 2021)
  • Disciplinary and grievance procedure reference

Working Hours & Overtime

The statutory maximum working week in Qatar is 48 hours (8 hours per day, 6 days per week). Many office-based companies operate a 5-day week (Sunday–Thursday), with Friday as the weekly rest day by law. During Ramadan, working hours are reduced to 36 hours per week (6 hours per day) for all employees, regardless of faith.

ParameterRuleNotes
Maximum daily hours8 hoursExtendable to 10 hours with the extra 2 hours paid as overtime
Maximum weekly hours48 hours6 days × 8 hours; Friday is the mandatory weekly rest day
Ramadan working hours36 hrs/week (6 hrs/day)Applies to all employees per the Labour Law
Overtime rate (daytime)125% of hourly rateFor hours worked beyond standard daily hours
Overtime rate (night)150% of hourly rateFor work between 9pm and 3am
Work on rest day / holiday150% of hourly ratePlus a compensatory day off where applicable

Access Financial drafts Qatari-compliant employment contracts and manages onboarding for EOR engagements.

Working Hours & Overtime

Qatar Labour Law (No. 14 of 2004, as amended) sets the maximum hours, mandatory rest periods, and overtime compensation rules. Friday is the weekly rest day, and Ramadan triggers a reduced 6-hour working day for all staff.

ParameterRuleNotes
Maximum weekly hours48 hours8 hours × 6 days; many office roles use 40–45 hours over a 5-day week
Maximum daily hours8 hours (10 with OT)Any time above 8 hrs/day must be paid as overtime
Ramadan hours36 hours/week6 hours/day for all employees regardless of faith
Weekly restFriday (minimum)Many private-sector firms grant Friday + Saturday off
Daily rest breaksAt least 1 hourMust include prayer, rest, and meals across shifts of 5+ hours
Overtime — daytime125% of regular hourly rateApplies to extra hours during normal daytime work
Overtime — night (9pm–3am)150% of regular hourly rateHigher premium for night-shift overtime

Wage Protection System (WPS)

All employers must pay salaries in QAR through locally licensed banks under the Wage Protection System. Payments are monitored electronically by the Ministry of Labour to ensure timely and traceable salary disbursement.

Probation Period

The probation period in Qatar is contractual but capped by law at a maximum of 6 months. It must be stated in writing in the employment contract.

ParameterStandard practiceLegal notes
Maximum duration6 monthsStatutory cap under Qatar Labour Law
Typical duration3–6 monthsStated in the contract; cannot be extended beyond 6 months
Notice during probation (employer)At least 1 monthUpdated rule under 2020 reforms protecting employees
Notice during probation (employee)1 month (to a new employer in Qatar) / 2 months (to leave Qatar)Different notice depending on whether moving employers or exiting the country
Statutory rights from day oneMinimum wage, weekly rest, health insurance, safe working conditionsApply during probation

Immigration & Work Visas

Qatar operates a sponsorship-based immigration system. Every expatriate worker must be sponsored by a Qatari-registered entity, which obtains the Work Residence Permit (commonly the QID — Qatari ID) on the worker’s behalf.

Exit Permit Abolished

Workers covered by the Labour Law no longer need employer permission to leave Qatar. Only a small percentage (under 5% of workforce, typically senior managerial roles) may require prior notice to the employer.

Visa Routes

GCC nationals (Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Oman, Bahrain) enjoy freedom of movement and do not require sponsorship. Citizens of over 100 countries — including the UK, EU, US, Canada, and Australia — receive visa-free entry or visa on arrival for short stays of up to 30 days (extendable). All other nationalities require a pre-approved entry visa arranged by the Qatari sponsor.

Visa RouteMin. SalarySponsor?Duration
Work Residence Permit (standard)QAR 1,800/month (statutory minimum)Yes — Qatari employer1 year, renewable
Family Residence VisaQAR 10,000/month (or QAR 6,000 with employer-provided housing)Resident family memberRenewable annually with sponsor’s RP
Temporary Work VisaProject-basedYes3 or 6 months
Business VisaN/AQatari host companyUp to 1 month (extendable to 3)
Visa for Highly Skilled TalentsSector-specific thresholdsEndorsing entityLinked to Qatar Vision 2030
Source: Ministry of Interior, 2026. Family sponsorship subject to approved job categories.
FeeCostNotes
Annual work permit feeQAR 100Standardised under Ministerial Decision No. 32 of 2025
Residence Permit (QID) issuance / renewalQAR 500 (per year)Paid by sponsor
Medical examination~QAR 200–300Mandatory before RP issuance
Fingerprinting & biometricsIncluded in MOI feesCaptured by Ministry of Interior
Mandatory health insurance (basic)From ~QAR 50/monthRequired for RP issuance/renewal under Law No. 22 of 2021

AF’s immigration team handles Qatari work residence permits, family sponsorships, QID renewals, and Qatar Visa Centre (QVC) pre-arrival processing.

Leave Entitlements

Qatar’s statutory leave provisions are set out in the Labour Law. Many professional employers enhance the statutory baseline to attract and retain skilled expatriate talent.

Annual Leave

Length of serviceStatutory entitlementNotes
Less than 1 yearPro-rata (approx. 1.75 days/month)Accrued; usually taken after probation
1–5 years3 weeks (21 days) per yearMinimum by law
More than 5 years4 weeks (28 days) per yearIncreased entitlement after 5 years of service
Market practice (professional)25–30 calendar daysMany employers offer above statutory minimum

Parental Leave

Leave typeDurationPayEligibility
Maternity50 daysFull payAfter 1 year of service; at least 35 days post-natal
Maternity (medical extension)Up to 60 daysUnpaidMedical certificate required
Nursing breaks1 hour/day for 12 monthsPaidFrom child’s birth, in addition to normal breaks
Paternity3–5 days (where offered)Full pay (employer policy)Not statutory in private sector — common in practice

Sick Leave

ParameterRule
EligibilityAfter 3 months of service
First 2 weeksFull pay
Next 4 weeksHalf pay
Beyond 6 weeks (same year)Unpaid
Maximum total (per year)12 weeks
Medical certificateRequired from approved doctor
Work-related injuryUp to 6 months full pay + 6 months half pay; free treatment
Source: Qatar Labour Law (Law No. 14 of 2004, as amended).

Public Holidays 2026

Qatar observes both fixed-date national holidays and Islamic holidays governed by the lunar Hijri calendar. Final Islamic dates are confirmed by the Amiri Diwan shortly before the event based on moon sightings.

DateDayHolidaySector
10 FebruaryTuesdayNational Sports DayAll sectors
20–22 March (approx.)Friday–SundayEid Al-Fitr (3 days private sector; up to 7 days public sector)All sectors
26 MayTuesdayArafat DayAll sectors
27–29 May (approx.)Wednesday–FridayEid Al-Adha (3 days private sector; extended in public sector)All sectors
18 DecemberFridayQatar National DayAll sectors
Islamic holiday dates are subject to moon sighting and final confirmation by the Amiri Diwan. Source: Cabinet of Qatar / Ministry of Labour, 2026.

Notice Periods

Statutory notice periods in Qatar depend on the length of service. Most professional contracts specify written notice in line with — or longer than — the statutory minimum.

Length of serviceNotice (both sides)Notes
Less than 2 years1 monthStatutory minimum under 2020 ministerial decree
2 years or more2 monthsIncreases with length of service
During probation (employer)At least 1 monthUnder the 2020 reforms protecting employees
During probation (employee, intra-Qatar transfer)1 monthMoving to another Qatari employer
During probation (employee, leaving Qatar)2 monthsWhere the worker exits the country
Source: Ministerial Decisions Nos. 51 and 95 of 2020.

Termination & End-of-Service Gratuity

Either party can terminate an employment contract with proper notice. End-of-Service Gratuity (EOSG) is a key statutory entitlement for employees who have completed at least one year of continuous service.

Length of serviceEOSG rateBasis
Less than 1 yearNo entitlementMust complete 1 full year
1 year and aboveMinimum 3 weeks of basic wage per year of servicePro-rated for partial years beyond the first
Common market practice30 days of basic wage per yearMany employers offer above the statutory minimum
ExcludedDismissal for gross misconductPer Article 61 of the Labour Law
Calculated on basic wage (excluding allowances). Source: Law No. 14 of 2004.

Summary Dismissal — No Notice, No EOSG

Article 61 of the Labour Law allows immediate dismissal without notice or gratuity in cases of gross misconduct — false identity, forged documents, causing serious financial loss, repeated safety breaches, absence without valid reason, or conviction for a crime of dishonesty.

Social Insurance

Qatar’s social insurance scheme applies only to Qatari nationals (and, in some cases, GCC citizens who opt in). Expatriate employees and their employers do not pay into the Qatari social security system.

No Social Security for Expats

Expatriate employees pay no social security, pension, or unemployment contributions in Qatar. Employers also have no equivalent payroll tax on expat wages. The main statutory cost is the End-of-Service Gratuity accrual.

Contributions for Qatari Nationals

ContributionRateNotes
Employee (Qatari national)7%Of monthly salary; paid to General Retirement & Social Insurance Authority
Employer (for Qatari national)14%Of monthly salary; capped at QAR 100,000 monthly earnings
CoverageState pensionFor Qatari citizens only — expats are not enrolled
Source: Law No. 1 of 2022 (General Retirement & Social Insurance Authority).

Employer Costs for Expatriate Staff

Cost itemAmountNotes
Salary (basic + allowances)Per contractMinimum QAR 1,800/month total package
Mandatory health insuranceFrom ~QAR 50/month (basic)Under Law No. 22 of 2021
End-of-Service Gratuity accrual3 weeks basic wage per year (minimum)Payable on termination after 1 year of service
Annual work permit feeQAR 100Paid by employer to MOL
Residence Permit issuance/renewalQAR 500/yearPaid by employer to MOI
Employer social security on expat wagesNoneNo payroll tax beyond items above
Source: Ministry of Labour / Ministry of Interior, 2026.

Income Tax

Qatar imposes no personal income tax on individuals — whether Qatari nationals or expatriates. Salaries, wages, bonuses, allowances, and similar personal income are fully exempt from taxation by the General Tax Authority.

Personal Tax Treatment 2026

Tax typeRateNotes
Personal income tax0%No tax on salaries, wages, or allowances
Capital gains tax (individuals)0%No tax on personal capital gains
Wealth tax0%None
Inheritance tax0%None
Bank interest (personal)0%Not taxed in Qatar
Source: General Tax Authority of Qatar, 2026.

Home-Country Tax Obligations

Qatar has signed over 80 double taxation agreements (DTAs). Even though Qatar does not tax personal income, expatriates may still have reporting or tax obligations in their home country (especially US citizens). Always consult a tax adviser on residency and treaty positions before relocating.

Indirect Taxes

TaxRateApplies to
VAT0%Not yet implemented in Qatar (under regional discussion)
Excise tax50–100%Tobacco, energy drinks, carbonated drinks, special-purpose goods
Customs duty5% (most goods)Standard rate; higher rates apply to some categories
Corporate income tax10%Generally applies only to foreign-owned business profits — not to individuals

Let Access Financial handle your Qatari payroll — Wage Protection System compliant, with local specialists on call.

Benefits

Qatari statutory benefits include leave, gratuity, and mandatory health insurance. Competitive employers typically layer further allowances and supplemental benefits to attract and retain professional expatriate talent.

Mandatory Statutory Benefits

BenefitRate / AmountNotes
Minimum wage (total package)QAR 1,800/monthQAR 1,000 basic + QAR 500 housing + QAR 300 food
Mandatory health insuranceFrom ~QAR 50/monthUnder Law No. 22 of 2021 — required for RP issuance
Annual leave3–4 weeks/year3 weeks after 1 year; 4 weeks after 5 years
Sick leaveUp to 12 weeks (graduated pay)2 weeks full pay + 4 weeks half pay + 6 weeks unpaid
Maternity leave50 days full payAfter 1 year of service
End-of-Service GratuityMin. 3 weeks basic wage per yearAfter 1 year of continuous service

Market-Standard Supplemental Benefits

BenefitPrevalenceTypical provision
Housing allowance (above statutory)Very commonQAR 4,000–15,000/month depending on seniority and family status
Transport allowance / company carCommonQAR 1,500–3,000/month or vehicle provided
Annual home-country flight ticketsStandard for expatsOnce a year for employee + family
Enhanced private medical insuranceVery common in professional rolesComprehensive cover via Bupa, Cigna, AXA, MetLife
Education allowance (children)Common for senior expatsPartial or full school fees up to a cap
Life & disability insuranceCommon (large employers)3–4× annual salary lump sum
End-of-service bonus / extra gratuityCommonSome employers pay 30 days basic per year (above the 3-week minimum)

Pension System

Qatar’s state pension scheme is administered by the General Retirement & Social Insurance Authority and applies to Qatari nationals only. Expatriate employees do not contribute to or receive a Qatari state pension — they rely instead on End-of-Service Gratuity and private retirement savings.

ParameterRuleNotes
Coverage (Qatari nationals)Mandatory enrolmentFor all Qatari nationals in public sector and joint stock companies
Coverage (expatriates)Not enrolledExpats are not part of the state pension system
Employee contribution (Qatari)7%Of monthly salary, capped at QAR 100,000/month
Employer contribution (Qatari)14%Of monthly salary, capped at QAR 100,000/month
Expatriate retirement substituteEnd-of-Service GratuityMin. 3 weeks basic wage per year of service
Private retirement savingsVoluntaryMany employers offer voluntary savings plans or international pension schemes
Source: Law No. 1 of 2022 (Retirement & Social Insurance); Qatar Labour Law (EOSG provisions).

Insurances

Mandatory and recommended insurances for employers, employees, and contractors operating in Qatar.

InsuranceStatusRequired by
Health insurance (all expat residents and visitors)MandatoryLaw No. 22 of 2021 — required for RP issuance / renewal
Workers’ compensationEffectively mandatoryLabour Law — work injury liability lies with employer
Motor insurance (third party)MandatoryTraffic Law — required to register and drive a vehicle
Employer’s liabilityRecommendedCommon in oil & gas, construction, and industrial sectors

Professional Indemnity Insurance — Contractors

Often contractually required by end-clients on government and large infrastructure projects. Covers negligence claims against contractors and consultants. Minimum QAR 1M is standard; engineering, financial services, and IT roles typically require higher limits. AF can advise on appropriate cover for your sector.

Private Health Insurance

ProviderTypical monthly costType
Bupa GlobalQAR 400–900 (individual)Comprehensive international
AXA GulfQAR 300–800 (individual)Comprehensive regional
CignaQAR 400–1,000 (individual)Comprehensive international
MetLifeQAR 350–750 (individual)Standard / mid-tier
Basic mandatory plan (Law 22/2021)From ~QAR 50Minimum legal coverage

AF Solutions

Access Financial supports end-clients, recruitment agencies, and contractors operating in Qatar — from sponsorship and onboarding to payroll, compliance, and off-boarding.

For End-Clients

Managing a contingent workforce in Qatar can be complex due to sponsorship rules and WPS compliance. Our solutions streamline workforce management, making it simple, compliant, and cost-effective.

For Recruiters

We offer a complete suite of services, allowing you to simply, compliantly, and efficiently place your candidates in Qatar, with minimum fuss.

For Contractors

Focus on what you do best and let us take care of your sponsorship, payroll, gratuity accruals, and immigration needs in Qatar.

Free Consultation

FAQ

Find answers to our most frequently asked questions below.

What solutions do you offer in Qatar?

In Qatar, Access Financial provides one compliant engagement model:

Employed/EOR (umbrella): We become the legal employer of your employees in Qatar. Your business retains full control of the day-to-day work and deliverables, while we carry the employment, payroll, and tax liability.

When should a company consider using an EOR?

An EOR is especially useful in a range of scenarios. It is the most efficient route when you want to convert existing contractors into compliant employees and reduce misclassification risk, or when you need to hire talent in a country where you do not have a local entity. It also allows you to onboard quickly without going through a lengthy and complex company registration process, while ensuring full compliance with local employment law, payroll, and tax regulations. Beyond these core use cases, an EOR is equally valuable when you are testing a new market before committing to a long-term investment, or when you simply need temporary or project-based hires abroad.

Can we hire both local nationals and foreign employees through an EOR?

Yes. Our EOR services cover both local nationals and foreign hires. For foreign nationals, additional visa or work permit requirements apply, and we can support the application process end-to-end — including sponsorship in jurisdictions where we hold the relevant licence.

Is permanent establishment (PE) risk avoided?

An EOR is a third-party business that legally employs international workers on your behalf, creating a clear layer of separation between your company and the staff based in other countries. The EOR becomes the legal employer for those workers, so although the employees continue to deliver services to your business, the legal distancing helps mitigate many common PE risks. That said, PE is determined by the facts on the ground (the nature of the activity, contract-signing authority, where revenue is generated, and so on), not solely by who issues the payslip. We therefore recommend reviewing each engagement with our specialists to confirm the appropriate structure.

What is your pricing model?

Our standard management fee is 5% of the contract value, with a minimum of €550. We also offer volume discounts on bulk engagements. To discuss pricing for your specific scenario, please get in touch with our team here: https://accessfinancial.com/#get-started.