Belgium Immigration Update: Mandatory Digital Submission for Work Permits from May 2026
Overview
Belgium’s immigration framework continues to evolve in 2026, as authorities advance efforts to modernize and streamline administrative processes. Following recent reforms to the Single Permit system, further procedural changes are being introduced that directly affect how certain work authorization applications are prepared and submitted.
While the purpose of these permits remains unchanged, the filing process is being significantly updated, requiring employers, applicants, and mobility professionals to plan accordingly. This marks a shift not just in how applications are submitted, but in how strictly immigration processes are controlled and validated.
From May 1, 2026, applications for short-term work permits and commuter permits must be submitted exclusively through the government’s digital platform. This represents a clear departure from the current process, where email-based submissions have generally remained the standard. Once implemented, email submissions will no longer be accepted, making digital filing the only valid route.
Although this may appear to be a procedural adjustment rather than a substantive policy reform, the impact is significant. It reflects a broader shift toward digitized, standardized, and closely managed immigration processes, with increased emphasis on traceability, process control, and administrative consistency.
For employers and global mobility teams, this means internal workflows must be reviewed and adapted to ensure correct submission channels, compliant documentation formats, and well-managed timelines.
Early preparation will be critical. Organizations managing cross-border hiring or mobility into Belgium should ensure stakeholders are aligned with the new submission requirements ahead of the May 2026 deadline, reducing the risk of rejected filings, delays, and disruption to workforce planning.
What Are the Key Changes?
The update introduces a mandatory shift in the submission process:
A regional transition period has been confirmed:
This creates a non-uniform rollout, requiring careful attention to region-specific requirements.
Who Will Be Affected?
This change will impact:
Organizations relying on email-based submissions or informal follow-ups will need to adjust their processes.
Key Benefits of the New System
The move to a digital platform is expected to improve:
These improvements support more traceable and standardized immigration systems, although efficiency gains will depend on effective system adoption and correct usage.
Operational and Compliance Considerations
Alongside these benefits, the system introduces stricter operational requirements:
As a result, accuracy at the point of submission becomes critical.
What This Means for Employers
For employers, this shift requires moving from reactive filing to structured process management.
Key actions include:
Delays are more likely where access, mandates, or documentation are not fully aligned before submission.
Organizations that prepare early will benefit from more predictable processing, while those that delay may face disruptions or rejected filings.
Implementation and Next Steps
The requirement takes effect on May 1, 2026, after which the digital platform will become the primary and in most regions, the only valid submission channel for short-term work permit and commuter permit applications.
A limited transition period may apply in certain regions, but this should be viewed as temporary rather than a long-term alternative.
As implementation progresses:
Employers should:
By doing so, organizations can reduce compliance risks and maintain continuity in mobility and recruitment plans.
Key Takeaway
Belgium’s move to mandatory digital submissions is not just a technical system upgrade, it represents a structural shift toward more standardized, rule-bound, and less flexible immigration processes.
While the change improves transparency, traceability, and application tracking, it also reshapes operational realities:
Organizations that treat this as a strategic shift rather than an administrative change by strengthening internal processes and planning ahead will be better positioned to maintain smooth, compliant, and predictable workforce mobility.
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About Anywr
Anywr is a French international group specializing in global mobility solutions.
Founded in 2012, Anywr operates in 12 countries across 4 continents. Our mission is to support companies in addressing their Human Resources challenges. We respond to your needs in terms of international mobility, particularly in terms of immigration policies, relocation, the implementation of mobility policies and EOR.
Do you have a mobility project for your teams? Contact us!