Work in Europe, by country
Pick a country for indicative salary, net pay, living cost, realistic monthly savings and the work-permit route — each with an official source to verify against.
The biggest single market for foreign skilled workers in Central Europe — heavy demand in construction, welding, logistics and manufacturing.
A fast-growing destination for South-Asian workers, especially in construction, hospitality and shipyards.
Large annual worker quotas and strong demand in construction, manufacturing and drivers — a common entry point into the EU.
Baltic hub for logistics, transport and manufacturing with one of the simpler shortage-occupation routes.
Europe's car-factory belt — steady demand for machine operators, welders and assemblers.
Lowest cost of living on this list and a flat 10% tax — modest wages but solid take-home for savers.
Big automotive and logistics employers near Budapest; the guest-worker permit ties you to one employer.
Higher living costs but a popular settlement route — strong in construction, tourism and agriculture.
Highest wages on this list but also the highest costs and a quota-gated (Decreto Flussi) entry process.
Lowest barrier and lowest cost, but outside the EU/Schengen — useful first European experience, not an EU permit.
Europe's biggest economy and the #1 skilled-worker magnet — heavy demand in trades, care, logistics and engineering.
High wages and a structured route; functional French helps a lot for most jobs.
Big hospitality and agriculture demand; pay below the north but living costs are lower too.
High wages and English-friendly workplaces, but housing is scarce and expensive.
Strong wages and a central location; high tax trims take-home pay.
High pay and Alpine quality of life via a points-based skilled-worker route.
English-speaking with top wages — but one of Europe's tightest housing markets.
Among Europe's highest wages — tiny, multilingual and finance-heavy.
The highest pay on the continent — and the highest costs plus tight non-EU quotas.
English-speaking with fast decisions, but you need a licensed sponsor and an English test.
Very high pay and strong welfare, balanced by high tax and living costs.
High wages and English-friendly workplaces; processing can be slow.
High pay and growing labour shortages, with an English-friendly tech sector.
Top wages and strong worker rights; very high costs, and outside the EU.
High pay and a tiny labour market with strong construction and tourism demand.
A central manufacturing hub with steady demand for factory and trade workers.
Orderly and Alpine, with a good pay-to-cost balance and construction-heavy demand.
A digital-first Baltic state with IT and logistics demand and a simple tax system.
An affordable Baltic option with transport, construction and manufacturing demand.
Seasonal tourism and farm demand; quota-gated, lower pay and low living costs.
An English-friendly island with tourism, construction and low income tax.
English-speaking with gaming and tourism jobs — sunny, but housing is tight.
Fast-growing and low-cost, with construction and manufacturing demand; a non-EU stepping stone.
An Adriatic tourism economy that uses the euro — non-EU and low-cost.
Among the cheapest on the list, with growing tourism and BPO work; non-EU.
Euro-using and very low-cost with a young economy; non-EU.
A low-cost Balkan manufacturing base; non-EU.
The cheapest option and Romanian-speaking — an EU-candidate stepping stone.
Very liberal stay rules, low cost and nomad-friendly; not the EU.
A huge manufacturing and tourism economy bridging Europe and Asia; non-EU.
Indicative estimates, not a job offer. Salary, cost and savings figures are modelled from each occupation's rough EU average and a per-country wage index, and exclude employer-specific terms, exchange-rate swings and personal tax. Visa rules are summarised for general guidance. Always confirm pay and immigration rules with the official source or embassy, and never pay a fee for a job offer you have not verified.