Can You Work or Look for a Job on a Tourist Schengen Visa?
Can You Work or Look for a Job on a Tourist Schengen Visa?
No a standard tourist or short-stay Schengen visa does not give you the right to work in the Schengen Area. The official Schengen FAQ states that a Schengen visa is not appropriate if you want to stay longer than 90 days, take up employment, or establish a business, trade, or profession. So if your real goal is to start a job in Europe, a tourist visa is the wrong route.
If you are still sorting out the travel side of the application, this sits best alongside your broader Schengen Visa Requirements guide.
What A Tourist Schengen Visa Is Actually For
A short-stay Schengen visa is for a temporary visit of up to 90 days in any 180-day period. Official EU guidance and EEAS materials describe typical short-stay purposes such as tourism, visiting friends or family, attending cultural or sports events, joining business meetings, receiving medical treatment, or taking short-term study or training. They also make a separate point: short-stay travel does not grant a right to work.
What is usually fine on a short stay:
Tourism And Visiting Friends Or Family
Conferences And Business Meetings
Cultural Or Sports Events
Short-Term Visitor Activities That Are Not Employment
What You Should Not Treat As Covered By A Tourist Visa
The clean rule is simple: a tourist Schengen visa is not work authorisation. That means you should not treat any activity that looks like actual employment as automatically covered just because your stay is short, unpaid, freelance, or framed as “temporary.” The official line is about the right to work, not just about whether you have already received your first salary.
That includes high-risk assumptions such as:
Starting Paid Employment For A Schengen-Based Employer
Doing Paid Freelance Or Client Work In The Host Market
Using A Tourist Stay As A Substitute For A Work Visa
Assuming Unpaid Trial Work, Placements, Or Internships Are Automatically Safe
Can You Look For A Job Or Attend Interviews While Visiting?
This is the part many articles oversimplify. A tourist Schengen visa is not a dedicated job-search permit. Casual networking is one thing, but entering mainly to look for work, line up interviews, do trial days, or move straight into employment is much harder to defend as a normal tourist stay. The safer editorial answer is: do not use a standard tourist visa as your job-search strategy. Countries create separate job-search routes for a reason.
That does not mean every conversation with a recruiter is automatically illegal. It means the more your trip looks like a real employment search rather than genuine tourism or a limited visitor purpose, the more you move into risky territory and country-specific immigration rules. Germany’s own guidance on professional activities shows how narrow and interpretation-dependent these exceptions can be, which is exactly why a broad “yes” or “no” answer on interviews alone can be misleading.
What About Remote Work?
Do not assume remote work for a non-European employer is automatically allowed on an ordinary tourist Schengen visa. EU short-stay rules do not grant a general right to work, and some countries use separate remote-worker or digital-nomad routes instead. Italy, for example, publishes dedicated digital nomad and remote worker visa routes, including a short-stay Schengen route in certain cases, which shows that remote work should not simply be folded into a standard tourist stay by default.
That is the safer way to frame it for readers: remote work is not something you should present as generally allowed on a tourist visa across the whole Schengen Area. It is a country-by-country issue, and in some places there is a specific visa precisely because standard tourist status is not the right bucket.
If You Actually Want To Work In Europe Legally
Use the national route for the country where you want to work. The EU Immigration Portal explains that work, study, and family routes for longer stays are handled under national procedures, and work-related applications generally need to be submitted while you are still outside the EU.
Depending on the country, the correct route may be:
A National Work Visa Or Residence/Work Permit
A Country-Specific Job-Search Permit
An Employer-Sponsored Work Route
A Dedicated Remote-Worker Or Digital-Nomad Route
Examples of country-specific legal pathways include Germany’s Opportunity Card, Austria’s Job-Seeker Visa, and Sweden’s residence permit to look for work or start a business for qualifying applicants. These are all national routes not ordinary tourist Schengen use.
Conclusion
You should treat the rule this way: No for work, and no as a general strategy for job hunting on tourist status. A tourist Schengen visa is for short visits, not for taking up employment. Some edge cases, such as interviews, networking, or remote work, are more nuanced than many blogs suggest, but that nuance is exactly why you should not rely on a standard tourist visa when your real purpose is to work or search seriously for work. Use the correct country-specific route instead.
If your end goal is employment rather than tourism, a soft CTA that fits naturally here is to compare country-specific routes in your Forum or have Visa Concierge / Smart VisaAssist review the correct path before you apply.
Sources
European External Action Service — Frequently Asked Questions
https://www.eeas.europa.eu/sites/default/files/frequently_asked_questions_en.pdfEuropean External Action Service — Frequently Asked Questions On The Schengen Visa-Free Regime
https://www.eeas.europa.eu/sites/default/files/visa_waiver_faqs_en.pdfEuropean Commission — Applying For A Schengen Visa
https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen/visa-policy/applying-schengen-visa_enEuropean Commission — EU Immigration Portal
https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/migration-and-asylum/eu-immigration-portal_enEuropean Commission — What Category Do I Fit Into?
https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/migration-and-asylum/eu-immigration-portal/what-category-do-i-fit_enMake It In Germany — Job Search Opportunity Card
https://www.make-it-in-germany.com/en/visa-residence/opportunity-card/job-search
Accessed April 30, 2026Austrian Government — Very Highly Qualified Workers / Job-Seeker Visa
https://www.migration.gv.at/en/types-of-immigration/permanent-immigration/very-highly-qualified-workers/Swedish Migration Agency — Look For Work Or Start A Business
https://www.migrationsverket.se/en/you-want-to-apply/work/look-for-work/look-for-work-or-start-a-business.htmlFederal Foreign Office Germany — Professional Activities Not Classed As Economic Activities / Work
https://uk.diplo.de/uk-en/02/visa/professional-activities-not-classed-as-work-2447446Consulate General Of Italy In Toronto — Digital Nomad And Remote Worker Schengen Visa
https://constoronto.esteri.it/en/servizi-consolari-e-visti/servizi-per-il-cittadino-straniero/visti/visti-schengen/visto-schengen-per-nomadi-digitali-e-lavoratori-da-remoto/EEAS Indonesia — European Union Adopts More Favourable Schengen Visa Rules For Indonesia
https://www.eeas.europa.eu/delegations/indonesia/european-union-adopts-more-favourable-schengen-visa-rules-indonesia_en

