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how to recruit workers for employment abroad Uganda

How to Recruit Ugandans for Employment Abroad (step‑by‑step, Employment Amendment Act 2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to recruit workers for employment abroad in Uganda is now a statutory compliance exercise, not merely a commercial negotiation. The Employment (Amendment) Act 2026 (Act 10 of 2026), published on 5 June 2026 in the Acts Supplement, inserted a new Part IVA into the principal Employment Act, 2006, imposing tightened licensing controls, mandatory contract clauses and joint liability obligations on every party involved in placing Ugandan workers overseas. This guide sets out the recruitment requirements Uganda 2026 has introduced, walking employers, foreign principals, licensed recruitment agencies and prospective migrant workers through the full compliance workflow, from agency verification to post-placement monitoring.

It consolidates timelines, required documents, indicative costs and common pitfalls in a single procedural reference, keyed to the statute and the regulations that remain in force.

Overview of the Recruitment Process and Who It Applies To

The recruitment-for-employment-abroad regime applies to four categories of participant. Employers and foreign principals are the entities offering overseas positions. Licensed recruitment agencies are the intermediaries authorised by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development (MGLSD) to match Ugandan workers with those positions. Prospective migrant workers are Ugandan nationals seeking placement abroad. Under Part IVA of the amended Employment Act, no employer may recruit Ugandan workers for overseas employment except through the MGLSD itself or through a recruitment agency holding a valid licence registered on the External Employment Management Information System (EEMIS).

The high-level compliance flow runs as follows: confirm agency licensing → verify the foreign principal’s accreditation → draft a government-approved employment contract containing every mandatory clause (including repatriation) → file the contract and supporting documents with MGLSD via EEMIS → obtain pre-departure clearances (medical, orientation, visa) → deploy the worker → maintain post-placement monitoring and record keeping. Each stage carries specific documentary and timing obligations examined in the sections that follow.

The 2026 amendments are not optional upgrades. Recruitment agencies, employers and foreign principals that fail to comply face licence suspension, criminal penalties and joint liability for worker repatriation costs. Industry observers expect the MGLSD to intensify enforcement audits through EEMIS during the second half of 2026, making early compliance essential.

Eligibility and Prerequisites for Recruiting Workers for Employment Abroad in Uganda

Who Needs a Recruitment Agency Licence?

Any entity or individual that connects Ugandan workers with overseas employment opportunities must hold a recruitment agency licence issued by the MGLSD and recorded in EEMIS. This requirement originates in the Employment (Recruitment of Ugandan Migrant Workers Abroad) Regulations, 2005 (SI 62 of 2005) and is reinforced by Part IVA of the 2026 Amendment. An employer or foreign principal that wishes to hire directly, without using a third-party agency, must still process the placement through the MGLSD’s External Employment Unit. Operating without a licence, or through an unlicensed intermediary, is a criminal offence carrying penalties under both the Regulations and the amended Act.

When Employers Must Use a Licensed Agent

The statutory default is clear: an employer shall not recruit Ugandan workers for overseas employment except through the MGLSD or a licensed recruitment agency. Employers based outside Uganda, referred to in the legislation as “foreign principals”, must additionally obtain accreditation from the MGLSD before any agency can lawfully process placements on their behalf. The likely practical effect is that most overseas employers will need to partner with a Ugandan-licensed agency rather than attempting direct hire.

Verifying a Foreign Principal

Before accepting a placement mandate, a licensed agency must verify the foreign principal by requesting:

  • Authenticated business registration documents from the principal’s country of incorporation.
  • A power of attorney or written authorisation granting the agency recruitment rights.
  • Evidence of MGLSD accreditation, the foreign principal’s details should appear on the EEMIS portal once accredited.
  • A draft employment contract meeting all mandatory content requirements under the 2026 Act and SI 62/2005.

How to Recruit Workers for Employment Abroad Uganda, Step‑by‑Step Procedure

The following numbered steps trace the full recruitment process from initial route selection through to post-placement obligations. Each step identifies the responsible party and the typical duration, consolidated in the timeline table below.

Step 1: Decide the Recruitment Route

The employer or foreign principal must determine whether to recruit directly through the MGLSD or to engage a licensed recruitment agency. Direct recruitment through the MGLSD is rare in practice; the standard route is appointment of a licensed agency. The agency’s current licence status must be confirmed in EEMIS before any engagement proceeds. Where the employer chooses an agency, a written agency-principal agreement setting out responsibilities, fees and the scope of the mandate should be executed before recruitment activity begins.

Step 2: Confirm Agency Licensing and Foreign Principal Accreditation in EEMIS

Visit the EEMIS portal at eemis.mglsd.go.ug to verify that the recruitment agency holds a current licence. EEMIS maintains a public register of licensed, suspended and revoked agencies. The foreign principal’s accreditation status should also appear on the system once the MGLSD has approved the principal’s application. This verification step typically takes 1–3 days and should be completed by the employer’s HR team or compliance officer before signing any agency contract.

Step 3: Draft and Agree the Government‑Approved Employment Contract

Under both SI 62/2005 and Part IVA of the 2026 Amendment, the employment contract must follow a prescribed standard format and include, at minimum, the following mandatory clauses:

  • Wages, allowances and method of payment.
  • Working hours, rest periods and leave entitlements.
  • Accommodation and food provisions.
  • Health cover and medical insurance arrangements.
  • Repatriation clause, the 2026 Act now explicitly requires a binding commitment to fund the worker’s return to Uganda at the end of the contract or in the event of contract termination, employer insolvency or health emergency.
  • Insurance covering death, disability and repatriation.
  • Termination conditions and notice period.
  • Dispute resolution mechanism, including access to complaint channels through the MGLSD.

The contract must be signed by the foreign principal (or authorised employer representative), the recruitment agency and the worker. Drafting and agreement typically takes 3–14 days depending on negotiation complexity.

Step 4: File the Contract and Foreign Principal Accreditation with MGLSD via EEMIS

The recruitment agency files the signed employment contract, the foreign principal’s accreditation documents and all supporting worker documents with the MGLSD through the EEMIS platform. This filing constitutes the formal application for external employment clearance. The agency must retain copies of every document submitted. Filing and initial processing typically takes 7–30 working days, though timelines may extend if the agency’s own licence is due for renewal or if additional verification of the foreign principal is required.

Step 5: Obtain MGLSD / External Employment Unit Approval

The MGLSD’s External Employment Unit reviews the filed documents, verifies the foreign principal’s credentials, confirms the contract meets all statutory content requirements and, if satisfied, issues approval through EEMIS. Processing times vary. Early indications suggest a range of 14–60 days depending on destination country, volume of applications and completeness of the filing. Incomplete filings are returned, restarting the clock. Employers should build this variable into project timelines.

Step 6: Complete Pre‑Departure Clearances

Once MGLSD approval is obtained, the worker must complete several pre-departure requirements:

  • Medical examination at an authorised medical facility, producing a fitness certificate meeting destination-country health standards.
  • Pre-departure orientation conducted by an MGLSD-accredited training provider, covering worker rights, cultural awareness, complaint mechanisms and emergency contacts. An attendance certificate is issued on completion.
  • Visa and work permit for the destination country, obtained from the relevant embassy or consulate.
  • Insurance and repatriation policy covering the full contract period.

These clearances typically require 7–21 days. The recruitment agency coordinates the process, but the worker is responsible for attending appointments and providing accurate personal information.

Step 7: Departure and Follow‑Up Obligations

Departure proceeds once all clearances are complete and confirmed in EEMIS. The agency must ensure that the worker carries original copies of the approved employment contract, insurance policy and visa. Post-departure, the employer and agency share ongoing obligations: wages must be paid on time and in the agreed currency; the repatriation fund must remain accessible; and the worker must have access to a functioning complaint channel, including the MGLSD hotline. The 2026 Act introduces joint liability, both the agency and the foreign principal are liable for breach of contract terms or failure to repatriate the worker.

Step 8: Post‑Placement Monitoring and Record Keeping

The recruitment agency must maintain records of every placement for a minimum retention period prescribed by the Regulations. The MGLSD may conduct compliance audits through EEMIS at any time. Agencies are expected to provide periodic status reports on deployed workers, flag any complaints received, and cooperate with any investigations. Employer obligations for overseas placement include ensuring that working conditions match the filed contract and responding promptly to MGLSD inquiries.

Recruitment Process Timeline

Step Who Does It Typical Duration
1. Verify agency & foreign principal in EEMIS Employer / HR / Recruiter 1–3 days
2. Draft & finalise government-approved employment contract Employer + Recruiter + Worker 3–14 days
3. File contract and foreign principal accreditation with MGLSD (EEMIS) Recruitment agency / Employer 7–30 working days
4. MGLSD / External Employment Unit approval & EEMIS confirmation MGLSD (EEU) 14–60 days
5. Pre-departure clearances (medical, visa, orientation) Worker / Recruiter 7–21 days
6. Departure / placement Recruiter / Employer 1–7 days after approvals
7. Post-placement monitoring and complaint handling Employer / Recruiter / MGLSD Ongoing; record retention per Regulations

Documents Needed for Overseas Employment, Required Checklist

The table below consolidates every document that must be produced, filed or retained at various stages of the recruitment process. Employers and agencies should treat this as a compliance checklist. Where destination-country requirements add further documentary obligations, those should be layered on top of this baseline.

Document Notes (Issuer, Format, Validity)
Recruitment agency licence / EEMIS registration record Issued and verified by MGLSD (EEMIS). Pull live status from the EEMIS portal. Agency must present a current licence number.
Foreign principal accreditation / contract agreement with agency Issued by the foreign principal. Must be authenticated. Required for the agency’s MGLSD file.
Government-approved employment contract (standard contract) Signed by foreign principal, agency and worker. Must include repatriation clause, wages, allowances, insurance, working hours, termination and health cover. Originals filed with MGLSD via EEMIS.
Worker national ID / Passport copy Issued by the Directorate of Citizenship and Immigration Control. Passport validity must cover the contract period plus 6 months.
Professional certificates / licences (where applicable) Issued by relevant professional bodies (e.g., Uganda Nurses and Midwives Council, Engineers Registration Board). Originals required for verification.
Medical fitness certificate Issued by an authorised medical facility meeting destination-country health standards. Retain a copy for EEMIS filing.
Pre-departure orientation attendance certificate Issued by an MGLSD-accredited training provider. Required before travel in most cases.
Visa / Work permit (destination country) Issued by the destination state’s embassy or consulate. A copy must be retained before departure.
Insurance / repatriation policy documents Issued by insurer. Must cover repatriation, death and disability. Include policy number and coverage period.
Power of Attorney / Authorisation (if employer uses agent) Issued by the employer or foreign principal to the recruitment agency. Must be notarised if requested by MGLSD.

The mandatory contract content requirements under the 2026 Act deserve particular attention. Any contract that omits the repatriation clause, fails to specify wages in the agreed currency, or lacks an insurance commitment will be rejected by the MGLSD during the EEMIS filing stage. Agencies should use the standard contract template available from the MGLSD and adapt it only to add destination-specific provisions, not to remove mandatory terms.

Timeline and Key Deadlines for the Recruitment Process

End-to-end, a straightforward placement, where the agency is already licensed, the foreign principal is already accredited and documentation is complete, can be finalised in approximately 33–135 days. The widest variable is MGLSD processing time at Step 4 (14–60 days). Employers planning large-scale recruitment drives should begin the process at least four to five months before the intended deployment date.

Key statutory deadlines to note:

  • Recruitment agency licence validity: licences are issued for a fixed period and must be renewed before expiry. Operating on an expired licence is treated as unlicensed recruitment.
  • Contract filing window: the employment contract and all supporting documents must be filed with MGLSD before the worker departs Uganda. Retrospective filing is not permitted.
  • Missed deadline consequences: if a filing deadline is missed or an approval lapses, the agency must re-file. Deployment before approval exposes the agency and foreign principal to joint criminal and civil liability under the 2026 Act.

Where MGLSD processing times are causing delay, agencies may follow up through the External Employment Unit. Industry observers expect EEMIS system improvements during 2026 to reduce processing bottlenecks, but actual timelines remain dependent on filing completeness and MGLSD staffing capacity.

Costs, Fees and Tax Considerations

The table below lists indicative costs associated with each stage of the recruitment process. Official MGLSD fee schedules should be confirmed directly with the Ministry or through the EEMIS portal, as published amounts may change. Market estimates are labelled accordingly.

Item Indicative Amount (UGX / USD) Notes
EEMIS registration / verification (agency entry) Usually free to view; registration costs may apply Confirm with MGLSD notices and the EEMIS registration page.
Recruitment agency licence fee (application) Varies by category, confirm with MGLSD Fee schedule set by the Ministry; verify current rates before application.
Worker pre-departure medical UGX 60,000–200,000 (approx. USD 15–55), indicative Market estimate. Varies by accredited provider and destination-country requirements.
Pre-departure orientation UGX 30,000–150,000, indicative Charged by MGLSD-accredited training providers. Confirm current pricing.
Insurance & repatriation policy USD 50–500 per year, indicative Depends on cover level and destination. Contract must state which party pays.
Visa / work permit processing USD 100–1,000 (destination dependent) Normally paid by employer or foreign principal. Confirm per destination embassy.
Escrow / repatriation fund Amount varies, must demonstrate means The 2026 Act requires a repatriation guarantee. Confirm fund structure with legal adviser.

Employers placing workers overseas should also consider Ugandan tax obligations. Where the worker remains a Ugandan tax resident, PAYE withholding and National Social Security Fund (NSSF) contributions may still apply depending on the structure of the engagement. Double taxation agreements between Uganda and the destination country may provide relief. Tax and social security obligations for outbound placements require jurisdiction-specific analysis, employers should seek employment law advisory before deployment.

What Changed in 2026, Employment (Amendment) Act 2026

The Employment (Amendment) Act 2026 (Act 10 of 2026), published on 5 June 2026, inserted Part IVA into the Employment Act, 2006. The key procedural changes affecting recruitment for employment abroad are:

  • Dedicated statutory framework for external employment. Part IVA creates, for the first time, a self-contained legislative regime governing the recruitment and placement of Ugandan workers abroad, replacing the previous reliance on the 2005 Regulations alone.
  • Tightened licensing requirements. Recruitment agencies must now meet enhanced criteria for licence issuance and renewal, including demonstrated financial capacity and compliance history. EEMIS registration is mandatory.
  • Mandatory contract clauses. The Act prescribes minimum content for employment contracts, including explicit repatriation commitments, insurance coverage, wage specification and dispute-resolution mechanisms. Contracts that omit any prescribed clause will not receive MGLSD approval.
  • Joint liability. The agency and the foreign principal are jointly and severally liable for contract breaches, failure to repatriate and worker welfare failures. This is a significant shift that increases the risk exposure of both parties.
  • EEMIS pre-approval. All contracts and foreign-principal accreditations must now be filed and approved through EEMIS before the worker departs Uganda. This formalises what was previously an administrative practice into a statutory requirement.
  • Enhanced enforcement powers. The MGLSD has expanded authority to suspend or revoke licences, impose fines and refer matters for criminal prosecution.

Employers and recruitment agencies that were operating under pre-2026 procedures should take the following immediate actions:

  • Review and update all standard employment contracts to include every mandatory clause required by Part IVA.
  • Confirm that EEMIS registration is current and that the agency licence reflects the new criteria.
  • Verify that all active foreign-principal relationships have been accredited through the updated MGLSD process.
  • Brief operational staff on the joint-liability provisions and establish internal compliance audit procedures.

Common Pitfalls and How to Avoid Them

  • Using an unlicensed agency. Verify the agency’s status on EEMIS before signing any agreement. Engaging an unlicensed or suspended agency exposes the employer to criminal liability and renders the placement void. The MGLSD publishes updated lists of suspended agencies on the EEMIS portal.
  • Loan-based recruitment. Some operators charge workers advance “travel loans” that create debt bondage. This practice violates the Ugandan legal framework governing labour migration and may constitute trafficking. Workers should never pay upfront recruitment fees that exceed published government-approved charges.
  • Missing or incomplete repatriation clause. The 2026 Act makes the repatriation clause mandatory. Contracts that omit it will be rejected by MGLSD. Ensure the clause specifies who pays, under what circumstances repatriation is triggered and the timeframe for return.
  • Insufficient insurance cover. The policy must cover repatriation, death and disability for the full contract period. Policies with exclusions for pre-existing conditions or narrow geographic cover are likely to be flagged during EEMIS review.
  • Deploying workers before MGLSD approval. Filing is not approval. The agency must wait for EEMIS confirmation before the worker departs. Premature deployment carries penalties for illegal recruitment, including licence revocation.
  • Forged or expired documents. The MGLSD cross-checks documents against issuing authorities. Filing forged medical certificates, expired passports or fabricated professional licences results in immediate suspension and criminal referral.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mbanza Martin Kalemera at Birungyi Barata & Associates, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Employment (Amendment) Act, 2026 (Act 10 of 2026), ULII
  2. Acts Supplement, Employment (Amendment) Act 2026 (Gazette PDF), ULII
  3. Employment Act (consolidated), ULII
  4. Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development, External Employment Management Information System (EEMIS)
  5. Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development, Official Website
  6. Employment (Recruitment of Ugandan Migrant Workers Abroad) Regulations, 2005 (SI 62/2005), Uganda Business Licensing Information Portal
  7. Guidelines on Recruitment and Placement of Ugandan Migrant Workers, ILO / NATLEX
  8. EEMIS Public Notice, MGLSD

FAQs

How do I legally recruit Ugandans for work abroad under the 2026 amendments?
Engage a recruitment agency holding a valid licence on EEMIS, verify the foreign principal’s MGLSD accreditation, execute a government-approved employment contract containing all mandatory clauses (including repatriation), file the contract through EEMIS, obtain MGLSD approval, and complete all pre-departure clearances before the worker departs Uganda.
Agencies require a recruitment agency licence issued by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development under the Employment (Recruitment of Ugandan Migrant Workers Abroad) Regulations, 2005 (SI 62/2005), as reinforced by Part IVA of the Employment (Amendment) Act 2026. The licence must be registered on the EEMIS portal.
Required documents include the agency licence, foreign principal accreditation, a signed standard employment contract (with mandatory clauses on wages, repatriation, insurance, termination and dispute resolution), worker passport, medical fitness certificate, pre-departure orientation certificate, visa, insurance policy and any relevant professional certificates.
End-to-end processing typically takes 33–135 days depending on filing completeness and MGLSD processing capacity. Penalties for non-compliance include licence suspension or revocation, fines and criminal prosecution under the amended Employment Act. Joint liability extends to both the agency and the foreign principal.
Visit the EEMIS portal at eemis.mglsd.go.ug and use the public register to search for any agency by name or licence number. EEMIS displays each agency’s current status, including whether it is licensed, suspended or revoked. The MGLSD periodically publishes updated suspension lists through official notices.
The employment contract must specify which party bears each cost. Under international good practice referenced by the ILO, employers and foreign principals should bear the primary burden of recruitment-related costs. Workers should not be required to pay fees that create debt bondage. The 2026 Act reinforces this by requiring transparency in the contract on all cost allocations.
Legal advice is recommended at the earliest stage, before the agency is engaged and before the employment contract is drafted. This ensures that the contract meets all mandatory content requirements, that the foreign principal’s accreditation is properly structured and that tax, social security and joint-liability risks are addressed before any commitments are made.
The worker (or their representative) should report the complaint to the MGLSD External Employment Unit via the designated hotline or the EEMIS complaint channel. The recruitment agency is obliged to cooperate with the investigation. Under the 2026 Act, the agency and foreign principal are jointly liable, and the MGLSD has power to suspend the agency’s licence pending resolution.
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How to Recruit Ugandans for Employment Abroad (step‑by‑step, Employment Amendment Act 2026)

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