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Hungary to Stop Issuing Worker Visas to People From Three Countries Starting Friday

BUDAPEST, June 5 (Reuters) – Hungary’s government ⁠will ⁠stop issuing worker ⁠visas to employees from the Philippines, Georgia ​and Armenia from Friday, a government spokeswoman said, calling ‌the move a first ‌step towards regulating the inflow of guest ⁠workers.

• Prime ⁠Minister Peter Magyar’s Tisza party, which ended right-wing leader ​Viktor Orban’s 16-year rule in an April 12 election landslide, has said it would stop issuing visas to ​workers from outside the European Union from June.

• ⁠Government to ⁠tighten employment opportunities for ⁠guest ​workers over what it says are concerns they are ​pushing down local ⁠salaries, spokeswoman Vanda Szondi told a media briefing.

• Foreign workers account for just 2% of Hungary’s workforce based on official statistics, but some sectors, ⁠like services and manufacturing, are heavily reliant on foreign workers.

• ⁠Government to change decree allowing manpower companies to import workers in a simplified procedure from the Philippines, Georgia and Armenia as of Friday.

• Employees already present can still apply for an extension, while requests already submitted would be assessed.

• Government calls reforms a first step in ⁠a planned long-term solution.

• Some of Hungary’s largest foreign investors have said a complete halt to the inflow of guest workers would hit companies ​and the wider economy.

(Reporting by Gergely Szakacs, ​Editing by William Maclean)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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