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Last reviewed: 2 July 2026
Employing migrant workers in Uganda now carries a significantly expanded set of legal obligations following the presidential assent to the Employment (Amendment) Act, 2025 on 29 April 2026, the most substantial overhaul of the country’s employment framework in nearly two decades. The new Part IXA, inserted into the principal Employment Act, 2006, creates a dedicated regulatory regime for non-citizen workers that touches every stage of the employment relationship, from recruitment and work-permit procurement through to PAYE withholding, contract documentation and repatriation. This guide sets out the practical steps that HR directors, in-house counsel, payroll providers and household employers in Uganda must take to achieve full employment compliance under the 2026 rules.
It combines the legal requirements of Part IXA with the immigration procedures administered by the Directorate of Citizenship and Immigration Control, the payroll obligations enforced by the Uganda Revenue Authority (URA), and the recruitment-agency licensing regime overseen by the Ministry of Gender, Labour and Social Development (MGLSD).
Disclaimer: This guide is for general information only. Employers should obtain qualified legal advice before acting on any matter discussed here, as individual circumstances vary and ministerial Gazette notices may introduce additional requirements after the date of publication.
Before hiring or seconding any non-citizen worker in Uganda, employers should confirm they have addressed every item on the following quick-action checklist:
Each item is unpacked in the sections that follow. Employers who need a tailored compliance audit should consult a qualified Uganda employment law practitioner.
The Employment (Amendment) Act, 2025 amends the Employment Act, 2006 (Cap. 226). Its stated objective is to operationalise Article 40 of the Constitution of the Republic of Uganda, which guarantees the right to fair and just working conditions. The Bill was introduced in Parliament as the Employment (Amendment) Bill, 2022 and progressed through committee stages over several sessions before being passed and ultimately receiving presidential assent.
The centrepiece reform for employers of foreign nationals is the insertion of a new Part IXA, which for the first time creates a self-contained statutory framework regulating the employment of non-citizen workers in Uganda. Part IXA grants the Minister responsible for labour broad powers to issue Gazette notices specifying, among other things, the categories of jobs that may or may not be offered to non-citizen workers, the conditions to be attached to their employment, and the obligations that employers must satisfy before and during the engagement.
The amendment also strengthens protections for domestic workers and casual workers, introduces new grounds for lawful termination (including redundancy and prolonged sickness exceeding six months), and tightens the rules on written contracts of service. Industry observers expect subsidiary regulations and further Gazette notices to follow throughout 2026 and into 2027, adding detail to the broad ministerial powers conferred by Part IXA.
| Date | Event | Practical Effect for Employers |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | Employment (Amendment) Bill, 2022 introduced in Parliament | Employers placed on notice that major reforms were in progress |
| 29 April 2026 | Presidential assent to the Employment (Amendment) Act, 2025 | Act takes legal effect; Part IXA obligations begin to apply |
| Mid-2026 onwards | Ministerial Gazette notices anticipated (Code on Wages, job categories for migrant workers) | Employers must monitor the Uganda Gazette and MGLSD announcements for specific sector rules and wage floors |
Part IXA applies broadly to the employment of non-citizen workers in Uganda. In practical terms, employers should assume coverage extends to the following categories unless a specific exemption is enacted by Gazette notice:
The Minister may, by Gazette notice, designate specific job categories in which non-citizen workers may not be employed, effectively reserving those roles for Ugandan citizens. Employers should check the current list of restricted occupations before initiating any recruitment.
No discussion of employing migrant workers in Uganda is complete without addressing immigration permits. The Directorate of Citizenship and Immigration Control administers the work-permit regime under the Uganda Citizenship and Immigration Control Act. An employer that allows a non-citizen to work without a valid permit faces enforcement action under both immigration law and the employment amendment act.
| Permit Type | Who Typically Applies | Typical Processing Time |
|---|---|---|
| Class G Entry Permit (Employment) | Foreign nationals offered full-time employment in Uganda; application submitted by the employer alongside the employee | 4–8 weeks (may vary) |
| Special Pass (Temporary Employment) | Short-term assignments, project-based engagements or while a substantive work permit is being processed | 1–3 weeks |
| Dependant’s Pass | Accompanying spouse or child of a permit holder, does not authorise employment; separate permit required if dependant seeks to work | Processed alongside primary permit |
Processing times are indicative and subject to change. Employers planning to bring in work permits for Uganda should build a buffer of at least two to three months before the intended start date. Fee schedules are published by the Directorate of Citizenship and Immigration Control and may be updated by statutory instrument, always confirm the current fee with the Directorate before submitting.
The employment amendment act reinforces the obligation to provide every worker, and especially non-citizen employees, with a written contract of service that specifies prescribed particulars. For migrant workers, Part IXA heightens the importance of contractual clarity because breaches may trigger both employment-law sanctions and immigration consequences.
Contracts for non-citizen employees should include, at minimum:
Employers should have every contract reviewed by a qualified employment practitioner, particularly where the worker is being seconded from another jurisdiction and dual-country obligations may arise. For a ready reference on domestic-worker-specific terms, see the planned guide on domestic workers in Uganda 2026: required contract terms.
Employers who are hiring or seconding foreign workers must correctly operate PAYE for foreign employees from the outset. The Income Tax Act (Cap. 340) and URA administrative guidance govern employer withholding obligations. Errors in PAYE treatment are a common audit finding and carry interest and penalty consequences.
A foreign employee is treated as a resident individual for income-tax purposes if they are present in Uganda for 183 days or more in any twelve-month period, or if they have a permanent home in Uganda. Resident individuals are taxed on worldwide income; non-residents are taxed only on Uganda-source income. The distinction matters because PAYE rates differ.
The following simplified example illustrates PAYE withholding for a resident foreign employee earning a monthly gross salary of UGX 15,000,000 (inclusive of a housing allowance of UGX 3,000,000). The current annual PAYE bands for resident individuals are applied on a monthly basis:
| Monthly Taxable Income Band (UGX) | Rate | Tax on Band (UGX) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 – 235,000 | 0% | 0 |
| 235,001 – 335,000 | 10% | 10,000 |
| 335,001 – 410,000 | 20% | 15,000 |
| 410,001 – 10,000,000 | 30% | 2,877,000 |
| Above 10,000,000 | 40% | 2,000,000 |
| Total monthly PAYE | 4,902,000 |
Note: Employers should verify the current PAYE thresholds with URA before applying this calculation, as bands may be adjusted by statutory instrument or Finance Act amendments. Benefits in kind, such as employer-provided housing, motor vehicles and school fees, must be valued and added to cash emoluments before applying the bands.
Where a foreign employee is covered by the National Social Security Fund Act, the employer must register the employee and remit monthly contributions, currently 10% employer and 5% employee of the employee’s total monthly wage. Exemptions may apply where a reciprocal social-security agreement exists with the worker’s home country, but such agreements are rare for Uganda. Employers should confirm coverage with NSSF directly.
The Code on Wages 2026 empowers the Minister to issue Gazette notifications setting minimum-wage floors for specified sectors and worker categories. This is particularly relevant for domestic workers in Uganda, who have historically fallen outside formal minimum-wage protections.
Employer obligations under the Code on Wages framework include:
Employers should monitor the Uganda Gazette and MGLSD announcements for specific minimum-wage notifications. As of the date of this article, industry observers expect sector-specific rates to be gazetted during the second half of 2026, and employers would be well advised to budget for potential wage-floor adjustments now.
Employers bringing non-citizen workers into Uganda may recruit directly or through a licensed recruitment agency. Where an agency is used, the employer shares responsibility for ensuring the agency complies with the Employment (Recruitment of Ugandan Migrant Workers) Regulations, 2021 and any subsequent regulations made under the employment amendment act.
Key due-diligence steps when using an agency:
For a comprehensive guide to recruitment agency due diligence and MGLSD licence lookup, see the planned resource on recruitment agency due diligence and licence lookup.
Non-compliance with the employer obligations outlined in this guide exposes employers to a range of penalties for non-compliance. Labour inspectors appointed under the Employment Act have powers of entry, inspection and investigation, and the 2025 amendments strengthen enforcement mechanisms.
| Offence | Potential Sanction | Recommended Mitigation |
|---|---|---|
| Employing a non-citizen without a valid work permit | Fines under immigration and employment law; deportation of the worker; possible criminal prosecution of the employer | Verify permit validity before start date; diarise renewal deadlines |
| Failure to provide a written contract with prescribed terms | Fines; adverse findings in any subsequent labour dispute | Use a compliant contract template reviewed by an employment lawyer |
| PAYE non-compliance (failure to withhold, late remittance, understatement) | URA penalties and interest; potential prosecution for wilful evasion | Automate payroll; reconcile monthly; file returns by the 15th |
| Paying below gazetted minimum wage | Fines; order to pay arrears and compensation | Monitor Gazette notices; adjust wages promptly when new floors are notified |
| Using an unlicensed recruitment agency | Fines; potential joint liability for worker exploitation | Check MGLSD licence register before engaging any agency |
| Failure to maintain or produce employment records during inspection | Fines; adverse presumptions in disputes | Centralise records; conduct annual internal audits |
The likely practical effect of the strengthened enforcement provisions will be an increase in targeted inspections, particularly of sectors that employ large numbers of non-citizen workers. Employers should treat compliance as an ongoing obligation, not a one-time exercise.
| Employer Type | Key Employment / Immigration Reporting Required | Typical Timeline / Trigger |
|---|---|---|
| Multinational seconding an employee | Work-permit application; URA PAYE registration; register with MGLSD if using foreign contractors | Before employee starts; PAYE registration within 14 days of commencement |
| Local employer hiring an expatriate | Work permit; tax-clearance arrangements; NSSF registration where applicable | Before start date; ongoing monthly PAYE and NSSF remittance |
| Household employer (domestic worker) | Written contract with specified terms; PAYE if wages exceed the tax-free threshold; Code on Wages compliance | Before employment commences; monthly PAYE filing if applicable |
Use this numbered checklist to ensure every compliance step is completed when employing migrant workers in Uganda:
If you need legal assistance reviewing your onboarding process or drafting compliant contracts, find an employment lawyer in Uganda through our directory.
The Employment (Amendment) Act, 2025 and its Part IXA provisions represent a step change in the regulatory expectations placed on employers of non-citizen workers. Compliance is not optional, and the penalty regime gives enforcement real teeth. Employers who act now, auditing their contracts, verifying work permits, confirming PAYE set-up and checking recruitment-agency credentials, will be well positioned when inspections intensify.
For employers seeking further guidance on specific aspects of the new framework, the following resources complement this guide:
Explore the Uganda employment practice area for expert commentary and updates. If you need a qualified practitioner to conduct a compliance audit or review your employment documentation, find an employment lawyer in Uganda through our directory.
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.
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