EuroWire, BRUSSELS: The European Union gave final approval on Monday to a new digital recruitment platform designed to connect non-EU jobseekers living outside the bloc with employers in member states facing labor shortages. The Council adopted the regulation establishing the EU Talent Pool, completing the lawmaking process after the European Parliament backed the measure on March 10. First proposed by the European Commission in November 2023, the initiative is intended to support international hiring in occupations where participating member states say domestic recruitment and mobility within the EU do not fully meet demand.

Under the regulation, participation will be voluntary for member states, and a job match through the platform will not replace national immigration procedures. Non-EU candidates who receive an offer will still have to apply for residence and work authorization under the rules of the country where they seek employment. The platform is to provide information on recruitment steps, legal migration procedures and workers’ rights, including fair recruitment standards and decent working conditions, while operating as a matching tool rather than a new legal route that grants entry or employment rights across the EU.
The law says the system will cover vacancies in sectors marked by shortages and will be open to non-EU applicants with relevant skills. It also assigns a central role to national contact points in participating countries, which will guide employers and candidates through the process and provide information on work contracts, social security, taxation, health insurance and, where relevant, family reunification and integration support. The regulation also states that traineeships and apprenticeships are not to be advertised through the platform, keeping the scheme focused on regular employment rather than short-term training placements.
How the platform will work
Access for recruiters will be limited to employers and other entities that are lawfully established in participating member states. The regulation allows temporary work agencies, private employment agencies and labor market intermediaries to take part, but it also includes enforcement measures aimed at reducing abuse. National authorities and contact points can suspend or permanently exclude employers or other entities that fail to comply with the rules, while complaints about unfair recruitment practices or labor law breaches are to be handled through existing national mechanisms and forwarded to the relevant authorities.
For jobseekers, the platform will use standardized profiles containing personal and professional details needed for matching, including qualifications, work or volunteering experience, language skills, nationality, availability and preferred destinations within the EU. The regulation says those profiles are to be used only for search and matching purposes and gives candidates the right to edit, delete or restrict access to their data. Profiles that are not accessed for one year must be removed, with automatic notice sent in advance, adding a data retention rule to a platform built around cross-border recruitment.
Timeline and legal scope
The European Commission is now tasked with developing the IT platform, which the Council said is expected to be fully operational by 2027. The regulation also allows member states to withdraw from the scheme, with an exit taking effect nine months after notice and new vacancies from that country barred from the platform once notice is filed. In its recitals, the law cites current and future labor and skills shortages, along with demographic trends, and says measures targeting domestic and EU workforces alone are likely to be insufficient to address those pressures across the bloc.
The final approval establishes the EU’s first Union-wide platform dedicated to matching employers with non-EU jobseekers residing outside the bloc. The law sets a common framework for recruitment safeguards, worker information requirements and administrative coordination, while leaving decisions on entry, residence and work permits to national authorities under existing immigration rules. It also allows candidates who have taken part in Talent Partnerships, bilateral arrangements or national skills frameworks in third countries to indicate that in their profiles, without treating that information as formal recognition of qualifications.
