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Immigration Rubric Production v1.0 Complexity

Scaffolder · Greece · Scaffolder

  • Posted Workers Directive
  • Directive 2018/957/EU
  • A1 portable document
  • EU Regulation 883/2004
  • Single Permit
  • EU Blue Card
Collection Bayswater Immigration Intelligence
Document Deployment Regulatory Reference
Jurisdiction Greece
As at April 2026

Executive Summary

Greece regulates the scaffolder trade through a layered statutory framework comprising the host-state Labour Code, the labour-migration statute, the spatial-development or construction-categorisation act, and EU-derived regulations transposed under accession treaty obligations. Cross-border deployment of scaffolders into Greece sites engages four concurrent regulatory layers: immigration authorisation, labour-migration registration with the host inspectorate, social-insurance affiliation under EU Regulation 883/2004, and firm-level construction qualification.

Scaffolder as a stand-alone occupation in Greece sits within the broader construction sector regulatory framework. Trade-specific recognition pathways operate under the Recognition of Professional Qualifications regime transposing Directive 2005/36/EC as amended by 2013/55/EU. scaffolding erection and dismantling on multi-trade sites adds firm-level construction-qualification overhead and may engage trade-adjacent regulated activities such as welding (EN ISO 9606), lifting equipment operation, and pressure-equipment work depending on the site context.

Bottom line: Greece is a Tier-1 wage destination for scaffolder deployment. Total deployment cost reflects high statutory minimum wage, sector-fund contributions where applicable, and qualification-recognition lead times. Pre-deployment compliance preparation reduces exposure to inspectorate-driven schedule disruption.

Greece (Ελληνική Δημοκρατία) is a civil-law jurisdiction whose private-law architecture descends from the French/Roman tradition through the Astikos Kodikas (Civil Code, Law 2250/1940 as re-promulgated). It has been an EU Member State since 1 January 1981 and a Schengen member since 26 March 2000. The principal instruments controlling cross-border workforce mobilisation into Greek construction, EPC, energy and shipyard sites are: the Migration Code (Kodikas Metanasteusis kai Koinonikis Entaxis) Law 5038/2023, which entered into force on 1 January 2024 and replaced the prior Law 4251/2014; the Labour Reform package of Law 4808/2021 (For the Protection of Labour) and Law 5053/2023 (Strengthening Labour); and the posted-worker transposition Law 4554/2018 as amended by Law 4768/2021, transposing Directive 96/71/EC and Directive 2018/957/EU.

Recent reform pressure has come from three directions. Law 5038/2023 consolidated and modernised the migration framework, restructuring residence-permit categories, clarifying employer obligations under the unified single-permit procedure, and expanding the Metaklisi (μετάκληση — formal invitation) instrument as the principal lawful entry channel for non-EU subordinate workers in seasonal and short-cycle sectors. Law 5053/2023 changed working time, on-call and digital-platform rules and recalibrated overtime; its provisions on six-day working in industrial sectors are relevant to refinery, shipyard and EPC turnaround deployments. The EU Blue Card recast Directive 2021/1883 was transposed via the corresponding articles of Law 5038/2023, lowering qualification thresholds and broadening recognition of higher professional skills as alternative to formal tertiary qualifications.

The principal labour inspectorate is SEPE (Soma Epitheorisis Ergasias — Σώμα Επιθεώρησης Εργασίας), now operating as the Independent Labour Inspectorate Authority following Law 4808/2021. SEPE coordinates joint inspections with e-EFKA, DOY (tax authority) and the Hellenic Police Aliens Bureau. The Ministry of Migration and Asylum (migration.gov.gr) holds primary jurisdiction over Migration Code enforcement and residence-permit issuance through the Decentralised Administration Aliens and Migration Directorates.

Source instruments: Law 5038/2023 via et.gr (FEK A’ 81/2023); Law 4808/2021 via e-nomothesia.gr; Law 5053/2023 via et.gr; Law 4554/2018 + 4768/2021 via e-nomothesia.gr; migration portal migration.gov.gr; SEPE at sepenet.gr.

Trade-specific context

A scaffolder erects, modifies, alters and dismantles temporary access platforms and supporting structures for construction, refurbishment, demolition and industrial maintenance shutdowns. The work spans system scaffolds (Layher Allround, PERI UP, Plettac contur, Haki, Altrad), traditional tube-and-fitting (steel or aluminium tubes 48.3mm OD with right-angle, swivel, putlog and sleeve couplers), birdcage and independent scaffolds, cantilevered and hanging configurations, mast climbers and suspended cradles, and temporary roofs and weather encapsulation.

The trade is distinct from the formwork carpenter (who erects the falsework and shuttering that contains poured concrete), the steel erector (who places permanent structural steel) and the rigger (who plans and executes lifting operations using cranes and lifting accessories). Scaffolders work to drawings produced by a scaffold designer in accordance with EN 12811-1 and load class definitions; complex configurations require a competent person to issue a handover certificate before the platform is released for trade use. On Tier 1 EPC sites — refineries, gigafactories, offshore wind landfall stations, petrochemical complexes — scaffolders typically operate inside a permit-to-work regime with daily inspections logged before each shift.

Governing Laws

Regulatory Bodies

Industry-Specific Compliance Stack

For scaffolder deployment to a Greece site, the four-layer compliance stack — immigration authorisation, posting notification, social-insurance affiliation, and firm-level qualification — operates concurrently. Failure on any single layer can trigger inspectorate enforcement.

Greece (Ελληνική Δημοκρατία) is a civil-law jurisdiction whose private-law architecture descends from the French/Roman tradition through the Astikos Kodikas (Civil Code, Law 2250/1940 as re-promulgated). It has been an EU Member State since 1 January 1981 and a Schengen member since 26 March 2000. The principal instruments controlling cross-border workforce mobilisation into Greek construction, EPC, energy and shipyard sites are: the Migration Code (Kodikas Metanasteusis kai Koinonikis Entaxis) Law 5038/2023, which entered into force on 1 January 2024 and replaced the prior Law 4251/2014; the Labour Reform package of Law 4808/2021 (For the Protection of Labour) and Law 5053/2023 (Strengthening Labour); and the posted-worker transposition Law 4554/2018 as amended by Law 4768/2021, transposing Directive 96/71/EC and Directive 2018/957/EU.

Recent reform pressure has come from three directions. Law 5038/2023 consolidated and modernised the migration framework, restructuring residence-permit categories, clarifying employer obligations under the unified single-permit procedure, and expanding the Metaklisi (μετάκληση — formal invitation) instrument as the principal lawful entry channel for non-EU subordinate workers in seasonal and short-cycle sectors. Law 5053/2023 changed working time, on-call and digital-platform rules and recalibrated overtime; its provisions on six-day working in industrial sectors are relevant to refinery, shipyard and EPC turnaround deployments. The EU Blue Card recast Directive 2021/1883 was transposed via the corresponding articles of Law 5038/2023, lowering qualification thresholds and broadening recognition of higher professional skills as alternative to formal tertiary qualifications.

The principal labour inspectorate is SEPE (Soma Epitheorisis Ergasias — Σώμα Επιθεώρησης Εργασίας), now operating as the Independent Labour Inspectorate Authority following Law 4808/2021. SEPE coordinates joint inspections with e-EFKA, DOY (tax authority) and the Hellenic Police Aliens Bureau. The Ministry of Migration and Asylum (migration.gov.gr) holds primary jurisdiction over Migration Code enforcement and residence-permit issuance through the Decentralised Administration Aliens and Migration Directorates.

Source instruments: Law 5038/2023 via et.gr (FEK A’ 81/2023); Law 4808/2021 via e-nomothesia.gr; Law 5053/2023 via et.gr; Law 4554/2018 + 4768/2021 via e-nomothesia.gr; migration portal migration.gov.gr; SEPE at sepenet.gr.

2. Immigration Pathways

PathwayPrerequisiteProcessing TimeSalary Floor (2026 EUR/yr)
Single Permit / National PermitEmployer offer; labour-market test30-90 working daysNational sector wage floor
EU Blue CardTertiary qualification or 5 yrs experience; salary threshold30-90 days1.5× national average gross [verify]
Posted-worker notificationA1 portable document; pre-existing employment with non-GR employerNotification effective on submissionWage parity with host-state CBA where applicable
ICT (Directive 2014/66/EU)6+ months tenure; manager/specialist/trainee30-90 daysAligned with hooggekwalificeerd floor

Non-EU access to subordinate employment in Greece is gated sequentially: an entry visa (Type D, Ethniki Theorisi — Εθνική Θεώρηση) issued by the Greek consular post of origin, followed by a Residence Permit (Adeia Diamonis — Άδεια Διαμονής) issued by the Decentralised Administration after arrival. Under Law 5038/2023, the Residence Permit and Work Permit are integrated into a single permit (eniaia adeia) for the great majority of non-EU subordinate-work pathways, eliminating the prior bifurcation under Law 4251/2014.

PathwayPrerequisiteProcessing TimeSalary Floor (2026 EUR/yr)
Type D Visa + Single Permit (lavoro subordinato)Employer engagement; Migration Code Art 11-15; positive labour-market test where applicable90-180 days end-to-endGreek minimum + sector CBA where extended [verify]
EU Blue Card (Mple Karta EE — Μπλε Κάρτα ΕΕ)Tertiary qualification OR 5 years senior professional experience (3 of which in IT/related); employer contract minimum 6 months; Law 5038/2023 transposition of Dir 2021/188360-90 daysEUR ~26,500-29,000 [verify] (1.0x national average gross salary)
High-Skilled (Specialist) PermitSpecialist scientific/technical role; employer offer; outside Metaklisi quota60-120 daysIndicative EUR 28,000+ [verify]
Posted worker (Apospasmenos Ergazomenos — αποσπασμένος εργαζόμενος)A1 portable document; SEPE notification via ergani.gov.grNotification day-of-deploymentGreek minimum + sector CBA where extended (Law 4554/2018)
Metaklisi (Μετάκληση — invitation, seasonal/short-term)Annual quota slot in Joint Ministerial Decision (KYA); employer commitment; binding accommodation undertaking30-90 daysGreek statutory minimum
Long-term EU Resident (Epi Makron Diamenon — Επί μακρόν διαμένων)5 years legal residence; stable income; A2 Greek language; integration test6-12 months from applicationn/a — status-based
Investor (Golden Visa, Adeia Diamonis Ependyti)Real-estate or business investment thresholds raised in 2024 (EUR 250k-800k regional)60-180 daysn/a — investment-based

The Type D visa is non-Schengen and authorises entry for the purpose stated; it is converted on arrival via the Residence Permit application within the validity window of the visa. Under Law 5038/2023 Art 8-10, the employer files a justified position-statement (vevaiosi thesis ergasias) through the migration.gov.gr portal, including evidence of e-EFKA registration and ergani.gov.gr employer code.

For non-EU workers deployed via a UK or other third-country sending entity, posting under Directive 96/71/EC is unavailable post-Brexit — the EU posted-worker regime applies only to EU/EEA-established undertakings. Deployment of Indian, Filipino, Egyptian, Pakistani or Bangladeshi trades into Greek construction and shipyards uses the Type D + Single Permit channel, the Metaklisi quota where the timing fits the annual decree window, or the EU Blue Card / Specialist for senior technical roles. EU-established sending entities deploy under the standard posted-worker regime with SEPE notification.

Source: Migration Code Law 5038/2023 via et.gr FEK A’ 81/2023; Metaklisi KYA at migration.gov.gr.

3. Professional Recognition & Certification

Scaffolder as a stand-alone occupation in Greece typically does not carry an individual ordinal-registration requirement, though some host states (notably Germany under HwO Anlage A) impose Meisterzwang or equivalent qualification gates for specific construction trades. The Recognition of Professional Qualifications regime transposes Directive 2005/36/EC as amended by 2013/55/EU.

For EEA-issued scaffolder certificates, recognition flows under the automatic or general systems with typical processing of 2-6 weeks. For non-EEA certificates, equivalence assessment by the host-state competent authority typically runs 4-12 weeks and may require supplementary assessment via a designated host-state VET centre.

Greece regulates entry to construction-adjacent trades primarily through individual-licence regimes operated by the regional Decentralised Administration directorates and through firm-level engineering supervision under the Technical Chamber of Greece (TEE — Τεχνικό Επιμελητήριο Ελλάδος). All building works above defined thresholds must be executed under a Mihaniki (engineering) supervisory mandate by a TEE-registered engineer.

For the licensed trades — electrician (Ilektrologos), plumber/sanitary fitter (Ydraulikos), refrigeration and air-conditioning installer (Psyktikos), gas fitter (Egkatastatis Aeriou), and oil-burner technician — Presidential Decree 108/2013 and subsequent ministerial implementing decisions establish a tiered licensing system (vathmides). Examination is conducted by regional examination committees under the Decentralised Administrations. The licence (adeia askisis epangelmatos) is granted to the natural-person practitioner after vocational training, supervised experience, and pass on the State examination. Foreign qualifications are recognised via the ATEEN procedure under Directive 2005/36/EC and Law 4610/2019, taking 4-9 months and requiring Greek-language demonstration.

Welding (synkollisis) is not subject to a national State licensing albo, but EN ISO 9606 / 14732 qualification is contractually mandatory on CE-marked structural steel (EN 1090) and pressure equipment (PED 2014/68/EU); the executing firm must hold EN ISO 3834-2 or 3834-3 certification through an accredited body (TUV Hellas, Bureau Veritas Hellas, ELOT). Crane operations require operator certification under Ministerial Decision 6/2007 (FEK B’ 2154/2007) implementing PD 305/1996 (transposing Directive 92/57/EEC). Scaffolding installation requires the team leader to hold a recognised competency under PD 305/1996 Annex IV; the SAY (health and safety plan) and FAY (health and safety file) must be drafted by a competent Mihaniki for each site.

Lifting equipment safety, pressure-vessel periodic inspection, and heavy-equipment operation operate under PD 305/1996, PD 17/1996, PD 89/1999 and Law 3850/2010 (Code of Health and Safety of Workers). Inspection competence is divided between SEPE for occupational safety and the Decentralised Administrations for installation certification.

Trade-specific context

The European standards framework for scaffolds applies regardless of jurisdiction:

The de-facto cross-border craft passport is the CISRS (Construction Industry Scaffolders Record Scheme), administered by the NASC. CISRS Trainee, Part 1, Part 2, Advanced and Supervisor cards are recognised on UK, Irish, Middle Eastern and increasingly European EPC sites. Reference: https://cisrs.org.uk/

Country-specific craft qualifications include:

4. Social Security & Insurance

A1 portable documents are issued by the home-state social-insurance institution under EU Regulation (EC) 883/2004 and accepted by Greece authorities for inbound postings. Absence of a valid A1 triggers Greece social-security liability from day one of work.

Contribution architecture: standard EU host-state pattern of employer + employee contributions on insurable income, typically 25-35% combined depending on trade-specific risk classification and sector-fund supplements where applicable.

Greek social security operates on a unified-fund principle since the 2017 reform. The pillars are: e-EFKA (Ηλεκτρονικός Εθνικός Φορέας Κοινωνικής Ασφάλισης), which under Law 4387/2016 absorbed all prior sector funds (IKA-ETAM, OAEE, OGA, ETAA and others); EOPYY (Εθνικός Οργανισμός Παροχής Υπηρεσιών Υγείας), the public health-insurance leg; and TEKA (Tameio Epikourikis Kefalaiopoiitikis Asfalisis), the auxiliary capitalised pension fund operating from 2022 under Law 4826/2021 for new entrants.

e-EFKA at efka.gov.gr collects pension and ancillary contributions for all construction and EPC subordinate employees. The 2026 employer composite sits in the 21.79-25.0% range of gross taxable earnings [verify], comprising main pension, auxiliary (epikouriko), lump-sum (efapax) and ancillary social levies. Employee withholding sits in the 13.87-15.5% band [verify]. Total composite wage-cost loading is therefore in the high-30s to low-40s percent when EOPYY levies are included.

EOPYY at eopyy.gov.gr provides mandatory health-insurance access; contributions are collected as part of the unified e-EFKA assessment. There is no separate sectoral construction health fund.

Greece does NOT operate a construction-sector bilateral fund equivalent to German Soka-Bau or French Congés Intempéries BTP. Paid-leave and 13th-month accruals are managed directly by the employer under the Greek Labour Code and (where applicable) sector SSE. This simplifies the social-security architecture relative to Germany or France but raises the importance of direct e-EFKA filing currency.

The Asfalistiki Enimerotita is the e-EFKA-issued certificate confirming current contributory standing. Validity is 6 months general, 1 month for tender purposes. It must be active at every public-works payment milestone. A lapse triggers payment suspension and on public sites can trigger formal site notice procedures.

A1 reciprocity: EU/EEA/CH workers on documented posting present an A1 certificate exempting them from Greek e-EFKA for the posting duration (up to 24 months extendable). UK A1 equivalence under the TCA Protocol on Social Security Coordination operates similarly post-Brexit but is subject to closer SEPE/e-EFKA verification. Non-EU workers entering via Type D + Single Permit or Metaklisi are fully subject to e-EFKA from day one.

5. Wages & Collective Agreements

Greece statutory minimum wage is set annually by the relevant national authority. Sector-level CBA coverage in construction varies; posted-worker wage parity under Directive 2018/957/EU anchors to statutory minimum or to applicable CBA rates where the agreement has been universally extended.

Greece operates a statutory minimum wage (Katotatos Misthos — Κατώτατος μισθός) fixed by ministerial decree under the procedure introduced in 2012 (Law 4046/2012) and consolidated under Law 4093/2012, as supplemented by Law 4172/2013 and Law 4808/2021. The setting procedure requires consultation with social partners and research bodies (KEPE, INE-GSEE, IOBE, IME-GSEVEE) but ultimate fixation is by Cabinet decree. Sectoral Collective Bargaining Agreements (SSE — Συλλογικές Συμβάσεις Εργασίας) operate above the statutory minimum, but generally-binding extension (epektassi) was substantially narrowed under the memoranda reforms of 2012-2018 and is only progressively being re-broadened.

For 2026, indicative statutory minimum wage figures (subject to ministerial decree publication in FEK B’):

  • Monthly minimum (Katotatos misthos): EUR ~905-920 gross [verify]
  • Daily minimum (Katotato imeromisthio): EUR ~40.0-41.0 [verify]
  • Hourly equivalent (40h/week, 26-day month): EUR ~5.20-5.45 [verify]

For comparison, the 2024 floor was EUR 830 monthly / EUR 37.07 daily, raised to EUR 880 / EUR 39.30 in 2025; the 2026 figure has been signalled at EUR 905-920 monthly in pre-decree communications [verify].

Construction-sector pay sits above statutory minimum. Indicative 2026 construction operative gross monthly [verify against current SSE Oikodomon and per-site practice]:

  • Anidikeftos (unskilled labourer): EUR 1,000-1,150 [verify]
  • Eidikeumenos (qualified operative): EUR 1,250-1,500 [verify]
  • Texnitis (skilled tradesman — carpenter, mason, electrician): EUR 1,500-1,900 [verify]
  • Eidikos texnitis (specialist — coded welder, tower-crane operator): EUR 1,900-2,500 [verify]

The 14-month convention (12 + Christmas double + Easter half + summer half) lifts these by 16.6% over bare-monthly. Annual gross for a skilled tradesman therefore sits in the EUR 21,000-26,500 band on contract minimums [verify], EUR 25,000-32,000 with overtime.

Source: ministerial decree on Katotatos Misthos via et.gr FEK B’; sectoral SSE Oikodomon via Ministry of Labour at ypergasias.gov.gr; 14-month conventions in Law 1082/1980 as amended.

Trade-specific context

Scaffolder rates carry a premium over general construction labour, typically 15-30% above the unskilled-operative rate in the same jurisdiction, reflecting both the height risk and the certification overhead. The trade is one of the few where Tier 1 senior scaffolders (CISRS Advanced or DE Gerüstbau-Vorarbeiter with multi-site experience) command rates approaching qualified pipefitters.

  • Tier 1 (CH, LU, NO, DK): €23-34/hr base for certified erector; €28-38/hr for chargehand/Vorarbeiter. CH LMV Lohnklasse Q applies for senior scaffolders.
  • Tier 2 (DE, NL, FR, BE, AT, FI, SE, IE): €18-27/hr base; €22-32/hr for chargehand. DE BRTV-Bau Lohngruppe 4-5 for Geselle Gerüstbauer.
  • Tier 3 (IT, ES, PT, CY, MT, GR): €11-17/hr base; €14-20/hr for chargehand.
  • Tier 4 (PL, CZ, SK, HU, RO, BG, HR, SI, EE, LT, LV): €7-13/hr base; €9-15/hr for chargehand. Posted-worker mobilisations from this tier into Tier 1/2 jurisdictions must observe host-country minimum wage and equal-treatment provisions under Directive 96/71/EC as amended by 2018/957.

Shutdown and turnaround premia of 20-50% over base are standard on refinery TARs and offshore wind landfall projects, often with rotational schedules (e.g. 3 weeks on / 1 week off) and accommodation provided.

6. Accommodation & Welfare

Posted-worker accommodation standards in Greece are governed by general employer health-and-safety obligations under the Labour Code and, where applicable, by sector-specific implementation ordinances setting square-meter-per-worker minima, sanitary-facility ratios, and ventilation/heating requirements. Practical norms on multi-trade sites typically follow national contractor codes of practice.

7. Language Requirements

Greece’s official administrative language applies to inspectorate notifications, social-insurance filings, and regulatory submissions. Site language fluency expectations follow from the supervisor’s working language and the safety-driven inspectorate posture.

Greece imposes no statutory CEFR threshold for construction-sector subordinate work entry under Type D + Single Permit or under Metaklisi. There is no equivalent of the German Telc B1 site-access gate. However, three operational constraints make Greek language capacity functionally relevant:

(1) Law 3850/2010 (Code of Health and Safety of Workers) Art 41-46 on training and information. Implementing decisions require safety training and Ergosimeio (εργοσημείο — site safety briefing) delivery in a comprehensible manner. SEPE reads this as an affirmative duty to provide Greek training OR translated/interpreted training of equivalent rigour. Pure English induction is accepted on international EPC projects with English as documented site lingua franca — prevailing practice on tourism-resort, refinery, shipyard and major energy projects with Italian, Korean or French principals.

(2) Long-term EU Resident permit (Epi Makron Diamenon, Migration Code Art 89-92): obtaining this 5-year status requires Greek A2 and an integration test on Greek history, geography and culture. Temporary Type D + Single Permit has no such language requirement.

(3) Greek is the official documentary language. Employment contracts, payslips and Ergani filings are generated in Greek; the Ergani II portal supports English UI partially but generates Greek-language official documents.

Practical implication: trade workers on short-cycle EPC turnarounds, refinery shutdowns and shipyard projects can operate with limited Greek where the site has English-speaking supervision and translated briefings. Workers on multi-year subordination should be assessed at Greek A2 minimum. English tolerance is highest on Athens EPC, Eleusis/Aspropyrgos petrochemical, Skaramangas/Salamina/Syros shipyards and tourism-construction in Crete, Rhodes, the Cyclades; lowest on regional civil works in mainland Greece.

8. Compliance & Enforcement

The host-state labour inspectorate conducts site audits with statutory powers under the labour code and posting-regime ordinance. Audit triggers include targeted inspections on high-risk sites, complaint-driven inspections, cross-agency referrals, and routine audits on randomly selected posting notifications.

Common compliance traps cluster around late posting notification, A1 absence, document-translation overhead for non-Latin-script jurisdictions, and CBA wage-parity assumptions where the host-state CBA universal-extension status is variable.

The five most frequent compliance failures observed by SEPE and e-EFKA across cross-border construction deployments into Greece:

  1. SEPE-Ergani notification missing or late on posted-worker deployments. The notification under Law 4554/2018 must be lodged in Ergani II before commencement of work in Greece; post-arrival “fixes” do not regularise. Sanctions EUR 1,000-30,000 per worker, aggravated where SEPE finds wider compliance failure.

  2. Greek minimum-wage and SSE non-parity on posted workers. Sending undertakings apply origin-country wage levels with an under-pegged “completion” allowance. SEPE reconstructs the treatment on Greek statutory minimum + sector SSE and recovers the differential plus sanctions; principal contractors face joint and several liability.

  3. e-EFKA contribution evasion via under-declaration of working time or wage base. The Ergani II e-clocking module (kartas ergasias) under Law 5053/2023 has tightened SEPE’s ability to reconcile declared time against site-presence. Under-declaration on the monthly APD (Analytiki Periodiki Dilosi) carries combined criminal and administrative exposure.

  4. Type D / Residence Permit scope mismatch with site role. The Migration Code permits non-EU workers to perform only the work specified in the engagement underlying the Single Permit. Re-deployment to a different end-client or upgrading from labourer to skilled trade without permit amendment is a breach. Ministry of Migration guidance requires amendment before any material change.

  5. Metaklisi quota slot exhaustion and window miss. The Metaklisi quota is set annually by KYA and allocated via migration.gov.gr in narrow windows. Slots are exhausted rapidly in agricultural and construction sectors. Missed window or wrong sectoral allocation means rejection and a deployment-cycle reset to the Type D + Single Permit timeline (4-6 months longer).

9. Cost-Per-Worker Breakdown (First Year)

Indicative cost stack for a posted scaffolder on a 12-month deployment to a Greece construction site:

ItemEUR / worker / yearNotes
Gross wage (sector journeyman)35,000Tier-1 wage destination; varies by CBA
Employer social-insurance contributions9,000~25% of gross; varies by jurisdiction
Sector-fund contributions (where applicable)2,500SOKA-BAU equivalent / construction levy
Visa/permit fees (one-off)500Single Permit or Blue Card application fees
Qualification-recognition fees (one-off)200Per qualification recognition
Document-translation overhead (initial)300Variable by document count
Accommodation (employer-provided, indicative)6,000EUR 500/month; varies by location
Total deployment cost~53,500First-year, fully loaded; excludes per-diem and travel

10. Operational Warnings & Red Flags

  • Pre-arrival posting notification is non-negotiable: late notification is treated identically to non-notification under the host-state Posted Workers Directive transposition. Build the notification milestone into the pre-deployment T-2 weeks checkpoint.
  • A1 absence triggers parallel host-state social-security liability: a posted worker without a valid A1 from home state is presumed host-state-affiliated from day one of work, with retroactive contribution liability cumulating monthly.
  • CBA wage-parity verification: confirm the host-state construction CBA’s universal-extension status before pricing the deployment; assumption of universal applicability is a common compliance error.
  • Subcontracting chain liability: where the host state imposes joint and several liability across the subcontracting chain, the principal contractor bears risk for sub-tier wage and contribution compliance.
  • Sector-fund registration (where applicable): SOKA-BAU (Germany), Constructiv (Belgium), CIBTP (France), Cassa Edile (Italy), BUAK (Austria) — verify whether Greece’s sector-fund regime covers scaffolder deployment and pre-register before site arrival.

Trade-specific context

Scaffolding consistently records the highest fatality rate per worker-hour of any common European construction trade. Eurostat construction-sector data and country-level Berufsgenossenschaft Bau (BG BAU) reports place falls from height as the dominant fatal mechanism, with scaffolders disproportionately represented [verify against latest 2026 BG BAU annual report].

Operational risks the trade must control:

  • Working at height: The defining hazard. Twin-lanyard 100% tie-off discipline during erection and dismantling phases when guardrails are not yet or no longer present. EN 363 fall-arrest systems with EN 361 full-body harness, EN 355 energy-absorbing lanyard, EN 362 connectors. https://www.cencenelec.eu/
  • Falling materials: Tools, fittings (1-2 kg each), tubes (6.4 kg/m for 48.3mm × 4.0mm steel), planks (15-25 kg). Tool tethering, debris netting, exclusion zones, hard-hat with chinstrap mandatory.
  • Manual handling: Repetitive lifting of tubes, fittings, transoms, ledgers and decks. Cumulative musculoskeletal injury is the leading cause of mid-career trade exit.
  • Wind and weather: Erection halt protocols typically trigger at sustained 8 m/s, dismantling halts at 12-15 m/s depending on configuration. Encapsulated scaffolds (sheeted or netted) require recalculated wind loads.
  • Electrical contact: Proximity to overhead lines — minimum clearance distances per country regulator (e.g. BGV A3 in DE, INRS ED 6027 in FR).
  • Statutory inspections: Weekly scafftag inspection, after high winds, after material alteration, before first use. Logged in the scaffold register held on site.
  • PPE: Helmet with chinstrap (EN 397 + EN 12492 for height work), full-body harness (EN 361) with twin lanyard, scaffold gloves with cut and impact protection (EN 388), safety boots S3 (EN ISO 20345), hi-vis class 2 (EN ISO 20471), eye protection during cutting operations (EN 166).

11. Compliance Checklist

Pre-deployment (T-12 to T-0 weeks)

  • T-12: Sponsoring/host construction firm qualification verified for appropriate construction category
  • T-10: Worker qualification dossier compiled; sworn translation initiated where applicable
  • T-8: Qualification-recognition application submitted (non-EEA workers) OR EEA recognition pathway initiated
  • T-6: Single Permit (or applicable pathway) application lodged; OR posting employer-of-record A1 issuance triggered
  • T-4: Worker insurance coverage verified (A1 reference confirmed); social-insurance and tax registration files prepared
  • T-2: Pre-posting notification submitted via host-state inspectorate portal; reference number captured
  • T-1: Site-arrival logistics confirmed; sworn-translated documents pack assembled for site retention
  • T-0: Worker arrives on site; A1, employment contract, payslip-template, time-record system available within inspector accessibility window

Monthly during deployment

  • Wage payment effected at minimum wage floor or applicable CBA tariff with statutory premia
  • Time-records updated and retained on site
  • Social-insurance contributions remitted by host-state due date
  • Sector-fund contributions remitted (where applicable)
  • Any change to worker, scope, or duration triggers notification update

Annual / per-event

  • Minimum wage indexation update verified
  • A1 renewal initiated 60 days before expiry
  • CBA-signatory status of employer rechecked if joining/leaving sector membership
  • Sector-fund contribution-rate update applied to payroll

12. References

Primary statutory instruments

[See scripts/immigration/briefs/country-GR.md for consolidated primary-source list with URLs and dates.]

Regulatory bodies

[See country brief for named authorities + URLs.]

Internal cross-references

Skills assessment

Operational competency, practical-test specifications and pass-thresholds for this trade are documented separately in the Scaffolder skills-assessment framework — Greece.

Methodology

The regulatory analysis on this page follows the Bayswater observational assessment methodology and the cross-jurisdiction skills-coverage framework.