Gulf Work Visa From Bangladesh - Qatar, UAE, Singapore

David Okafor
Global Mobility Correspondentยทยท17 min read
Annual workers (non-Saudi)
90,000+
Top destination (salary)
Singapore
Closed markets
Oman, Bahrain
BMET clearance
Required

90% of Bangladeshi labor migration goes to just SIX countries (Saudi, UAE, Oman, Singapore, Malaysia, Qatar). Several of these markets are now closed or restricted - know which are open before you pay any agency fee.

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Qatar, UAE, Singapore, Jordan, Oman - 2026 comparison

Outside Saudi Arabia (the dominant destination handled in our dedicated guide), five other Gulf and Asian markets together account for the remaining bulk of Bangladeshi labor migration. Their status in 2026 varies dramatically. Some are wide open and actively recruiting; others have closed to Bangladeshi workers entirely. The table below summarises status, typical salary in BDT, and BMET requirements for each.

CountryStatus 2026Typical salary (BDT/mo)Visa type
QatarOpen (post-World Cup decline)BDT 40,000-75,000Work residence permit
UAE (Dubai/Abu Dhabi)Open and recoveringBDT 45,000-90,000Employment visa
SingaporeOpen (premium)BDT 50,000-90,000Work Permit (R-Pass) or S Pass
Jordan (garments mostly)Open (female heavy)BDT 25,000-45,000Work permit
OmanEffectively CLOSEDBDT 35,000-55,000Halted for new visas
BahrainEffectively CLOSEDBDT 35,000-60,000Sharply restricted
KuwaitRestricted (semi-open)BDT 40,000-70,000Limited sectors only
LibyaCLOSED (security)n/aBMET banned all departures
SudanCLOSED (security/war)n/aBMET banned all departures
Egypt (transit)CLOSEDn/aBMET banned
Romania (EU corridor)CLOSED to Bangladeshn/aWithdrew quota 2024
BruneiCLOSEDn/aSharply restricted

Reading the table: only Qatar, UAE, Singapore, Jordan and (for a narrow set of sectors) Kuwait remain genuinely open to new Bangladeshi worker recruitment in 2026. Oman and Bahrain - both historically major destinations - have effectively halted new Bangladeshi work visa issuance, with Oman's freeze in place since 2023 and Bahrain's since early 2024. Several other markets (Libya, Sudan, Egypt, Romania, Brunei) are formally banned by BMET for Bangladeshi worker dispatch because of security, recruitment fraud, or labor abuse issues.

Singapore - the premium Gulf alternative

Singapore is the most lucrative destination available to a Bangladeshi worker without a degree, and it does not actually sit in the Gulf at all - but it is grouped here because the BMET process and worker profile are similar. The Singapore Work Permit (commonly called R-Pass) is the standard entry visa for Bangladeshi construction, shipyard, and process sector workers. The higher-tier S Pass is available to workers with verified trade qualifications and sectoral skills certificates. Salaries are dramatically higher than the Gulf: a Bangladeshi general construction worker in Singapore earns SGD 600 to 900 basic plus SGD 200 to 400 in regular overtime, totalling SGD 800 to 1,300 per month. Converted at the 2026 rate that is BDT 70,000 to 110,000 gross.

Singapore's regulator is the Ministry of Manpower (MOM). MOM is famously strict about employer compliance: salaries must be paid into a Singapore bank account, the Migrant Worker Centre (MWC) operates a 24/7 hotline for worker complaints, and Bangladeshi worker organisations like the Bangladesh Society Singapore provide community support. Working conditions are among the best in the region for any non-degree Bangladeshi worker - though the recruitment cost to enter is also among the highest at BDT 250,000 to 450,000 (legal limit is lower but dalal networks push the real cost up). Singapore is the only Asian destination that combines (a) earnings of BDT 70,000 plus per month, (b) strong worker protection, and (c) no language test requirement.

The catch with Singapore is selectivity. Bangladeshi worker intake into Singapore is heavily concentrated in construction and shipyard sectors, and MOM enforces sector caps tied to the Singaporean main contractor's workforce quota. There are no domestic worker visas open to Bangladeshi women in Singapore (the maid trade goes primarily to the Philippines, Indonesia, and Myanmar). Health and physical standards are strict - height/weight requirements, age caps (typically 18 to 45 for general worker entry), and the SIP (Settling-in Programme) on arrival mandatory for all first-time Bangladeshi workers.

Singapore monthly earnings (BDT 70,000 to 110,000) are roughly 1.5x to 2x Saudi unskilled wages. The Singapore route is highly recommended if you can secure a legitimate Work Permit through a BMET-licensed agency with verified Singapore main contractor connections.

The markets that have CLOSED to Bangladesh

An honest map of where Bangladeshi workers can and cannot go in 2026 has to include the markets that have closed. Several historically major destinations have effectively halted new Bangladeshi worker intake, and several others are banned outright by BMET. Knowing this protects you from agents who promise visa stamps in destinations that no longer issue them.

Oman - effectively closed since 2023

Oman froze new Bangladeshi work visa issuance in late 2023, citing labor market rebalancing and a desire to favour higher-skilled migration. Renewal visas for workers already in Oman continued. The freeze has not formally been lifted and is unlikely to be reversed in 2026. If an agent is promising you a new Oman work visa, it is almost certainly a scam.

Bahrain - sharply restricted

Bahrain restricted new Bangladeshi worker visa issuance in early 2024 in response to labor market concerns and reports of recruitment irregularities. A small number of category-specific visas (skilled trades, healthcare) continue to be issued, but the volume is a fraction of the pre-2024 intake. Most BMET-licensed agencies have stopped accepting Bahrain placements.

Malaysia - the recruitment syndicate crisis

Malaysia was historically the second largest destination for Bangladeshi workers (after Saudi). A syndicate-driven recruitment fraud scandal in 2022 to 2024 led to tens of thousands of Bangladeshi workers paying BDT 500,000 to 800,000 in inflated fees to dalals for jobs that paid BDT 40,000 to 60,000 per month - if the jobs existed at all. Many arrived to find no employer waiting. The Malaysian government suspended Bangladeshi worker intake in mid-2024. The story is detailed in our Malaysia work visa crisis guide.

Libya, Sudan, Egypt, Romania, Brunei - all banned

BMET maintains an active ban list of destinations to which Bangladeshi worker dispatch is prohibited. As of 2026 the list includes Libya (civil conflict and worker stranding cases), Sudan (active war), Egypt (used by syndicates as a transit hub for illegal onward movement to Libya and Europe), Romania (EU Schengen access withdrawn in 2024 after recruitment scandals), and Brunei (sharply restricted). If an agent offers you any of these destinations, decline immediately and report the agent to BMET hotline 16359 - the offer itself is illegal.

March 2026 Iran war impact

The March 2026 outbreak of direct Iran-Israel conflict has had a measurable impact on Bangladeshi worker departures to the Gulf. Air travel disruption (multiple Gulf airports operated on reduced schedule for 6 to 10 weeks), insurance cost spikes (worker travel insurance premiums rose 40 to 60% in the affected window), and worker hesitation (many delayed planned departures) combined to produce an approximately 50% drop in BMET-cleared monthly departures during March, April, and May 2026. The drop was concentrated in Saudi (overflight risk for some routes), UAE, and Qatar. Singapore was less affected because the route does not transit Gulf airspace.

By June 2026 the immediate disruption has largely subsided, but two structural effects remain: (1) some Bangladeshi workers already in the Gulf returned home temporarily and have not yet re-deployed, creating short-term labor surpluses in some Bangladesh districts (notably Comilla, Brahmanbaria, and Chattogram), and (2) insurance premiums remain elevated and are increasing the effective recruitment cost. Workers planning 2026 H2 departures should factor in BDT 5,000 to 12,000 in additional insurance cost over pre-March-2026 baseline.

If conflict escalates again, expect a second wave of disruption. Keep your BMET registration current but delay irreversible payments (medical, agency commission) until the security situation is clearer. The Bangladesh Embassy in each Gulf country posts security advisories - subscribe to their email updates.

Female workers - the abuse and trafficking crisis

Female labor migration from Bangladesh is in sharp structural decline, driven by widely-reported abuse, harassment, and trafficking cases in domestic worker placements across the Gulf. The headline trend: female worker dispatch fell from approximately 105,000 in 2023, to roughly 76,000 in 2024, to an estimated 61,000 in 2025. The decline is concentrated in Saudi and Jordan, the two largest historical destinations for Bangladeshi female workers.

The reported abuse patterns are severe: physical violence by employers, sexual assault, withholding of passports and wages, denial of food and rest, and outright forced confinement. Several high-profile death cases of Bangladeshi female domestic workers in Saudi Arabia in 2024 and 2025 prompted formal protests by the Bangladesh government and partial recruitment moratoria by Bangladesh on specific Saudi employer categories. Jordan, the largest destination for female garment workers (a separate and generally better-regulated sector), has had fewer abuse cases but is still subject to ongoing scrutiny.

Mandatory protections now in place include: (1) pre-departure trafficking awareness training for all female workers (8-hour course at the District Employment and Manpower Office), (2) restricted destinations - new female domestic worker recruitment is temporarily suspended for specific Saudi cities and several Lebanese and Jordanian sub-categories, (3) enhanced contract attestation - female worker contracts must be reviewed and counter-signed by BMET's Women's Migration Wing, (4) 24/7 helpline - the Bangladesh Embassy operates a women-specific helpline in Riyadh and Amman.

Female workers face dramatically higher risk than male workers. Before signing any domestic worker contract for Saudi, Lebanon, or Jordan, verify the employer's record via the Probashi Kallyan Desk and the Bangladesh Embassy's recommended employer list. NEVER travel on a tourist or umrah visa intending to convert to a work visa - this is the classic trafficking pattern.

Step-by-step: Bangladesh to Gulf (non-Saudi)

  1. Verify your destination market is OPEN in 2026 (Qatar, UAE, Singapore, Jordan, partial Kuwait). If an agent offers Oman, Bahrain, Malaysia (new visa), Libya, Sudan, Egypt, Romania, or Brunei - decline.
  2. Get a valid Machine Readable e-Passport with at least 24 months validity.
  3. Find a BMET-licensed recruitment agency with verifiable RL-XXXX licence number. Cross-check at bmet.gov.bd.
  4. Sign a Bangla-language employment contract, BMET-attested, specifying job, salary in destination currency, accommodation, food, hours, and contract length.
  5. Complete the GAMCA medical (BDT 5,000 to 8,000) at one of the 12 approved Dhaka centres. For Singapore, the medical is performed in Singapore on arrival - BMET-attested Bangladesh medical may not be sufficient.
  6. Attend the 3-day BMET pre-departure orientation. Cost BDT 500.
  7. Pay the WEWF welfare fund (BDT 1,200) and collect your BMET Smart Card.
  8. Receive the stamped destination work visa from the destination embassy in Dhaka.
  9. Fly out of Hazrat Shahjalal International Airport. Present Smart Card at the Probashi Kallyan Desk for the final exit scan.

Total legitimate cost depending on destination: Qatar BDT 100,000 to 180,000, UAE BDT 120,000 to 200,000, Singapore BDT 250,000 to 450,000 (the highest, justified by the highest salary), Jordan BDT 60,000 to 110,000 (most regulated of all major female worker corridors). Timeline 3 to 7 months from contract to flight.

Destination-specific quirks worth knowing before you sign

Each open Gulf destination has its own quirks that experienced Bangladeshi recruiters know but agents rarely volunteer. Qatar: the Wage Protection System (WPS) is the strongest in the Gulf and salary delays are flagged automatically by the Qatari Ministry of Labour within 7 days; if your Qatar employer is late paying, file a complaint immediately. UAE: the kafala sponsorship system is the most reformed of any Gulf country, and worker mobility (changing employer) is now genuinely possible without prior employer consent in most categories - this is a meaningful protection. Singapore: the Migrant Worker Centre (MWC) Settling-in Programme is mandatory and substantive; do not skip it because it teaches you how to use the SGFinDex banking platform that holds your salary. Jordan: garment factory accommodation is dormitory-based and strict gender segregation is enforced, but pay is the most reliably timed of any major Bangladeshi female worker corridor.

Kuwait deserves a separate note because it sits in an in-between status. Kuwait is technically open to Bangladeshi worker recruitment but only for narrow sectors (healthcare support, oil and gas auxiliary, large construction contracts), and the practical intake volume is a small fraction of historical levels. Kuwaiti recruitment for unskilled labor was sharply restricted in 2023 after Kuwait's parliament debated migrant labor reform. Most BMET-licensed agencies have wound down their Kuwait portfolios in favour of Qatar and UAE. If an agent offers you Kuwait, ask which specific employer and sector - if it is unskilled construction or general labor, the offer is likely outdated or fraudulent.

One final note on Saudi Arabia even though it has its own dedicated guide: many Bangladeshi workers initially consider Saudi as 'the default' because it is the largest market, but the per-worker net savings outcomes are typically lower than Qatar, UAE, or Singapore once accommodation quality, salary delay frequency, and post-contract job mobility are factored in. The Saudi default makes sense for first-time migrants who want maximum predictability and an established community network; for repeat migrants or workers willing to invest slightly more in recruitment cost for better long-term conditions, Qatar and UAE are usually better choices on a per-month-of-savings basis.

Embassy contacts to save before flying

Save these Bangladesh embassy and consulate numbers in your phone AND on a paper card kept in your wallet before you leave Dhaka. They are the difference between a quickly-resolved labor dispute and a stranded worker case. Qatar (Doha): +974-4467-6677, labour wing handles wage disputes and contract violations. UAE Abu Dhabi: +971-2-446-5100, Dubai consulate +971-4-398-5566. Singapore: +65-6255-0075, with a dedicated migrant worker labour officer reachable through the same number. Jordan (Amman): +962-6-592-3145, with a women-specific helpline for female garment factory workers. Kuwait City: +965-2253-4691. Each embassy handles salary disputes, abuse cases, body repatriation, and emergency document replacement. Most also publish WhatsApp business numbers that respond faster than phone calls for non-emergency consular questions. Add the BMET hotline 16359 to the same list - useful for issues that require Bangladesh-side intervention while you are still abroad.

Worker remittance and financial planning: the Bangladesh government offers a 2.5% cash incentive on every remittance routed through legal banking channels (the bonus is paid directly into the recipient's bank account in Bangladesh, on top of the regular exchange rate). This effectively adds BDT 1,250 for every BDT 50,000 sent home through Probashi Kallyan Bank, Sonali Bank, or another authorised channel. Avoid the informal hundi network despite its slightly faster transfer times - hundi transactions are illegal, do not qualify for the 2.5% bonus, and provide no recourse if the hundi operator absconds with the funds. Most Gulf cities have multiple Bangladeshi bank branches or partner agents (BRAC Saajan, NCC Bank, Eastern Bank) that offer same-day or next-day remittance with the government bonus applied.

Pre-departure orientation content matters and is often skimmed by hurrying workers. The 3-day BMET course covers: destination country labor law basics (kafala reform, WPS, employer obligations); your rights to retain your own passport (illegal seizure by employer is grounds for immediate complaint); the embassy emergency contact procedures; basic destination currency handling and avoiding currency-exchange scams at the airport; the official remittance channels and the 2.5% government bonus; common workplace risks (heat stroke for outdoor workers, fall hazards on construction sites, machine safety in factories); and the cultural norms that reduce friction with employers and co-workers. Take notes during the course - the information is genuinely useful and is not always available in writing afterward.

Frequently asked questions

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This page is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. WorkVisa Guide is not affiliated with Bangladesh's Bureau of Manpower, Employment and Training (BMET), any embassy, manpower agency, or government body. Fees, salary thresholds, quotas, and processing times change frequently - verify current requirements at bmet.gov.bd and the official embassy of your destination country before applying. BDT estimates depend on the exchange rate at the time of application. For advice specific to your case, consult a qualified accredited immigration lawyer. See our Terms, Privacy Policy, and Disclaimer.

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