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Can a Nigerian Work in Gibraltar in 2026?

Yes, a Nigerian citizen can work in Gibraltar, but it needs a work permit and a visa. Nigeria is a visa-required country for Gibraltar, so you need entry clearance, and your employer must sponsor the permit after showing no local or EU worker was available. The realistic route in is a specialist role, often in tech, finance or iGaming.

Work permit needed?Yes, employer-sponsored and labour-market tested
Visa to enter?Yes, Nigeria is a visa-required country for Gibraltar
Live in Spain, work in Gibraltar?Not via the treaty, frontier-worker rights cover EU residents of Spain, not Nigerians
Sectors that hireSpecialist tech, finance and iGaming roles
Salary contextNo salary floor for the permit. To live in Gibraltar the 2026 rules want about £37,500.

Your route, step by step

  1. Get the job offer first. Only a Gibraltar-registered employer can apply for the permit, after offering you the role.
  2. The employer applies to the Department of Employment and passes the labour-market test, showing no Gibraltarian or EU/EEA worker was available.
  3. They lodge a repatriation deposit, and the permit covers that one job for up to 12 months (up to 36 months in finance and gaming).
  4. Get your entry visa separately, Nigeria is a visa-required country for Gibraltar.
  5. To live in Gibraltar as well, you also need a residence permit under the 2026 rules, a job paying about £37,500 and being 55 or under.

What the new residency rules mean for you

Since June 2026 Gibraltar has tied residency to a real local job. The government has announced new criteria (now being brought into force) for anyone becoming resident after 6 October 2025: a residence permit generally needs an employment contract paying at least Gibraltar’s average salary, currently around £37,500, the applicant must be 55 or under, and the permit is renewed every year. If you lose the job and do not line up a new contract within eight weeks, the permit lapses. In short, the job is now the route to living here.

Who hires Nigerian workers in Gibraltar

With the permit labour-market tested, Nigerian nationals realistically come in for specialist tech, finance and iGaming roles where an employer can show the skills were not available locally or from the EU. Entry-level and general routes are much harder to sponsor.

Work in Gibraltar, live in La Línea

Plenty of people who work in Gibraltar live just across the border in La Línea, Spain, where rents are lower. With the new residency rules, that is an increasingly common move. Working in Gibraltar while living in Spain has tax and social-insurance implications on both sides, so it is worth speaking to a cross-border tax adviser before you commit. Our sister sites cover the Spanish side: renting in La Línea and buying in La Línea.

Frequently asked questions

Do Nigerians need a visa for Gibraltar?

Yes. Nigeria is a visa-required country for Gibraltar, so you need entry clearance through the Gibraltar visa route as well as the work permit.

Can I apply for the work permit myself?

No. Only a Gibraltar employer can apply, after offering you the role and showing no Gibraltarian or EU worker was available.

How long does the permit last?

It is tied to the job for up to 12 months, or up to 36 months in finance and gaming, and must be renewed before it expires.

Can I commute from Spain instead?

Not easily. The treaty frontier-worker rights cover EU residents of Spain, not Nigerians, and living in Spain needs Spanish residency in its own right.

Sources

Disclaimer: This page is general information, not legal or immigration advice. Gibraltar's residency and Category 2 rules changed in June 2026 and the new criteria are being brought into force, so details can move. Always check the official source at gibraltar.gov.gi or take professional advice before you act.

Last updated: 22 June 2026

Ethan Roworth
Written by
Ethan Roworth
Writer, Norry Group

Ethan Roworth is a Gibraltar-based writer and one of the founders of Norry Group. He covers the Gibraltar and Spain border region: cross-border work, daily life, business, and the markets that move between the two.