Resource article
EU Blue Card shortage occupations 2026 — which IT, engineering, medical roles qualify for the lower threshold
Several EU countries offer a LOWER Blue Card threshold for shortage occupations. Germany €43,759 (vs €48,300), Spain €33,908 (vs €40,690), Netherlands €44,256 (vs €60,612, under 30 only). We list the recognised shortage roles per country (ISCO codes), explain how the lists are updated, and how to verify your role qualifies.
What you will learn
- Germany — Mangelberufe 2026
- Spain — Catálogo de ocupaciones de difícil cobertura 2026
- Netherlands — under-30 graduate threshold
- How to verify your role qualifies
Germany — Mangelberufe 2026
Germany's Mangelberufe list is published by the Bundesagentur für Arbeit (BA) and updated yearly. For 2026, the recognised shortage IT/engineering codes (ISCO-08) include: 2511 System analysts, 2512 Software developers, 2513 Web and multimedia developers, 2514 Application programmers, 2519 IT specialists not elsewhere classified, 2521 Database designers, 2522 Systems administrators, 2523 Computer network specialists, 2356 IT trainers.
Engineering: 2141 Industrial and production engineers, 2142 Civil engineers, 2143 Environmental engineers, 2144 Mechanical engineers, 2145 Chemical engineers, 2146 Mining engineers, 2151 Electrical engineers.
Mathematics & natural sciences: 2120 Mathematicians and statisticians, 2114 Geologists and geophysicists, 2131 Biologists, 2132 Farming and forestry advisers.
Health: 2211 Generalist medical doctors, 2212 Specialist medical doctors. Note: medical roles also require Approbation (medical-license recognition) BEFORE the Blue Card.
Spain — Catálogo de ocupaciones de difícil cobertura 2026
Spain's catálogo de ocupaciones de difícil cobertura (COT) is updated quarterly by the SEPE. For Blue Card purposes (the €33,908 reduced threshold for under-30 / shortage), the most relevant categories in 2026: software development, data engineering, cybersecurity, embedded systems, mechanical and aerospace engineering, civil engineering, biotechnology specialists.
Spain has been less consistent than Germany on its shortage list — sectors swing year to year based on labour-market reports from the regional autonomous communities. Always check the current catálogo via SEPE before applying.
Netherlands — under-30 graduate threshold
The Netherlands does not have a per-occupation shortage list for the Blue Card itself. Instead, it offers a LOWER threshold (€44,256 in 2026) for applicants under 30 who hold a university Master's degree from any internationally recognised institution.
For over-30 applicants, the Highly Skilled Migrant Permit (Kennismigrant) at €39,000-€60,612 — depending on age and recognition status — is the more practical route. The IND maintains a list of 'recognised sponsor' employers who can use this faster process.
How to verify your role qualifies
Step 1: identify the ISCO-08 code for your role. Use the official ISCO classification at ilo.org/public/english/bureau/stat/isco. The 4-digit code (e.g. 2512 for software developers) determines eligibility.
Step 2: cross-reference the code against the destination country's shortage list. For Germany, check the BA's Engpassanalyse PDF (updated each January). For Spain, check the SEPE's quarterly catálogo. For Netherlands, your role just needs to fit the 'higher education' category — no per-role check.
Step 3: if your role is borderline (e.g. 'Marketing Manager' is rarely on shortage lists), get a written confirmation from the employer that they intend to register the position as Blue Card eligible. The employer's BA / IND case officer is the final authority on classification.
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