Unemployment is stressful anywhere, but unemployment in Sweden can feel even heavier if you are an immigrant. In Sweden, it is not only about finding a new position. It is also about understanding rules, deadlines, agencies, benefits, and, for many immigrants, residency questions that can suddenly become very important. What makes the situation harder is that the Swedish system is not built around one single office handling everything for you. Instead, you often need to deal with several different institutions at the same time, such as Arbetsförmedlingen, your A-kassa, your trade union, and in some cases Migrationsverket too.
- The first day of unemployment: What you need to do immediately
- Securing financial stability: the role of A-kassa
- The October 2025 legislative reform
- Eligibility and income requirements
- Compensation levels and calculation ceilings
- Maximizing your safety net: trade unions (Facket) and income insurance
- How income insurance works
- The rules of compliance: Arbetsförmedlingen activity reports
- Documenting your job search activities
- The consequences of non-compliance
- Immigration realities: work permits and Migrationsverket
- The current three-month rule
- The 2026 migration reforms: more time, but stricter rules
- Leveraging collective agreements: transition support (Omställningsstöd)
- Accessing career coaching and financial support
- Retraining for the future: student finance for transition (Omställningsstudiestöd)
- Eligibility requirements for non-citizens
- Cross-border mobility: transferring EU/EEA unemployment benefits
- Cracking the hidden job market: fika, networking, and cultural codes
- Safeguarding mental health and immigrant well-being
- Accessing the healthcare system and non-profits
- Workplace and community support
- Finding your footing again in Sweden
At the same time, Sweden is a country that depends strongly on international talent, especially in fields like tech, engineering, and life sciences. The labour market has been quite competitive recently, and unemployment figures in late 2025 and early 2026 showed that finding a new role may take time for many people. Still, Sweden also has support systems in place, and they can make a big difference when you know how to use them properly. That is why understanding how the system works is so important, especially in the first days and weeks after losing your job.
This guide is here to help you make sense of it all in a simple and practical way. Instead of sounding like a formal report, it will walk you through what actually matters after job loss in Sweden: what steps to take first, which organisations you may need to contact, what changed in the rules during 2025 and 2026, how financial support works, how networking in Sweden often works in real life, and why taking care of your mental health during this period matters just as much as updating your CV. The goal is to make a complicated system feel easier to understand, so you can focus on your next steps with a bit more clarity and confidence.
The first day of unemployment: What you need to do immediately
The first day after losing your job is not the moment to wait, breathe for a week, and hope things will somehow sort themselves out on their own. In Sweden, unemployment is handled through a very structured system, and deadlines matter much more than many people expect. In practice, even a short delay can affect your money, your insurance protection, and your access to important support later on. That is why the first official day without work is often the most important moment in the whole process.
Registering with Arbetsförmedlingen
The very first thing you should do is register with Arbetsförmedlingen, the Swedish Public Employment Service. This should happen on the exact first day you are unemployed, not a few days later when you feel more ready to deal with paperwork. In Sweden, Arbetsförmedlingen is the main authority that confirms you are actively part of the labour market and officially looking for work.
This registration matters for two very important reasons. The first one is your A-kassa, which is the unemployment insurance fund. Your A-kassa will only count your right to compensation from the day you are officially registered in the Arbetsförmedlingen system. If you wait several days, or even a full week, those days are simply lost. You will not receive compensation for them, even if you meet all the other requirements and have been paying into the system.
The second reason is even more serious in the long run, because it is connected to your SGI, or sjukpenninggrundande inkomst. This is the income level that Försäkringskassan uses to calculate how much money you can receive if you get sick, go on parental leave, or need to stay home with a sick child through VAB. Your SGI is based on your previous salary, and it plays a major role in your financial safety net in Sweden. If there is a gap between your last working day and the day you register with Arbetsförmedlingen, your SGI can be reduced to zero. If that happens, you may suddenly lose protection in situations where you really need it, which is why registering on day one is not just a technical detail but an essential step.
The digital registration process
The registration process is mostly digital, so in most cases you will start online. To do that, you normally need Swedish electronic identification such as BankID. Once you log in to the Arbetsförmedlingen website and enter your personal portal, called Mina Sidor, you will be asked to fill in details about your education, your professional background, and your previous work experience.
Still, the online form is usually not the whole process. After submitting your information digitally, you are often required to visit a physical service centre within 14 days in order to confirm your identity. When you go there, you need to bring valid physical identification, such as a passport or a national ID card. This in-person step is important, because if you do not complete it within the required time, your information may be automatically removed from the system.
That can create a very frustrating situation, because you may then have to start the whole process again from the beginning, and in the meantime you can lose valuable compensation days. Once your registration is fully completed, Arbetsförmedlingen will automatically notify your A-kassa that you are officially unemployed and actively looking for work. This is what allows your unemployment fund to move forward with your claim and begin processing your financial support.
Establishing an action plan
After you have completed your registration, the next step is usually a planning meeting with an employment officer from Arbetsförmedlingen. The purpose of this meeting is to look at your current situation in a practical way, including your experience, your skills, and the kind of work you are aiming for next. Based on that conversation, you will create a formal action plan, known in Swedish as a handlingsplan.
This action plan is basically an agreement about how your job search will work. It can include the types of jobs you are expected to apply for, the areas where you are expected to search, and the practical steps you should take to improve your chances of finding work. Depending on your situation, it may also include extra support such as Swedish language studies, job coaching, or other employment programs that could help you move forward faster.
There is, however, one useful exception to know about. If you already have a new job contract signed and your next position starts within three months from the date your unemployment begins, you usually do not need to go through the full formal planning meeting. In that case, the system generally sees your unemployment as a temporary transition rather than a longer period of job seeking.
Securing financial stability: the role of A-kassa
One of the most common misunderstandings among international professionals in Sweden is the belief that unemployment benefits are automatically covered through taxes and paid by the state when needed. In reality, that is not how the system works. In Sweden, unemployment insurance is separate from the general social insurance system, which means you need to join an unemployment insurance fund yourself if you want financial support after losing your job. These funds are called A-kassa, and without membership, your protection is much more limited.
There are 24 different A-kassa organisations in Sweden, and most of them are connected either to certain professions or to specific educational backgrounds. For example, Akademikernas a-kassa is the largest fund for people with university education, while Unionens a-kassa is aimed at white-collar employees in the private sector. There is also Alfa-kassan, which is more flexible and accepts members from any profession. It also handles a basic form of support for people who are not members of another specific fund. What often surprises newcomers is how affordable A-kassa membership actually is. In many cases, it costs around 140 SEK per month, and the fee is tax-deductible. For many working professionals, it is one of the smartest and most important administrative decisions they can make in Sweden.
The October 2025 legislative reform
The Swedish unemployment insurance system changed in a major way on October 1, 2025, when the new Swedish Unemployment Benefit Act (2024:506) came into force. Before this reform, the right to unemployment compensation was mainly based on how many hours a person had worked before becoming unemployed. That older system created a lot of paperwork, because employers had to provide detailed certificates showing every hour worked. It also caused delays and often worked badly for people with irregular schedules, part-time jobs, or income from more modern work structures such as gig work.
The 2025 reform changed the system quite dramatically by moving the focus away from time worked and toward income earned. Under the new rules, your right to receive compensation depends on how much income you had, the level of compensation depends on how long you have been a member of an A-kassa, and the length of time you can receive benefits depends on how many months you had income. This makes the system much easier to manage, because A-kassa can now use income information directly from Skatteverket, the Swedish Tax Agency. In practice, this reduces paperwork for both the applicant and the former employer, and it makes the whole process more suitable for the way many people actually work today.
Eligibility and income requirements
To qualify for compensation under the new legal framework introduced in 2025, every applicant must meet three main conditions. These are the basic condition, the income requirement, and the membership condition. All three matter, and together they decide whether you can receive support and how much support you may be entitled to.
The basic condition means that you must be registered with Arbetsförmedlingen, actively looking for work, and able to take a job in Sweden. This sounds simple, but it has practical consequences. For example, if you are studying full-time, you normally cannot receive A-kassa unless you have a specific exemption. The same applies if you are on full-time sick leave, because in that situation you are not considered available for work.
The income requirement is checked over a 12-month period directly before your unemployment begins. This period is called the qualification period. Under the main rule, you must have earned a total gross income of at least 120,000 SEK during those 12 months. On top of that, you must also have earned at least 11,000 SEK in at least four separate months during the same period. If you do not meet that main income rule, there is also an alternative option. You may still qualify if you earned at least 11,000 SEK per month for at least four consecutive months during the last year.
The system also takes into account the fact that real life is not always linear. If you were unable to work during part of the qualification period because of parental leave, full-time studies, or a longer illness, the 12-month period can be extended further back in time. This is meant to make the rules fairer for people whose income history was temporarily interrupted for valid reasons.
Compensation levels and calculation ceilings
The amount of money you can receive from A-kassa is closely connected to how long you have been a paying member. At the same time, there is a limit to the salary level that can be used in the calculation. Under the current rules, the maximum salary basis is capped at a gross monthly income of 34,000 SEK, even if you earned more than that before becoming unemployed.
Under the rules introduced in October 2025, there are three different compensation levels depending on how long you have been a member of an A-kassa.
| Consecutive membership duration | Compensation percentage | Maximum calculation base |
|---|---|---|
| 12 months or more | 80% of previous income | 34,000 SEK |
| 6 to 11 months | 60% of previous income | 34,000 SEK |
| 0 to 5 months (or non-members) | 50% of previous income | 34,000 SEK |
People who have been members of an A-kassa for at least one full year receive the highest level of protection. In that case, compensation is set at 80 percent of previous salary, up to the maximum ceiling. For someone who earned 34,000 SEK per month or more, this means a maximum payment of 27,200 SEK per month before tax. However, this amount does not stay the same forever. During the first 100 days of unemployment, compensation is based on 80 percent of the 34,000 SEK ceiling. After those first 100 days, the rules become less generous and the ceiling is lowered, which means the monthly payment drops even if the person is still unemployed.
People who joined an A-kassa only shortly before losing their job, or who never joined one at all, fall into the lowest protection level. The previous model used to offer a flat basic benefit for non-members, but that was removed in the 2025 reform. Instead, non-members are now covered by a percentage-based system where they can receive 50 percent of their previous income, still with the same maximum ceiling of 34,000 SEK. This means that even though some support may still exist without membership, the difference between being insured properly and not being insured can be very significant.
Maximizing your safety net: trade unions (Facket) and income insurance
While A-kassa gives you an important financial base, it does not fully protect everyone in the same way. One major limitation is the income ceiling of 34,000 SEK per month used for benefit calculations. For many international professionals, especially those working in tech, finance, engineering, or academia, salaries are often much higher than that. This means that even if you qualify for the highest level of A-kassa, the money you receive may still be far below your normal monthly income. For someone earning 70,000 SEK per month, a maximum A-kassa payment of 27,200 SEK before tax can mean a very sharp drop in living standards and make it much harder to keep up with costs such as rent, mortgage payments, and other fixed expenses in cities like Stockholm or Gothenburg.
This is exactly where another important part of the Swedish system comes in, namely income insurance, or inkomstförsäkring. This extra protection is designed to cover the gap that A-kassa leaves behind. It is not provided by the state, and it is not part of the standard A-kassa itself. Instead, it is usually included as one of the main benefits of joining a Swedish trade union, which in everyday language is called Facket.
A lot of newcomers mix these two systems together, because they are closely connected in practice but they are not the same thing. A-kassa is an independent insurance fund regulated by the state, and it handles your basic unemployment benefits. A trade union, on the other hand, is a professional membership organisation that negotiates collective agreements, supports employees in workplace disputes, and often provides access to income insurance. Being a member of a union does not automatically mean you are a member of an A-kassa, and the other way around is also true. If you want the full level of protection available in Sweden, you usually need to apply to both separately.
How income insurance works
Income insurance works as an extra layer on top of your regular unemployment benefits. In simple terms, A-kassa first pays 80 percent of your salary up to the 34,000 SEK ceiling, assuming you qualify for the highest tier. Then, if your trade union includes income insurance, that insurance can step in and cover 80 percent of the part of your salary that is above that ceiling, up to a higher maximum set by the union. This makes a huge difference for people with medium to high salaries, because it reduces the financial shock that can otherwise come with job loss.
Different unions offer different coverage levels, usually depending on the salary patterns common in that profession. For example, Unionen, which is the largest trade union for white-collar workers in the private sector, offers income insurance for salaries up to 80,000 SEK per month. Finansförbundet, which is aimed at people in the financial sector, also covers salaries up to 80,000 SEK, and members can sometimes buy extra voluntary insurance to raise that ceiling to 120,000 SEK. Academic unions such as Akademikerförbundet SSR and Akavia often offer even stronger protection, with standard income insurance covering salaries up to 100,000 SEK per month for around 140 to 150 days. In the case of Akavia, members can also choose additional insurance that increases the salary limit as high as 160,000 SEK and extends the compensation period to 300 days.
| Organization type | Example entities | Core function | Coverage ceiling (Approximate) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Unemployment Fund (A-kassa) | Akademikernas, Unionens, Alfa-kassan | Base compensation (50%-80%) | 34,000 SEK |
| Trade Union (Facket) | Unionen, Akavia, Sveriges Ingenjörer | Supplementary Income Insurance | 80,000 – 100,000 SEK |
| Voluntary Insurance Add-ons | Unionen Extra, Akavia Tillägg | Extended time and higher ceilings | Up to 160,000 SEK |
To actually receive money from a union’s income insurance, you usually need to meet more than one condition. In most cases, you must be a member of both the union and the relevant A-kassa, and you normally need to have been in the union for at least 12 months before becoming unemployed. This waiting period is very important, because it means income insurance is something you need to set up before problems start, not after. For higher-earning professionals, this extra protection can make the difference between a difficult period that is still manageable and a financial situation that becomes much more serious very quickly.
The rules of compliance: Arbetsförmedlingen activity reports
Receiving unemployment benefits in Sweden is not something that happens automatically in the background while you casually look around for jobs. The system is built on a clear idea of mutual responsibility. If you receive financial support, you are also expected to actively work on getting back into employment. In practice, that means your job search needs to be treated seriously and consistently, almost like a job in itself. One of the main ways Arbetsförmedlingen checks this is through the monthly activity report, called aktivitetsrapport.
Every month, between the 1st and the 14th, you need to log in to your account on the Arbetsförmedlingen website and submit a report showing what you did during the previous calendar month to move closer to employment. This is not just a casual update or a box-ticking exercise. It is a formal document, and your A-kassa depends on it when deciding whether your monthly compensation can be paid out. If this part is ignored or handled carelessly, your money can be affected very quickly.
Documenting your job search activities
Arbetsförmedlingen expects your job search to be active, varied, and ongoing. In your monthly report, you need to include the jobs you have applied for during the previous month. This covers standard applications sent to advertised vacancies on platforms such as Platsbanken or LinkedIn, but it also includes jobs that Arbetsförmedlingen directly recommended or told you to apply for. On top of that, the Swedish labour market places a lot of value on initiative, so spontaneous applications also count. These are applications you send directly to employers even when they have not published an open vacancy, and they are seen as fully valid job search activities.
Your report should also include other useful steps you have taken to improve your chances of finding work. For example, if you attended recruitment meetings, went to formal job interviews, completed a short course relevant to your field, or joined coaching sessions or networking events to improve your CV and job search strategy, all of that should be included as well. The more clearly you can show what you did, when you did it, and who was involved, the stronger and safer your report will be.
Unless your official action plan says something different, Arbetsförmedlingen generally expects you to apply for at least six suitable jobs per month. This is important, because applying for too few roles can be seen as not managing your job search properly. It is also worth understanding that their definition of a “suitable job” may be broader than your own. It does not only mean a role that perfectly matches your last job title, salary, or ideal career path. It can also include jobs where you have relevant general experience, jobs where your skills could be transferred quite easily, and roles within a reasonable commuting distance from where you live. If your search is too narrow, the authorities may see that as non-compliance.
The consequences of non-compliance
The Swedish system can be supportive, but when it comes to administrative responsibilities, it can also be quite strict. If you do not submit your activity report by the 14th of the month, or if the report shows too little effort, your financial compensation can be affected immediately. This is one of those areas where missing a deadline or underestimating the formal requirements can become expensive very quickly.
If Arbetsförmedlingen decides that you are not managing your job search properly, they are required by law to inform your A-kassa. This can happen for several reasons, such as applying for too few jobs, refusing a suitable offer, missing scheduled meetings with your employment officer, or leaving a labour market program without a valid reason. Once that happens, the system usually moves through a series of increasing penalties. A first mistake may lead to a formal warning, but later problems can result in your daily compensation being stopped for one or several days.
In more serious cases, the consequences can be even harder. If the authorities believe you caused your own unemployment on purpose, or if you repeatedly ignore your action plan and the rules connected to your job search, your benefits may be suspended for a much longer period. In practice, this can leave you without income. That is why it is so important to keep detailed records of everything you do during your job search and to submit your activity report on time every single month. In Sweden, staying organised is not just helpful during unemployment, it is part of protecting your right to financial support.
Immigration realities: work permits and Migrationsverket
For immigrants from outside the EU and EEA, losing a job in Sweden is not only about income or career plans. It also directly affects your legal right to stay in the country. This adds a level of stress that EU citizens simply do not have to deal with. Swedish work permits are quite strict, because they are tied to a specific employer and a specific type of job. When your employment ends, whether you were laid off, dismissed, or you decided to leave, you technically no longer meet the conditions of your residence permit.
This means that job loss is not just a professional situation. It can quickly turn into a legal countdown, where your time in Sweden depends on how fast you can react and secure a new opportunity.
The current three-month rule
Under the standard rules that have been in place for years, if you lose your job while on a work permit, you are given a grace period of three months to stay in Sweden and find a new job. This is only possible if your current permit does not expire during that time, which is an important detail many people overlook.
During these 90 days, you need to actively search for a new role, go through interviews, and ideally sign a new contract. At the same time, the new job must meet several legal requirements. For example, the position should have been advertised in Sweden and across the EU and EEA through platforms like EURES before the employment starts. This rule exists to make sure the local labour market is protected.
If your new job is with a different employer, or even in a different type of role than the one listed in your original permit, you need to submit a completely new application to Migrationsverket. The good news is that you are usually allowed to start working for the new employer as soon as you submit the new application, as long as you do it before your current permit or your three-month period ends.
However, if you do not manage to secure a suitable job and submit the required application within those 90 days, the consequences are serious. You are legally expected to leave Sweden, which can interrupt not only your career but also your entire life setup in the country.
There are also stricter rules for certain groups, such as people holding an EU Blue Card. In these cases, you are required to inform Migrationsverket immediately if your employment ends, if you change jobs, or if your conditions change in a way that affects your permit, for example if your salary drops below the required level. If you do not report these changes, your permit may be withdrawn, and future applications can be negatively affected.
The 2026 migration reforms: more time, but stricter rules
Because the Swedish recruitment process can often take longer than three months, especially for skilled roles, the government introduced new reforms to make the system more realistic. These changes, based on proposal Ds 2025:18, started coming into effect in May and June 2026 and bring some important updates.
One of the biggest changes is the extension of the grace period. Under the new rules, immigrants who have held a valid Swedish work permit for more than two years can now receive up to six months to find a new job after losing their previous one. This is a major improvement compared to the old three-month limit, because it gives more time to go through interviews and recruitment processes that are often slow in Sweden.
To use this longer period beyond the initial three months, you need to be able to support yourself financially, which usually means having enough savings or another source of income. This condition is important, because the system still expects you not to rely on public support during that extended time.
The reforms also include important protections for people who experienced unfair treatment at work. If you lost your job because of issues like unpaid wages, poor working conditions, or exploitation, the grace period can be extended up to nine months for those who have worked in Sweden for more than two years. In these situations, you are not required to prove that you have financial savings, which is meant to protect workers from being forced to stay in unhealthy or abusive workplaces just to avoid losing their right to stay.
At the same time, the rules for getting a new work permit have become stricter. Starting from June 1, 2026, the salary offered in a new permit application must be at least 90 percent of the median salary in Sweden. This is a noticeable increase compared to the previous threshold of 80 percent, which was around 29,680 SEK. The new threshold will also be updated regularly based on official data from Statistics Sweden, known as SCB.
On top of that, the updated system includes stronger requirements around health insurance for shorter stays under one year, and stricter consequences for employers who break labour rules or exploit workers. So while the system now gives you more time to find a new job, it also expects higher standards from both employees and employers.
| Migration regulation | Traditional rules (Pre-May 2026) | New reforms (Post-May/June 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Standard job search grace Period | 3 months maximum | 3 months (Extended to 6 months if resident 2+ years) |
| Financial requirement for extension | Not applicable | Proof of savings/income required for months 4-6 |
| Protection for exploited workers | Limited | Up to 9 months grace period, no savings required |
| New permit salary threshold | 80% of national median salary | 90% of national median salary |
Leveraging collective agreements: transition support (Omställningsstöd)
One of the things that makes the Swedish labour market quite unique is how much support exists outside of the state system. A large part of this comes from collective agreements between employers and trade unions. These agreements create an extra safety layer that many immigrants are not aware of at first. If you lose your job because of redundancy, meaning there is simply no more work, or in some cases due to long-term illness, you may gain access to something called transition support, known in Swedish as omställningsstöd.
This support is not handled by the government directly. Instead, it is managed by specialised transition organisations that are funded by employers. These organisations cover almost the entire labour market. For example, TRR Trygghetsrådet works with white-collar employees in the private sector, Trygghetsfonden TSL supports blue-collar workers, Omställningsfonden focuses on municipal employees, and Trygghetsstiftelsen works with people employed in the public sector. Even though they are different organisations, they all share the same goal, which is to help people return to work as smoothly and quickly as possible. This approach reflects how the Swedish economy works, where industries are constantly changing and workers are expected to adapt over time.
Accessing career coaching and financial support
If your employment ends because of redundancy, your employer is usually responsible for starting the process. This is done together with a local union representative, who helps submit an application for transition support on your behalf. To qualify, your workplace must be covered by a collective agreement, which is an important condition. In most cases, you also need to have worked at least 16 hours per week on average for at least 12 out of the last 24 months. If you had breaks due to parental leave or illness, this period can often be extended.
Once approved, the level of support can be quite impressive. Transition organisations offer personal career coaching, help you prepare for interviews, improve your CV, and give you access to networking opportunities that are not always publicly available. This can include hidden job markets where positions are never officially advertised.
On top of that, there can also be financial support that works together with your A-kassa. One example is compensation called AGE (avgångsersättning), which in some cases can cover up to 70 percent of your previous salary. Depending on your age and situation, this support can last anywhere between 6 and 18 months. This can significantly reduce the financial pressure during unemployment, especially for people who previously had higher incomes.
It is also worth knowing that the system was updated in 2026 to reflect changes in retirement age. As Sweden gradually increases the expected working age, some transition support and disability-related protections have been extended to cover people up to around 66 or 67 years old. This means that older employees are now better protected during career changes later in life.
Retraining for the future: student finance for transition (Omställningsstudiestöd)
In today’s fast-changing job market, losing a job is often not only about finding a similar role again. Sometimes it is a sign that your skills need to be updated, or that it may be worth moving into a completely different field. To support this kind of transition, Sweden introduced a special form of financial support for studies, called omställningsstudiestöd.
This system is designed for adults who are already established in the labour market and want to improve their skills or change direction. It is managed by CSN, the Swedish Board of Student Finance. The idea is to make it possible to study without completely losing your income. In many cases, the support can cover up to 80 percent of your previous salary, up to a certain limit, which allows you to focus on full-time studies for up to 44 weeks. If you study part-time, this period can be extended further.
Transition organisations like TRR and TSL are often involved in this process. They can provide official recommendations to CSN, confirming that the education you choose is relevant and will improve your chances in the labour market. For many immigrants, this creates a very valuable opportunity. It can be used to improve Swedish language skills, gain local qualifications, or move into more in-demand industries such as tech or healthcare.
Eligibility requirements for non-citizens
Access to this type of study support comes with stricter requirements, especially for people who are not Swedish citizens. In general, you need to have a strong connection to the Swedish labour market. This usually means working at least 16 hours per week for a total of around 96 months, which is about 8 years, within the last 14 years.
For immigrants, residency status also plays a key role. Citizens of EU or EEA countries can usually qualify if they have permanent right of residence, which is typically achieved after living legally in Sweden for five continuous years. For people from outside the EU and EEA, the rules are stricter. You normally need to have a permanent residence permit, or at least have lived and worked in Sweden for a minimum of two years with at least part-time employment.
There are also some special situations. For example, British citizens who were already living in Sweden before Brexit may have different rights, depending on their status at that time. Overall, while the system offers strong support, it is clearly designed for people who have already built a longer-term connection to the Swedish labour market.
Cross-border mobility: transferring EU/EEA unemployment benefits
If you have worked in more than one EU or EEA country, you are not starting from zero every time you move. The European system is designed to support free movement, which means your work history and insurance contributions can follow you between countries. For many immigrants, this can make a big difference when facing unemployment in Sweden.
Aggregating insurance periods with the PD U1 form
A common situation is moving from another EU country, for example Poland, to Sweden and then becoming unemployed before meeting the full Swedish requirements for A-kassa. Normally, you need a certain period of membership to receive income-based benefits, but EU rules allow you to combine your previous insurance periods from another country with your Swedish record.
To make this possible, you need a document called PD U1. This document confirms your employment and insurance history from another EU or EEA country. If you want to use your previous work experience in Sweden, the first step is to join a Swedish A-kassa. After that, you can ask your A-kassa to request your records directly from the institution in your previous country. In some cases, you can also request the PD U1 document yourself and provide it as a paper certificate.
There are a few important conditions to keep in mind. To use your foreign work history in Sweden, you usually need to have worked in Sweden shortly before becoming unemployed. In addition, you should apply for membership in a Swedish A-kassa within eight weeks after your insurance coverage ends in your previous country. If you miss this eight-week window, the system treats it as a break in your insurance history, which means you may have to start building your eligibility from zero again.
Exporting benefits with the PD U2 form
The system also works in the opposite direction. If you are already unemployed in Sweden and receiving A-kassa, you are not forced to stay in the country while searching for a job. You can move to another EU or EEA country and continue your job search there, while still receiving Swedish unemployment benefits for a limited time.
To do this, you need to apply for a PD U2 document before leaving Sweden. This document allows you to transfer your benefits abroad, usually for up to three months. One important condition is that you must have been registered as unemployed in Sweden for at least four weeks before applying.
After arriving in your new country, you need to act quickly. You have seven days to register with the local employment office and submit your PD U2 document. If everything is done correctly, your Swedish A-kassa will continue paying your benefits directly to your account during this period. If you do not find a job, you need to return to Sweden before the U2 period ends to keep your remaining rights to benefits.
Cracking the hidden job market: fika, networking, and cultural codes
Finding a job in Sweden is not only about sending applications through platforms like Platsbanken. In reality, a large part of the job market is never publicly visible. Many roles are filled through internal recommendations, personal contacts, or informal conversations. This is often called the hidden job market, and for many immigrants, this is where the real challenge begins.
The power of fika in professional networking
One of the most important cultural concepts in Sweden is fika. On the surface, it looks like a simple coffee break with something sweet, but in practice, it plays a much bigger role in both social and professional life. Swedish workplaces are known for being quite flat and based on trust, and fika is one of the ways people build those relationships.
If you are looking for a job, inviting someone for a short fika is one of the most natural ways to start a professional connection. This could be a former colleague, someone from your university, a person working in your industry, or even someone you connected with online. The idea is not to immediately ask for a job, but to have a relaxed conversation, learn about their experience, and show who you are as a person.
These informal meetings often lead to unexpected opportunities. Many job openings are shared in conversations long before they are officially published. For immigrants, understanding this approach can be much more effective than sending dozens of applications without any personal contact.
Digital presence and proactive engagement
At the same time, networking in Sweden is not only about meeting people in person. Your online presence also plays a very important role. LinkedIn is widely used in the Swedish job market, and having a clear, well-structured profile can make a big difference. Highlighting your skills, engaging with posts from people in your industry, and following companies you are interested in can help you become more visible to recruiters.
It is also worth pushing yourself a bit outside your comfort zone. Attending job fairs, industry events, and local meetups can help you build connections much faster. Many immigrants also find it helpful to join international communities on platforms like Facebook or InterNations, where people share job tips and local advice.
Being proactive is highly valued in Sweden. Contacting companies directly, even when they are not actively hiring, is often seen as a positive sign of initiative rather than something unusual. Finally, one of the strongest signals you can send is investing time in learning Swedish. Even though English is widely used at work, improving your Swedish skills, for example through SFI (Swedish for Immigrants), can open many more opportunities and show that you are planning to stay in the country long term.
Safeguarding mental health and immigrant well-being
Losing a job is stressful in any country, but for immigrants living far from close family, long-term friends, and familiar routines, that stress can hit much harder. Unemployment often brings a sudden loss of structure, daily purpose, and social contact. When that is combined with worries about residence permits, money, and the challenge of building real support networks in a new culture, it can easily turn into deep loneliness and emotional exhaustion. In Sweden, public health data has also shown that unemployment is linked to higher risks of both mental and physical health problems. That is why taking care of your well-being during this period is not something extra or optional. It is a very important part of getting through the transition in a healthy and sustainable way.
Sweden does offer quite a wide range of support options, from urgent help in serious situations to more accessible everyday mental health services and community-based support. The most important thing is to not ignore the problem and wait until everything feels unmanageable. Reaching out early can make a real difference.
Accessing the healthcare system and non-profits
If you are not sure where to begin, one of the easiest first steps is to contact 1177, Sweden’s national healthcare helpline. This service is free, available in English, and can guide you through the healthcare system. They can explain where to turn for help and direct you to the right local vårdcentral, where you may be able to book an appointment with a doctor or psychologist if you are struggling with anxiety, depression, sleep problems, or other stress-related symptoms.
Support is not limited to the public healthcare system. There are also many non-profit organisations in Sweden that offer confidential help for people dealing with emotional pressure, isolation, or difficult life situations. For immigrants, these organisations can be especially valuable, because they often offer a more human and flexible kind of support when everything feels overwhelming.
| Organization / Service | Contact number | Focus area |
|---|---|---|
| Mind Sweden | 90 101 | 24/7 suicide prevention and general mental health support helpline |
| 1177 Healthcare Advice | 1177 | Medical guidance, booking local care, available in English |
| Kvinnofridslinjen | 020 50 50 50 | Support for survivors of domestic violence and trauma |
| SPES | 08 702 16 80 | Emotional support for individuals affected by suicide (7 PM – 10 PM) |
| BRIS | 116 111 | Psychological support for youth and adolescents |
| Emergency Services | 112 | Immediate psychiatric or physical emergencies |
Workplace and community support
Before your connection to your old workplace ends completely, it is also worth checking whether your former employer offered access to an Employee Assistance Program or occupational health services, called företagshälsovård in Sweden. Many medium-sized and larger companies provide short-term counselling through these services, often free of charge. This kind of support can be very useful in the first weeks after losing a job, when the emotional impact is often strongest and hardest to process calmly.
There are also other places where support can be found. Organisations such as the Swedish Red Cross may offer help that is especially relevant for migrants and people who have gone through stressful life transitions. Depending on your situation, you may also find support through student unions, churches, or organisations like RFSL, which provide counselling and safe spaces for LGBTQ+ individuals. These kinds of communities can be very important when unemployment also starts to feel socially isolating.
On a more practical level, protecting your mental health during unemployment often means creating structure where structure suddenly disappeared. Trying to keep a routine similar to a working day, taking care of your physical health, going outside regularly, and staying connected to other people can all help more than they may seem at first. For many immigrants, it also helps to stay in touch with others who understand the experience of building a life in a different country. Looking for a job in Sweden while dealing with uncertainty is not a short sprint. It is much closer to a marathon, and that means your emotional strength matters just as much as your paperwork, deadlines, and CV.
Finding your footing again in Sweden
Losing a job in Sweden as an international professional can feel overwhelming at first, because it is never only about employment. It quickly becomes a mix of deadlines, financial decisions, legal rules, and the emotional pressure of trying to stay steady while your everyday life suddenly changes. Still, the Swedish system does offer real support, and when you understand how its different parts work, the situation becomes much easier to manage step by step.
The most important thing is acting early and staying organised. Registering with Arbetsförmedlingen on your very first day without work helps protect your SGI and creates the basis for further support. Understanding how the income-based A-kassa rules work after the October 2025 reform, and knowing whether you also have protection through trade union income insurance, can make a huge difference to your financial stability during this period.
For immigrants from outside the EU and EEA, there is also the extra pressure of migration rules, where timing matters just as much as paperwork. The 2026 reforms have created more breathing room in some cases, but they have also introduced stricter conditions for new permits. At the same time, finding your next role in Sweden often means doing more than simply sending applications. It usually requires learning how the local job market works, building relationships, using networking more actively, and understanding the social side of professional life, including informal tools like fika.
Handled carefully, unemployment does not have to become only a crisis. It can also become a transition point. By staying on top of the administrative side, using the financial and educational support available, and steadily building your local network, it is possible to turn a very difficult period into the beginning of your next chapter in Sweden.


