Recruitment and Overseas Employment Promoter (OEP) Setup in Pakistan

Pakistan sends hundreds of thousands of workers abroad every year, and the businesses that recruit and place them, overseas employment promoters and recruitment agencies, operate in a sector regulated to protect workers from exploitation and fraud. Setting up a lawful recruitment or OEP business requires a specific licence and strict compliance with the emigration framework. Global Law Company advises recruitment entrepreneurs and manpower-export businesses across Pakistan on obtaining licences and operating in compliance with the emigration and overseas-employment regime.
Because the sector touches the welfare of vulnerable workers, it is closely supervised, and unlicensed or non-compliant recruitment carries serious legal consequences. We help legitimate operators enter the business correctly and protect both their workers and their licence.
The regulatory framework for overseas employment
Overseas employment in Pakistan is governed by the Emigration Ordinance 1979 and the Emigration Rules 1979, administered by the Bureau of Emigration and Overseas Employment (BEandOE) under the Ministry of Overseas Pakistanis and Human Resource Development. To recruit Pakistanis for employment abroad, a business must hold an Overseas Employment Promoter (OEP) licence issued under this framework. The regime regulates how workers may be recruited, the fees that may be charged, the protections owed to emigrants, and the conduct of the promoter, and it provides for penalties, including cancellation of the licence and criminal liability, for breaches such as overcharging, fraud, or sending workers on false promises. Domestic recruitment and manpower services engage labour and contract law as well.
Obtaining an OEP licence
We guide prospective promoters through obtaining the OEP licence: meeting the eligibility, financial, and security-deposit requirements, satisfying the conduct and premises conditions, and preparing and presenting the application to the Bureau of Emigration. The licence is subject to conditions and renewal, and the application examines the suitability of the applicant. We help structure the business to meet the requirements and manage the application through to the grant of the licence, so the promoter can operate lawfully from the start.
Compliance, worker protection, and foreign principals
A licensed promoter must operate within strict rules designed to protect emigrant workers, including limits on recruitment fees, proper documentation of the foreign employment, registration of workers, and adherence to the prescribed processes for demand letters, visas, and protector clearance. We advise promoters on compliance with these obligations, on their dealings and agreements with foreign principals and employers, and on the documentation that protects both the worker and the promoter. Building proper compliance into the business is the surest protection against the complaints and enforcement that can cost a promoter its licence.
Disputes, complaints, and enforcement
The sector generates disputes, worker complaints about fees or misrepresentation, issues with foreign employers, and regulatory action by the Bureau. We advise and represent promoters in complaints and disputes with workers, in dealings and disputes with foreign principals, and in regulatory and enforcement matters before the Bureau of Emigration and the courts. Because a single serious complaint can threaten a licence, we help promoters handle disputes promptly and properly, protecting both the affected worker's legitimate interests and the promoter's standing.
Domestic recruitment and staffing
Not all recruitment is for jobs abroad. Many businesses operate as domestic recruitment, staffing, and manpower-supply agencies, placing workers with employers within Pakistan or providing contract and outsourced labour. While these businesses do not need an OEP licence, they operate within labour, contract, and tax law, and the way they engage workers and contract with client employers carries real legal consequences, particularly around who is the employer, and the liabilities that follow. We advise domestic recruitment and staffing businesses on structuring their operations, drafting the agreements with workers and client employers, and managing the labour and tax obligations that contract-staffing arrangements create.
Foreign principals and bilateral arrangements
Overseas employment depends on relationships with foreign employers and principals, and these arrangements must be documented and managed carefully. We advise OEPs on their agreements with foreign principals, the demand letters, recruitment agreements, and service terms that govern the relationship, and on compliance with any bilateral labour arrangements between Pakistan and destination countries. Properly documenting the relationship with the foreign employer protects the promoter against disputes over fees, responsibilities, and worker welfare, and helps ensure that the workers placed are sent into genuine, properly documented employment.
How Global Law Company helps
We act for recruitment and overseas-employment businesses from licensing through compliance, contracting with foreign principals, and disputes. Because the sector is compliance-driven and worker-protective, our focus is on building a lawful, well-documented operation that satisfies the Bureau and avoids the breaches that lead to penalties. We combine regulatory, contract, and dispute capability, so we can take a promoter from licensing through to the resolution of the issues that arise in the business.
Why choose Global Law Company
This is a heavily regulated, scrutiny-prone sector, and clients value advisers who understand the emigration framework and the Bureau's requirements. We secure licences, build compliance that protects both workers and the promoter, draft sound arrangements with foreign principals, and defend promoters when complaints or enforcement arise. For operators who want to run a legitimate, durable recruitment business, that guidance is essential.
Talk to us about OEP licensing in Pakistan
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Frequently Asked Questions
An Overseas Employment Promoter (OEP) licence issued by the Bureau of Emigration and Overseas Employment under the Emigration Ordinance 1979. We handle the application.
Eligibility and suitability of the applicant, financial and security-deposit requirements, suitable premises, and adherence to conduct conditions, all assessed by the Bureau.
Yes. The framework limits the fees that may be charged to workers and regulates the recruitment process. Overcharging and fraud can lead to licence cancellation and criminal liability.
Yes. We draft and review the agreements and documentation between promoters and foreign principals and employers, protecting both the worker and the promoter.
Complaints can trigger Bureau action and threaten the licence. We advise and represent promoters in worker complaints and regulatory proceedings to resolve them properly.