Luxembourg

Registration procedures and residence permits



Kinds of employment
The first distinction to be made is between private sector and public sector jobs. In the public sector, there are essentially three categories of staff: civil servants, State/local authority white-collar and State/local authority manual workers. In the private sector, since 1 January 2009, no distinction is made between white-collar and manual workers in terms both of labour law and social security. There is simply a reference to the employee, regardless of the job performed. Different forms of employment: 1. Temporary work: this represents about 3 % of employment at national level. Employees have a ‘contrat de mission’ [assignment contract] with the temporary employment agency under which they carry out a specific and non-permanent task for one or more ‘users’. 2. Telework: work that could be performed on the premises of the employer but that is habitually performed off-site (for example, in the worker's home). The agreement on the legal rules applicable to teleworking, signed on 21 February 2006 by the trade unions (OGBL and LCGB) and the Union des Entreprises Luxembourgeoises (Union of Luxembourgish Enterprises) was given generally binding force by the Grand-Ducal Regulation of 13 October 2006. 3. Full-time work: the statutory weekly working time is 40 hours per week in Luxembourg. 4. Part-time work: a part-time employee is an employee who has agreed with his/her employer to work a number of working hours that is less than is normal in that place of employment. Legal provisions protect part-time employees against discrimination (limits on overtime, etc.). 4. Apprenticeship is a system of block-release training organised by the Ministry of Education, Children and Youth together with the trade associations concerned. Apprenticeship contracts generally last for three years and concern a specified number of trades. 5. Self-employment: self-employed workers run their own business (in their own name) under the aegis of the ‘Chambre des Métiers’ [Chamber of Skilled Trades], the Chamber of Commerce or the Chamber of Agriculture or pursue a professional activity that is primarily intellectual and does not involve trade. They are affiliated as such to the ‘Centre Commun de la Sécurité Sociale’ [Joint Social Security Centre]. 6. Entertainment industry worker on short-term contracts: this covers artistes and stage or studio technicians who offer their services against payment or for fees on the basis of a fixed-term contract or contract for services. 7. Seasonal work: fixed-term contract to carry out work that cannot be carried out throughout the year. 8. Work by school children and students: two months a year during school holidays (for those under 27 years old). 8. Internship agreement: work to be carried out within the framework of an essentially educational traineeship as part of school education. 9. Fixed-term contract: work contract that specifies the end date of the employment relationship (under certain conditions).

Source: https://ec.europa.eu/eures/main.jsp?catId=8114&acro=living&lang=en&parentId=7754&countryId=LU&living=
Source: https://ec.europa.eu/eures/main.jsp?catId=8246&acro=living&lang=en&parentId=7787&countryId=LU&living=