Denmark has 10 visa pathways relevant to chefs. The most relevant options are Business Visa, Short-Stay Visa Extension, Self-Employment/Entrepreneur Visa. Chefs and cooks are commonly listed on short-term skilled-shortage lists in Australia and Canada, qualifying for employer-sponsored temporary work visas with pathways to permanent residence. Use the VisaMatch eligibility checker below to see which specific visas match your qualifications, experience, and nationality.
For business meetings, conferences, and client visits
Extension of short-stay Schengen visa while in Denmark
For non-EU citizens establishing independent businesses in Denmark with particular Danish business interest
For foreign entrepreneurs with innovative, scalable business plans in eligible sectors (Tech, Cleantech, Life Science, Food, Maritime, Design)
For young people to experience Danish culture while working (Australia, Argentina, Canada, Chile, Japan, New Zealand, South Korea eligible)
For job seekers after study/work completion or persons who lost job without fault
For managers, specialists, trainees transferred between company branches (uses standard work schemes)
For foreign healthcare professionals (Social/healthcare workers: 1,000 permits available; Doctors/Nurses: quota at 0)
Standard pathway beginning point for residence under any work, study, or family scheme
For long-term residents meeting 8+ years residence or 4 years + supplementary requirements criteria
Yes — Denmark has 10 visa pathways relevant to chefs. The most relevant options include Business Visa, Short-Stay Visa Extension, Self-Employment/Entrepreneur Visa. Use the VisaMatch tool to check which ones match your specific profile.
Most visa routes for chefs in Denmark require an employer sponsor or a confirmed job offer. Some regional or provincial programs may have exceptions — check each visa in the list above for details.
Permanent residency pathways for chefs in Denmark depend on the specific visa and how long you stay. Most temporary work visas have a route to PR after a qualifying period. Check each visa's PR pathway column above.
Requirements vary by visa type, but most skilled-worker visas for chefs in Denmark require: a recognised chef qualification (sometimes formally assessed by the relevant Denmark authority), relevant work experience (typically 1–3 years), and in most countries an English or local-language proficiency test. Some countries also require a criminal background check and health clearance.
Processing times for chefs visas in Denmark vary widely: employer-sponsored temporary work visas typically take 4–12 weeks, while points-based permanent residence applications (where applicable) can take 6–18 months. Fast-track schemes for shortage occupations — if Denmark runs one — can reduce times to 2–4 weeks.
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