Foreign workers in Kuwait no longer have to wait a full year to change employers if their current employer breaks key labour rules. The change allows employees to exit earlier when companies fail to meet basic legal obligations.
For foreigners working in Kuwait, one of the Gulf’s biggest overseas job markets, the update offers more protection against salary delays, permit issues, and unfair employment practices.
When Can Workers Change Employers?
Foreign workers can now switch employers before completing one year if:
- Their employer fails to pay salaries.
- The employer does not complete work or residence permit formalities.
- The employer’s actions legally allow the worker to end the contract without notice.
- The employer’s labour file has been suspended or restricted by Kuwaiti authorities.
- Authorities determine that an absconding complaint was filed maliciously or by mistake.
Earlier, workers generally had to complete one year with the same employer before changing jobs, even when disputes arose.
Why the Rule Matters
The policy also raises the cost of non-compliance for employers. Companies that fail to meet salary or residency obligations now face a greater risk of losing workers instead of relying on mandatory employment periods.
For foreign workers, the change adds flexibility without waiting months for the one-year threshold to pass.
What This Means for Indian Workers
Thousands of Indians move to Kuwait each year for jobs in construction, healthcare, hospitality, retail, and domestic services. The new rule gives them a legal route to change employers sooner if labour laws are ignored.
This also reduces the risk of workers becoming trapped with employers who delay salaries or fail to process residency documents.