Profession · Entertainment
Entertainment Sector Work Permit
Foreign artists, performers and entertainment-sector workers in Türkiye work under standard Law 6735 work permits, with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism playing a consultative role for venue licensing and performance authorisation.
Legal anchor
Law 6735 + Ministry of Culture and Tourism regulations
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- Entertainment Sector Work Permit
Overview
Entertainment-sector employment of foreigners covers a wide spectrum: musicians and bands, theatre and dance performers, actors in Turkish productions, circus and acrobat performers, and supporting production crew. The legal frame is Law 6735 with the Ministry of Culture and Tourism (Kültür ve Turizm Bakanlığı) supplying venue and performance-licensing context.
Engagements vary in length — short performance tours, long-running theatre runs, season-long resort engagements. The work permit follows the contract length within the 1+2+3 progression of Article 10. Many entertainment-sector engagements are also tied to seasonal tourism (see the tourism-sector subtype) and are filed under the same regulatory umbrella.
Salary thresholds are set by the standard MoLSS multiplier applicable to commercial roles, with role-specific scaling. Tour-based engagements often combine a per-performance fee with a base contract — the contract structure must be transparent in the e-İzin filing.
Eligibility
- Employer side: registered Turkish entertainment company, theatre, hotel, resort or production house with active SGK workplace number and current tax registration.
- Performance authorisation from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism for the venue and engagement, where applicable.
- Foreigner side: relevant artistic credentials (training, prior productions, references) appropriate to the role.
- Salary at or above the entertainment-role multiplier of minimum wage published by MoLSS.
- Standard public-order, public-security and public-health clearance.
- Sector-specific clearances where applicable (e.g. minor-protection for productions involving children).
Documents required
- Standard e-İzin document set (passport, photograph, employment contract).
- Detailed contract specifying role, performance schedule, fee structure and engagement duration.
- Employer's standard registration package (trade registry, SGK, financials, 5:1 staff list).
- Ministry of Culture and Tourism venue authorisation where applicable.
- Foreigner's portfolio, biography and prior-engagement evidence.
- Sworn translations of foreign-issued credentials and references.
Application process
- 1
Confirm venue and engagement authorisation
Verify whether the venue / engagement requires Ministry of Culture and Tourism authorisation. Some engagement types (e.g. nightclub residencies) carry separate venue-licensing requirements that must be in place before MoLSS will process.
- 2
Sign the engagement contract
Contract specifies role, performance schedule, fee structure and duration. Tour-based engagements should clarify the per-performance fee plus base, and any travel-day arrangements.
- 3
Foreigner enters Türkiye on a work visa or applies in-country
Short engagements often run on the work-visa-from-abroad track for clean SGK and tax handling. Longer engagements convert from an existing residence permit if the foreigner is already in country.
- 4
Employer files the work permit in e-İzin
The employer files the standard Law 6735 application in e-İzin, attaching the contract, venue authorisation (where applicable) and the foreigner's portfolio.
- 5
MoLSS evaluation with sector consultation
MoLSS may consult the Ministry of Culture and Tourism on regulated venues and engagements. Typical processing time runs 4–8 weeks; verify on the e-İzin portal.
- 6
Approval, harç, card and SGK enrolment
On approval, pay the harç and kart bedeli. The employer enrols the foreigner on SGK 4A; the card doubles as a residence permit for the engagement period.
Validity and renewal
Engagement-driven. Short-tour engagements run for the contract length within the Article 10 first-grant maximum of one year. Longer engagements (theatre, resort residencies) run on the standard 1+2+3 progression. Renewal requires continued engagement and continued employer eligibility.
Salary thresholds and fees
Entertainment-sector roles face the standard MoLSS multiplier — historically around 1.5× minimum wage for line performers and crew, and higher for principal roles, headliners and senior production staff. Multipliers are set by MoLSS regulation; verify the current numbers on the e-İzin portal.
Common rejection reasons
- Venue authorisation missing where the engagement requires it.
- Engagement contract too vague on schedule, fees or duration.
- Salary structure inconsistent with the multiplier-of-minimum-wage floor.
- Employer fails the 5:1 Turkish-staff rule and the role does not justify a sector exemption.
- Foreigner's credentials weak relative to the principal role declared.
- Outstanding tax / SGK debt at the employer level.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
- Can a foreign band tour Türkiye on a tourist visa?
- No. Paid performances require a work permit even where the engagement is short. Some bilateral cultural-exchange programmes can authorise unpaid performances under separate frameworks, but commercial paid performances always require Law 6735 authorisation.
- What about resort and hotel performers?
- Hotel and resort entertainment teams (animators, performers, musicians) follow the same regime, often filed under the tourism-sector subtype. Seasonal engagements are common and run within the Article 10 one-year first-grant maximum.
- Are children permitted in productions?
- Yes, with sector-specific minor-protection clearances. Productions involving foreign minors trigger additional regulatory checks under Turkish child-labour and minor-protection rules.
- How is per-performance pay handled?
- The contract should be transparent — base salary plus per-performance fees. MoLSS evaluates whether the total compensation meets the multiplier threshold for the role. SGK and tax handling apply to the total.
- Are foreign actors common in Turkish productions?
- Yes — Turkish television and film hire foreign actors regularly, particularly for international co-productions. The mechanic is the same: Law 6735 work permit through the production company, with relevant Ministry of Culture and Tourism oversight where applicable.
- Can a touring crew member combine multiple short engagements?
- Each Turkish-side employer needs its own work permit. Multiple-employer scenarios run on parallel filings. Short-tour visa structures are sometimes used where a single Turkish-side promoter takes responsibility for all engagements.
Source: Law 6735, Article 6
Source: Law 6735, Article 10
Source: Turkish Labour Law (Law 4857) on minors
Source: MoLSS Implementing Regulation on Law 6735
Source: MoLSS Implementing Regulation on Law 6735
Source: Law 6735, Article 10
Related subtypes
Related work-permit subtypes
Turizm sektörü çalışma izni
Tourism Sector Work Permit
Law 6735 + Law 1618 (Tourism) + Ministry of Culture and Tourism
Foreign tourism-sector workers in Türkiye work under standard Law 6735 work permits, with hotels, resorts and travel agencies operating under Law 1618 (Travel Agencies Law) and Ministry of Culture and Tourism licensing.
View permit detailsSüreli çalışma izni
Definite-Period Work Permit
Law 6735, Article 10
The definite-period work permit is the default category for foreigners hired by a Turkish employer.
View permit detailsYabancı basın mensubu çalışma izni
Press Member Work Permit
Law 6735 + Law 5953 (Basın Mesleğinde) + Press Card regulation
Foreign press members in Türkiye work under standard Law 6735 work permits, with press accreditation issued by the Directorate of Communications (İletişim Başkanlığı) under the Press Card Regulation and Law 5953 (Basın Mesleğinde Çalışanlarla Çalıştıranlar Arasındaki Münasebetlerin Tanzimi Hakkında Kanun).
View permit detailsİstisnai çalışma izni
Exceptional Work Permit
Law 6735, Article 16
The exceptional work permit is a discretionary category under Article 16 of Law 6735 reserved for specific groups — including foreigners married to Turkish citizens, holders of citizenship by investment in process, recognised refugees and other categories the Council of Ministers identifies.
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