eVisa

Zimbabwe

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Important Notice

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90

days max stay

6 months

passport validity required

English, Shona, Ndebele

official language

English spoken

ZiG

currency

About

ZiG currency lost 95% value. Hyperinflation history (79.6 billion% in 2008). 4 currency collapses since 2008. Mining USD 200-700 but agriculture USD 26-52. No BD embassy.

Entry & Visa Requirements

  • eVisa
  • eVisa via evisa.gov.zw. BD eligible (Category C, USD 30). Processing 2-5 days.
  • Return ticket required
  • Proof of funds required

Work Permit Pathway

## Work Permit Pathway: No BD-Specific Pathway Exists

### Zimbabwe's Work Permit System

Zimbabwe issues Class 2 (Employment) work permits through the Department of Immigration Control:

- **Employer sponsorship** mandatory
- **Labour market test**: Employer must prove no Zimbabwean can fill the position
- **Class 2 permit fee**: ~USD 500 + residence permit ~USD 200
- **Duration**: Typically 2-3 years, renewable
- **Language**: English (Zimbabwe's official language)

### No BMET Channel

There is no BMET recruitment channel for Zimbabwe. No BMET-licensed agency lists Zimbabwe as a destination. No bilateral labor agreement exists between Bangladesh and Zimbabwe.

### The Economic Irrationality

Even if a BD worker obtained a Class 2 permit:
- Permit costs (~USD 700) plus relocation costs (~USD 1,000+) represent a significant investment
- Non-mining wages (USD 26-150/month) offer zero or negative return compared to Bangladesh
- Mining wages (USD 200-700) are inaccessible without technical qualifications
- Currency risk means ZiG-denominated wages can lose value faster than they are earned
- No BD embassy means any problem is unassisted

### No BD Embassy

There is **no Bangladeshi embassy or consulate in Zimbabwe**. The nearest BD diplomatic mission is the High Commission in Pretoria, South Africa — approximately 1,100 km from Harare. Any consular emergency requires coordination with a mission in a different country.

### Emergency Contacts

| Service | Contact | Notes |
|---------|---------|-------|
| Zimbabwe Emergency | 999 (police), 994 (ambulance) | Separate numbers per service |
| Zimbabwe Immigration | +263-4-791913 | Department of Immigration Control |
| BD High Commission, Pretoria | pretoria.mofa.gov.bd | Nearest BD mission (~1,100 km) |
| IOM Southern Africa | https://southafrica.iom.int/ | Regional migration assistance |

Overstay Penalties & Consequences

## Overstay Penalties in Zimbabwe

### For Overstaying

- **Fine**: USD 100-500 (payable in USD only — not ZiG)
- **Detention**: Administrative detention at Chikurubi or other facilities
- **Deportation**: At violator's expense with re-entry ban
- **Criminal prosecution**: Under the Immigration Act [Chapter 4:02]

### For Working Without Authorization

- **Criminal offence**: Working without a Class 2 work permit is illegal
- **Fine**: Up to USD 1,000
- **Imprisonment**: Up to 2 years
- **Deportation**: Mandatory with re-entry ban
- **Employer penalties**: Criminal prosecution for employing unauthorized workers

### Currency Note on Fines

Immigration fines are payable in USD. This is important because:
- If you are earning in ZiG (which is losing value), fines are effectively in a stable currency you may not hold
- Exchange from ZiG to USD at the time of penalty will be at whatever the current (unfavourable) rate is
- This creates additional financial risk for anyone operating in the ZiG economy

Job Market

## Job Market: Mining Wealth, Currency Chaos, Zero BD Workers

### The Structural Reality

Zimbabwe is **not a labor destination** for Bangladeshi workers:

- **ZERO documented BD workers** in Zimbabwe
- **No BMET-licensed agencies** for Zimbabwe
- **No bilateral labor MOU** with Bangladesh
- **No BD embassy** in Zimbabwe — nearest is Pretoria, South Africa (~1,100 km)
- **Unemployment**: Official figures disputed. Estimated 80-90% of the workforce is in the informal sector. Formal employment is scarce.

### Mining — Significant but Inaccessible

Zimbabwe has substantial mineral wealth:
- **Gold**: Major producer. Artisanal (exploitative) and formal (Zimplats standards).
- **Platinum**: Second-largest reserves globally. Zimplats, Unki, Mimosa operations.
- **Lithium**: Emerging — Bikita Minerals, Prospect Resources. Strategic mineral for batteries.
- **Diamonds**: Marange diamond fields — controversial history with military involvement.
- **Chrome**: Zimbabwe holds second-largest reserves globally.

**But for BD workers**:
- Formal mining requires technical qualifications and prioritizes Zimbabwean citizens
- Artisanal mining is where exploitation occurs — this is NOT a safe sector
- Mining wages (USD 200-700) exist but are inaccessible to foreign labor-class workers

### Non-Mining Sectors

| Sector | Monthly (USD) | Reality |
|--------|-------------|---------|
| Agriculture (commercial) | 50-100 | Tobacco estates, flower farms. Seasonal. |
| Agriculture (subsistence) | 26-52 | Near-zero. Often payment-in-kind. |
| Domestic work | 30-80 | Below any minimum. Poorly enforced. |
| Tourism (Victoria Falls) | 100-300 | Tips-dependent. Seasonal (April-October). Shared with Zambia. |
| Construction | 80-200 | Informal sector dominant. ZiG payment risk. |
| Retail/Services | 50-150 | Urban Harare/Bulawayo. Limited formal positions. |

### The Currency Problem for Workers

The critical question for any worker in Zimbabwe: **Are you paid in USD or ZiG?**
- **USD payments**: Relatively stable. Purchasing power preserved.
- **ZiG payments**: Losing value continuously. A salary of ZiG 10,000 in January may buy half as much by June.
- Government and some employers pay in ZiG — workers then need to convert to USD at unfavourable rates
- This is not theoretical — it has happened four times since 2008

Salary & Payments

Sector Min Max Currency
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
0 0 ZiG/mo
## Salary Reality in Zimbabwe

### Wage Levels

| Sector | Monthly (USD) | Notes |
|--------|-------------|-------|
| Mining (formal — Zimplats, Unki) | 200-700 | USD payments. Professional operations. Technical qualifications required. |
| Mining (artisanal) | Variable | Often paid in gold or ZiG. Exploitative. Dangerous. TIP Report sector. |
| Agriculture (commercial) | 50-100 | Tobacco, flowers. Seasonal peaks. |
| Agriculture (subsistence) | 26-52 | Near-zero. Payment-in-kind common. |
| Domestic work | 30-80 | Below any minimum. Poorly enforced. TIP sector. |
| Tourism (Victoria Falls) | 100-300 | Tips-dependent. Seasonal. Shared with Zambia. |
| Construction | 80-200 | Informal sector. ZiG payment risk. |
| Retail/Services | 50-150 | Urban Harare/Bulawayo. |

### Currency

- **Multi-currency**: USD (primary formal), ZiG (government/some retail), South African Rand (border areas)
- **ZiG to USD**: ~680 ZiG = 1 USD (June 2026) — started at 13.56:1 in April 2024
- **The pattern**: Every Zimbabwe currency since 2008 has followed the same trajectory — launched at parity with USD, lost value rapidly, eventually abandoned
- **For workers**: The ONLY safe currency to be paid in is USD. ZiG payments are high-risk.

### Chinese-Operated Mining Warning

If a recruitment offer for Zimbabwe involves a Chinese-operated mining company or business, the same TIP Report pattern that affects Zambia applies: South Asian nationals are documented exploitation targets. Treat such offers as high-risk. Chinese-operated artisanal mining ventures in Zimbabwe have been flagged for labor exploitation, unsafe working conditions, and wage theft. The exploitation pattern is consistent across Southern Africa (documented in both Zambia and Zimbabwe TIP Reports).

### The Wage Arithmetic

For non-mining sectors:
- Agriculture (~USD 26-52/month) is BELOW Bangladesh wages
- Domestic work (~USD 30-80/month) is at or below BD parity
- Only mining (USD 200-700) and tourism (USD 100-300) exceed BD levels — but mining is inaccessible to BD workers and tourism is seasonal
- After currency risk (ZiG depreciation), no-embassy costs, and relocation expenses, the effective wage advantage is negative for most BD workers

Where to Apply

Zimbabwe eVisa Portal

government

Zimbabwe Department of Immigration

government

BD High Commission, Pretoria (Nearest BD Mission)

embassy

IOM Southern Africa

ngo

Zimbabwe Emergency Services

government

Housing & Living

## Cost of Living in Zimbabwe

### Harare (Capital) — USD-Denominated

| Expense | Monthly (USD) | Notes |
|---------|-------------|-------|
| Accommodation (shared room) | 100-250 | Suburbs; city centre higher. Most landlords demand USD. |
| Food | 100-200 | Local markets cheaper; supermarkets USD-priced. |
| Transport | 30-80 | Kombis (minibuses) ~USD 0.50-1.00 per trip. Fuel costs volatile. |
| Utilities | 20-50 | ZESA (electricity) unreliable — load shedding. Water cuts common. |
| Phone/SIM | 10-30 | Econet, NetOne, Telecel |
| **Total minimum** | **260-610** | Basic survival in USD terms |

### The Multi-Currency Complexity

Daily life in Zimbabwe involves constant currency calculation:
- **Landlords**: Usually demand USD
- **Supermarkets**: USD-priced but accept ZiG at daily rate
- **Transport**: Often ZiG (kombis) or USD (intercity)
- **Salaries**: May be in USD, ZiG, or a mix
- **The gap**: If paid in ZiG but expenses are in USD, a worker is permanently on the losing side of the exchange

### Victoria Falls Area

Tourism-oriented economy. Higher prices than Harare. Everything tourism-related is USD-denominated. Workers in tourism may receive tips in USD (positive), but base wages are low.

### Electricity and Water

Zimbabwe's utility infrastructure is unreliable:
- **ZESA** (state electricity): Load shedding (planned power cuts) is routine. 4-8 hours without power daily in many areas.
- **Water**: Municipal water supply is inconsistent. Many households rely on boreholes.
- These infrastructure gaps affect quality of life significantly and are not reflected in the cost-of-living numbers above.

Social & Culture

## Bangladeshi Community in Zimbabwe

### Population

- **Estimated BD nationals**: ZERO documented presence
- **BD mission in Zimbabwe**: None — no embassy, no consulate, no honorary consulate
- **Nearest BD mission**: High Commission in Pretoria, South Africa (~1,100 km from Harare)
- **Community infrastructure**: None. No BD restaurants, grocery stores, or community organizations in any Zimbabwean city.

### South Asian Presence

A small but historically significant Indian community exists in Zimbabwe:
- Indian traders arrived during the colonial era (Rhodesia)
- Small Indian-owned businesses remain in Harare and Bulawayo
- Hindu temples exist in Harare
- But this is a distinct community with no documented BD component

### Religious Context

Zimbabwe is predominantly Christian (~86%). Islam is a small minority (~1%). Halal food is NOT widely available. BD Muslim workers would face significant dietary challenges outside international hotels.

### Victoria Falls Cross-Reference

If visiting Victoria Falls, note that the same waterfall is accessible from both Zimbabwe and Zambia:
- **Zimbabwe side**: Victoria Falls town — more developed tourism infrastructure
- **Zambia side**: Livingstone — see the Zambia eVisa page (Batch 3)
- **KAZA UniVisa**: A joint Zimbabwe-Zambia tourist visa allows visiting both sides — check availability for BD nationals

Business Opportunities

## Legitimate Uses of the Zimbabwe eVisa

### Tourism

Zimbabwe's tourism identity centres on Victoria Falls and wildlife:
- **Victoria Falls**: One of the Seven Natural Wonders. "The Smoke That Thunders." Best viewed February-May (high water). Zimbabwe side offers the most dramatic views.
- **Hwange National Park**: Zimbabwe's largest game reserve. Elephants, lions, wild dogs.
- **Great Zimbabwe**: UNESCO World Heritage Site — medieval stone city ruins. National symbol (the Zimbabwe Bird).
- **Mana Pools**: UNESCO World Heritage. Walking safaris along the Zambezi.
- **Eastern Highlands**: Nyanga, Chimanimani — mountain scenery, waterfalls, hiking.

### Business Travel

- **Mining sector**: Gold, platinum, lithium, diamonds. International mining companies operate here.
- **Agriculture**: Tobacco (Zimbabwe is Africa's largest producer), cotton, horticulture.
- **Trade**: Zimbabwe is part of SADC and COMESA trade blocs.
- **Emerging**: Lithium mining is attracting international investment (Bikita, Prospect Resources).

### What the eVisa is NOT For

- **Employment seeking**: zero BD worker presence, 80-90% informal sector, currency instability
- **Long-term stay**: 90-day eVisa is for visits only
- **Currency speculation**: ZiG's collapse is not an opportunity — it is a crisis for everyone holding the currency
- **Informal work**: Immigration enforcement exists and fines are in USD

### The Cautionary Lesson

Zimbabwe is this batch's cautionary tale about currency risk. Any worker paid in a local currency assumes the risk of that currency's stability. In most countries, this risk is manageable. In Zimbabwe, the pattern has been: local currency launches → loses value → workers' savings destroyed → currency abandoned → new currency launches → cycle repeats. Four times in 18 years. If you work in Zimbabwe, insist on USD payments.

Content Quality

AI Generated — Under Review

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Visa rules change frequently. Always verify the latest entry requirements with the embassy or consulate of your destination country before making travel plans.

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Cost of Living

## Cost of Living in Zimbabwe ### Harare (Capital) — USD-Denominated | Expense | Monthly (USD) | Notes | |---------|-------------|-------| | Accommodation (shared room) | 100-250 | Suburbs; city centre higher. Most landlords demand USD. | | Food | 100-200 | Local markets cheaper; supermarkets USD-priced. | | Transport | 30-80 | Kombis (minibuses) ~USD 0.50-1.00 per trip. Fuel costs volatile. | | Utilities | 20-50 | ZESA (electricity) unreliable — load shedding. Water cuts common. | | Phone/SIM | 10-30 | Econet, NetOne, Telecel | | **Total minimum** | **260-610** | Basic survival in USD terms | ### The Multi-Currency Complexity Daily life in Zimbabwe involves constant currency calculation: - **Landlords**: Usually demand USD - **Supermarkets**: USD-priced but accept ZiG at daily rate - **Transport**: Often ZiG (kombis) or USD (intercity) - **Salaries**: May be in USD, ZiG, or a mix - **The gap**: If paid in ZiG but expenses are in USD, a worker is permanently on the losing side of the exchange ### Victoria Falls Area Tourism-oriented economy. Higher prices than Harare. Everything tourism-related is USD-denominated. Workers in tourism may receive tips in USD (positive), but base wages are low. ### Electricity and Water Zimbabwe's utility infrastructure is unreliable: - **ZESA** (state electricity): Load shedding (planned power cuts) is routine. 4-8 hours without power daily in many areas. - **Water**: Municipal water supply is inconsistent. Many households rely on boreholes. - These infrastructure gaps affect quality of life significantly and are not reflected in the cost-of-living numbers above.

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Before You Travel

Visa-free entry is just the first step. Real preparation matters.

  • • Passport validity (6+ months beyond travel date)
  • • Return/onward ticket booking
  • • Proof of funds documentation
  • • Currency exchange arrangement
  • • Vaccinations (per destination requirements)
  • • Emergency contacts (embassy, family)
→ Full pre-departure guide

Last verified

04 Jun 2026

Visa rules may change — always verify before travel.

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