Regional Policies Jobs
1 positions at EU institutions
Regional policies roles inside the European Union institutions cover the EU's flagship cohesion policy — the second-largest single area of EU spending after the Common Agricultural Policy, with around €392 billion programmed for 2021–2027 through the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF), the Cohesion Fund, the Just Transition Fund, and the related instruments. The central employer is [DG REGIO](/institutions/ec/) at the Commission, working closely with regional and national managing authorities across 27 member states, the [European Investment Bank](/institutions/eca/), and the [Committee of the Regions](/institutions/cor/) representing 329 regional and local authorities. If you're a regional-development specialist, a cohesion-fund auditor, a structural-funds lawyer, or a regional-policy economist, the EU institutions are one of Europe's largest public-sector employers in this domain.
1 position found
About Regional Policies careers at EU institutions
Typical roles in regional policies
The largest hiring categories include policy officers and programme managers at [DG REGIO](/institutions/ec/) working on cohesion-policy design and implementation (ERDF, Cohesion Fund, Just Transition Fund, Interreg cross-border cooperation, urban policy, smart specialisation, outermost regions), country-desk officers at DG REGIO covering specific member states and dialoguing with national and regional managing authorities, financial-engineering specialists managing financial instruments under cohesion policy (including the Recovery and Resilience Facility country-team work), audit and control specialists ensuring compliance, monitoring and evaluation officers, and Interreg programme managers. The [European Investment Bank](/institutions/eca/)'s regional and urban-development lending teams in Luxembourg fund regional infrastructure across the EU. The Commission's executive agencies (notably CINEA and HADEA) manage parts of cohesion-related funding. The Common Provisions Regulation (CPR) creates a unified framework across the funds, generating substantial legal-officer hiring.
Top hiring institutions for regional policies
[DG REGIO](/institutions/ec/) at the Commission is the central employer with around 800 staff covering ERDF, Cohesion Fund, Just Transition Fund, Interreg, urban policy, and outermost regions. The [European Investment Bank](/institutions/eca/) operates substantial regional-development lending in Luxembourg with field offices. The [Committee of the Regions](/institutions/cor/) in Brussels employs around 600 staff supporting the work of 329 regional and local representatives. The European Parliament's REGI Committee secretariat hires regional-policy advisors. The Council Working Party on Structural Measures provides member-state input. The Commission's [DG EMPL](/institutions/ec/) manages the European Social Fund Plus, which is operated jointly with cohesion funds. The Commission's [DG AGRI](/institutions/ec/) manages the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development, often coordinated with regional policies. The [Joint Research Centre](/institutions/jrc/) runs the JRC Seville site on regional and innovation policy. CINEA manages the LIFE programme. HADEA manages substantial cohesion-related research and innovation.
Salary expectations for regional policies
Standard EU staff scales apply at DG REGIO, CINEA, HADEA, the Committee of the Regions, the European Parliament secretariat, and the JRC. AD5 entry-level regional-policy officers earn around €5,000–5,700 per month gross at step 1. AD7 senior policy officers and senior programme managers earn €7,400–8,500. AD9 senior specialists, country-team leads, and senior auditors earn €9,500–10,500. AD12 heads of unit at DG REGIO reach €13,000–14,500. AD14 directors earn €15,500–17,500. Function Group IV (FG IV) Contract Agents in programme management or audit support typically earn €4,200–6,800/month. The European Investment Bank operates a separate scale broadly competitive with private-sector banking for senior regional-development-finance roles. Standard EU benefits — expatriation allowance (16%), household and education allowances, EU community tax — apply. Brussels correction coefficient is close to 100. Luxembourg (EIB) is also close to 100.
Required qualifications and background
Most AD5 regional-policies positions require a 3-year bachelor's degree in regional economics, public policy, public administration, geography, urban planning, regional development, or a related field. AD7+ positions typically require a master's plus 4–6 years of relevant experience — often including time at a national regional-development ministry, a regional or municipal authority, a managing authority for EU structural funds, or a regional-policy research institute. Familiarity with the Common Provisions Regulation, the ERDF Regulation, the Cohesion Fund Regulation, the Just Transition Fund Regulation, and Interreg regulations is essential. Audit and control roles benefit from CIA, ACCA, or national audit qualifications. Quantitative skills (GIS, R/Python for regional-statistics analytics, econometric techniques for regional analysis) are increasingly valued. Working English is essential; French is helpful at DG REGIO and the Committee of the Regions; specific regional languages strengthen applications for country-desk roles (Polish for Poland desk, Spanish for Spain desk, etc.); a third EU language is required for permanent statutory posts.
EU-specific context to be aware of
EU regional policy operates through a distinctive partnership-and-shared-management architecture. Cohesion policy is delivered through programmes (national and regional) prepared by member states and approved by the Commission, then implemented by national or regional managing authorities under Commission supervision. The Common Provisions Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2021/1060) provides the horizontal framework. The ERDF Regulation, the Cohesion Fund Regulation, the European Social Fund Plus Regulation, and the Just Transition Fund Regulation set the fund-specific rules. The Recovery and Resilience Facility (€723.8 billion in grants and loans) introduced a parallel performance-based instrument that has substantially shaped regional-policy work since 2021. The EU Cohesion Policy 2021–2027 focuses on a smarter, greener, more connected, more social, closer Europe; the post-2027 cohesion policy negotiations are underway during the current MFF cycle. The Committee of the Regions consults regional and local representatives on EU legislation affecting them. Career mobility between DG REGIO, DG EMPL, DG AGRI, EIB, and national regional-development ministries is common.
Frequently asked questions
What qualifications are needed for regional policies roles?
A relevant degree (regional economics, public policy, public administration, geography, urban planning, or regional development). AD7+ positions need a master's plus 4–6 years of experience — often at a national regional-development ministry, regional/municipal authority, managing authority for EU structural funds, or regional-policy research institute. Familiarity with the Common Provisions Regulation and fund-specific regulations is essential. Working English is required; French is helpful; specific regional languages strengthen country-desk applications; a third EU language is required for permanent posts.
Which EU institutions hire regional policies professionals?
DG REGIO at the Commission is the central employer with around 800 staff. The EIB runs substantial regional-development lending. The Committee of the Regions has around 600 staff. The European Parliament's REGI Committee secretariat hires policy advisors. DG EMPL manages ESF+. DG AGRI manages the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development. The JRC Seville site works on regional and innovation policy. CINEA and HADEA manage cohesion-related funding.
What is the typical salary for regional policies roles at EU institutions?
AD5 around €5,000–5,700/month gross at step 1, AD7 €7,400–8,500, AD9 €9,500–10,500, AD12 €13,000–14,500, AD14 directors €15,500–17,500. FG IV contract agents earn €4,200–6,800/month. The EIB pays competitively for senior regional-development-finance roles. Standard EU community tax and allowances apply.
Are regional policies roles available across all duty stations?
Brussels hosts DG REGIO, the Committee of the Regions, DG EMPL, DG AGRI, CINEA, HADEA, and the European Parliament secretariat. Luxembourg hosts the EIB. The JRC Seville site is the largest regional-policy research hub in the EU institutions. Country-desk work at DG REGIO involves substantial travel to member-state managing authorities.
Can non-EU citizens apply for regional policies positions?
Permanent statutory positions at DG REGIO, the Commission, the Committee of the Regions, and EU agencies require EU citizenship. The EIB regularly hires non-EU citizens for regional-development-finance roles. Some JRC research positions can occasionally accommodate non-EU researchers. The most realistic non-citizen paths involve EIB recruitment, visiting-researcher arrangements at the JRC, or pursuing EU citizenship through residency.