Contributed By Oznur & Partners
Türkiye’s migration policy cannot be understood as a single, uniform system. It operates along two quite different lines: the government’s active and deliberate effort to attract skilled workers and investors, and a simultaneously hardening stance towards irregular migration.
On the skilled migration side, the government has spent recent years reshaping the legal framework to draw in professionals who can contribute to high-technology industries and investors who bring capital. The International Labour Force Law No 6735, which came into force in 2016, set the tone: its underlying logic is to make Türkiye an attractive destination for talent and investment by reducing barriers rather than raising them, positioning the country as a destination that actively competes for skilled professionals and investment capital on the global stage.
The picture looks very different for irregular migration. Enforcement has tightened considerably: the Ministry of Interior runs mobile inspection teams that operate continuously across the country, and any regular migrant who becomes involved in criminal activity faces immediate steps towards cancellation of their status and deportation.
This divide is reflected in public attitudes too. There is real tension in Turkish society around irregular migration and the large refugee population, but the arrival of senior executives, qualified professionals and high net worth investors is seen positively by both the business community and the government. Work and residence permit procedures for these groups have been actively streamlined, and instruments like the Turquoise Card offer meaningful advantages to those who genuinely add economic value.
Türkiye’s geography means it sits at the crossroads of multiple migration flows. Its major cities have grown into genuinely global metropolises, and the country functions simultaneously as an origin, destination and transit point for migrants. At the state level, work is ongoing to build a long-term, development-sensitive migration policy framework that aligns with both the UN Sustainable Development Goals adopted in 2015 and Türkiye’s own Eleventh Development Plan.
Türkiye’s immigration policy has shifted noticeably in recent years towards what might be described as a more selective approach: deeper security screening, a clearer expectation of economic contribution, and a growing preference for technology-sector skills. The changes below are already in force or in the final stages of implementation, and each will affect the standard routes that foreign nationals have historically relied upon.
Tourist Residence Permits: Stricter Income Requirements and Regional Quotas
For several years it was straightforward to obtain a short-term tourist residence permit on the back of a notarised lease agreement alone. That route has been substantially closed, both in practice and in the regulations themselves.
Income requirement
A single applicant must now show, with apostilled and translated documentation, a regular foreign-source or passive income of at least 1.5 times the net minimum wage in Türkiye, deposited continuously into their account for the three months before the application. Family applications require an additional amount of at least one minimum wage per dependent.
Regional restrictions (neighbourhood quotas)
In high-density provinces such as Istanbul, Antalya, Ankara and Izmir, neighbourhood-level quotas cap the proportion of foreign residents in any given area. Where a quota is full, lease-based applications are refused except in cases of medical or educational need. In practice this has effectively ended the route that many remote workers and digital nomads previously used to base themselves cheaply in Türkiye while working informally for employers abroad.
Property-Based Residence Permits: New Minimum Value Threshold
Separately from the USD400,000 threshold that applies to citizenship-by-investment, the rules for obtaining a short-term residence permit as a property owner have also been tightened since October 2023.
The property must now be worth at least USD200,000, regardless of location, and the applicant can no longer simply self-declare a value on the title deed. An official valuation report from a Capital Markets Board-licensed appraisal institution is required.
The practical effect is that low-budget buyers who previously obtained residence by purchasing cheap title deeds in peripheral areas can no longer use that approach.
The Türkiye Tech Visa
While the tourist and property routes have narrowed, the direction of travel for technology and entrepreneurship is the opposite.
The Türkiye Tech Visa, developed jointly by the Ministry of Industry and Technology and the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, was officially launched on 16 September 2024 at Istanbul Airport. It is one of the most significant liberalisation measures the government has introduced in recent years.
The programme offers foreign technology entrepreneurs, senior software engineers and technology investors a fast-track route to a work permit of up to three years, without the capital requirements or Turkish employment ratios that apply to standard work permits. It is an invitation-based, accelerated system designed specifically for technology professionals and founders.
Higher Fines and Faster Deportation
Administrative fines for immigration violations are updated every January under the annual Revaluation Rate, and the 2026 figures are substantially higher than previous years. Fines on employers who hire undocumented foreign workers have multiplied, and deportation decisions in unlawful residence cases are being enforced more quickly and with less tolerance for delay. Companies that previously tolerated informal foreign employment are now finding that the financial and reputational exposure is simply too high.
Overall picture
In light of all these data and policy shifts, visa routes within the jurisdiction have evolved in two opposite directions.
Türkiye does not use the word “sponsorship” in the way it is used in the United States or the United Kingdom, where a licensed sponsor takes on formal obligations to the state. Here, the mechanism is simpler: the employer – whether a company or an individual – applies directly to the Ministry of Labour and Social Security to employ a foreign national. The legal responsibilities that flow from this derive from the employer’s status under the Labour Law and the Turkish Commercial Code, not from any sponsorship agreement.
Before an employer can bring in a foreign national, two baseline conditions must be met at company level.
The foreign employee also has obligations. They must provide an employment contract – fixed-term or open-ended – drawn up in line with the Turkish Code of Obligations and Labour Law, together with apostilled and sworn-translated degree certificates and up-to-date biometric photographs.
Applications are made through one of two channels.
Türkiye offers the following types of work permit.
There are two routes that can ultimately lead to long-term status in Türkiye through employment: Turkish citizenship and the Long-Term Residence Permit. Both require continuous lawful presence, and both involve a meaningful administrative hurdle beyond simply reaching the required number of years.
Citizenship
Under the Turkish Citizenship Law No 5901, five years of lawful physical residence in Türkiye under a valid work permit opens the door to a citizenship application. The word “physical” matters: the authorities cross-check border entry and exit records and expect the individual to have been genuinely present in the country for a substantial part of each year. Periods built up through interrupted stays or short-term visits do not count. Reaching five years does not automatically lead to citizenship – it only establishes the right to apply. The application then goes through an archival and security review, and a final decision rests with the President.
Long-Term Residence Permit
Under Law No 6458, eight years of continuous lawful residence under a valid work permit or an eligible long-term residence permit qualifies a foreign national to apply for the Long-Term Residence Permit, which is effectively permanent. In practice, the clearest path is eight uninterrupted years with a single corporate employer. The key conditions are: an unbroken residence period, sufficient income to support the applicant and any dependants, no reliance on state social assistance in the three years before the application, and no threat to public order or national security.
The main routes available to foreign nationals who want to establish a lawful right to stay in Türkiye through their own investment, rather than through an employer, are as follows.
Business visitors in Türkiye operate within clear limits set by labour law. What is permitted and what crosses the line into unauthorised work is defined by the nature of the activity, not simply by how long the person stays.
A commercial visitor may lawfully conduct market research; initiate company incorporation and trade registry procedures; exercise signatory powers before a notary as a company partner; hold business or supply negotiations with potential clients; attend fairs and exhibitions; and carry out short-term training, installation or maintenance work related to equipment purchased under a contract, within the time limits the law allows.
What is not permitted is integrating into the local workforce: working regular hours under an employment contract, receiving a salary from a Turkish source, or carrying out day-to-day management and operations on company premises. This last point catches people out. Even if someone is listed in the company’s signature circular as a director or manager, they still need a work permit under the International Labour Force Law before performing active management duties. Doing so without one constitutes illegal employment.
On entry requirements: commercial travellers generally need a business visa obtained through a consulate. However, Türkiye has a wide network of visa-free arrangements, and nationals of many EU member states, the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and various Asian and Latin American countries can enter without a visa in advance and stay for commercial purposes for up to 90 days in any 180-day period (with some nationalities limited to 30 or 60 days depending on the bilateral agreement in place).
Nationals of countries that benefit from full diplomatic visa exemption with Türkiye – such as Germany, France and the United Kingdom – do not need to complete any electronic pre-authorisation before travelling. There is no Turkish equivalent of the US ESTA or the EU’s ETIAS for these travellers. They arrive at the border with a valid passport (at least six months remaining at the date of entry) and are admitted directly. Under certain bilateral agreements, citizens of specific countries – including Germany, Belgium, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus and Georgia – may even enter using a chip-enabled national identity card rather than a passport.
A second group of countries sits between full exemption and a full consular visa requirement. Their nationals fall under the e-Visa regime: they must apply online through the Ministry of Foreign Affairs’ official e-Visa platform before travelling, entering their personal details and paying the fee by credit card. The system runs a background security check and, where no restriction exists, issues a barcoded PDF within a few minutes. This functions in practice as an electronic pre-authorisation, rather than a traditional sticker visa.
Türkiye introduced a Digital Nomad Visa programme in the first half of 2024, giving formal legal status to a category of remote worker that had previously occupied a grey area. The programme creates a dedicated residence route for foreign nationals employed abroad or earning freelance income from outside Türkiye, who want to live in the country while continuing that work.
Applications are made through the Ministry of Culture and Tourism’s official platform. University graduates who can show a stable monthly foreign income of at least USD3,000 – evidenced by an employment contract or bank statements – receive a Digital Nomad Identification Certificate.
The certificate is then used to apply for the appropriate visa at a Turkish consulate. On arrival in Türkiye, the holder obtains a residence permit through the Directorate General of Migration Management.
The status does not open the door to the Turkish labour market. The holder cannot take up local employment, receive a salary from a Turkish company or invoice Turkish entities. What it provides is a straightforward, legally sound framework for people doing cross-border remote work who want to be based in Türkiye without the legal uncertainty that previously came with that arrangement.
There is no general language requirement for standard visa, residence permit or work permit applications in Türkiye. No IELTS, TOEFL or Turkish TÖMER certificate is required by law.
The e-Permit work permit application form does include a Turkish language proficiency field, but completing it is optional and has no bearing on the outcome. Turkish language ability is not a primary evaluation criterion for most positions, with the narrow exception of roles that are entirely customer-facing in a local market context and require no foreign language skills at all – certain retail positions being the typical example.
The one genuine exception applies to foreign nationals who are applying for a Short-Term Educational Residence Permit solely to attend a Turkish language course. In this case, the applicant must show that they have enrolled in and paid fees to a language institution formally accredited by the Ministry of National Education – an ordinary private language school will not do – and must include the relevant payment receipts in their application.
Routine medical certificates are not required at every stage of visa or residence permit applications in Türkiye. However, health-related obligations do arise in specific circumstances, and health insurance coverage is mandatory for all residence permit holders.
Health Insurance
All foreign nationals under 65 who apply for a residence permit must hold valid health insurance covering the full duration of their stay in Türkiye. Most expatriates satisfy this through a specialist foreign health insurance policy. Those who have already lived continuously in Türkiye for at least one year have the option of enrolling in the state General Health Insurance (GSS) scheme through the Social Security Institution by paying monthly premiums.
Public Health Controls
Under Articles 7 and 15 of Law No 6458, foreign nationals suspected of carrying a serious communicable disease can be refused entry or a visa. Border health officers and migration officials have the authority to pause a case where physical symptoms are present or where a traveller has arrived from a high-risk region, and may require the person to produce an official medical board report from a public hospital confirming the absence of a communicable disease.
Healthcare Professionals
Foreign doctors, dentists and nurses who want to work in Turkish healthcare institutions must go through diploma equivalency procedures and also provide official medical reports confirming they have no physical or mental condition that would prevent them from practising. These reports must be submitted to both the Ministry of Labour and Social Security and the Ministry of Health.
Vaccinations
No vaccination certificate is required for standard tourist or commercial entry into Türkiye. The exception is for travellers arriving from regions where yellow fever is endemic – certain parts of Africa and South America – who may be asked to show an International Certificate of Vaccination at the border, in line with WHO International Health Regulations. Asylum seekers and those under temporary or international protection receive access to the national vaccination programme free of charge, on the same basis as Turkish citizens. COVID-19 PCR and vaccination passport requirements have been fully suspended and are no longer enforced.
Türkiye operates a domestic labour market test that protects local employment while still allowing companies to bring in foreign talent where the need is genuine. The system sets minimum thresholds for both the employer and the foreign national, and includes a salary floor that varies by profession.
Employer Requirements
The employer must have a minimum paid-in capital of TRY500,000, registered with the Trade Registry.
The Five-to-One Quota
For each foreign employee, the workplace must have at least five Turkish citizens in active, SGK-registered employment. This applies across all branches of the company within the same sector.
Quota Exemptions
Three exemptions exist. First, if the company’s net annual turnover for the previous year is TRY50 million or above, the five-Turkish-citizen rule does not apply for the first five foreign hires. Second, where the foreign national is also a registered shareholder of the company, the quota does not apply for the first six months after the permit is issued; compliance is then assessed for the following six-month period. Third, a foreign employee who has continuously held a valid residence permit in Türkiye for at least three years benefits from a reduced 1:1 ratio, though this concession is capped at three foreign employees.
Salary Minimums
Foreign employees cannot be paid at minimum wage level. The Ministry sets salary multiples by profession and seniority: senior executives and pilots must receive at least 6.5 times the minimum wage; engineers and architects at least four times; skilled specialists such as head chefs and teachers at least three times; standard professional roles such as sales and marketing at least 1.5 times; and domestic care workers at least the full minimum wage.
Professions Closed to Foreign Nationals by Law
Several professions are reserved exclusively for Turkish citizens under sector-specific legislation including the Attorneys’ Act and the Medical Practice Act. Foreign nationals may not work as lawyers, judges or prosecutors, notaries, dentists, patient carers, veterinarians, responsible managers of private hospitals, civil servants in public institutions, or customs and financial advisers.
Professions Routinely Refused on Labour Market Grounds
Beyond the legally prohibited list, the Ministry routinely refuses work permit applications in roles where the local labour market has ample supply. These include cleaners, unskilled construction workers, kitchen porters and dishwashers, general gardeners, cashiers not requiring language skills, retail assistants, general waiting and kitchen staff outside luxury hospitality settings, call centre operators not requiring native-level foreign language ability, basic secretarial and data entry roles, and delivery and courier drivers. Seasonal agricultural work follows different rules and falls outside the standard visa framework except where provincial governorates have granted specific exemptions. In domestic services, permits are only issued for childcare and medically documented elderly or care work; applications for general cleaning or cooking are categorically refused.
A fixed-term work permit in Türkiye is tied to a single employer. The name of that employer is printed on the permit document and the holder cannot take up employment elsewhere – not even part-time or for supplementary income – while the permit is in force. If the employee leaves, whether by resigning or being dismissed, the permit ends. If they then find a new employer, the process starts again from scratch: a new application file must be submitted to the Ministry and the standard one-year initial cap applies. There is no mechanism for transferring or reactivating an existing permit under a different employer.
Criminal record checks are a routine part of visa, residence permit and work permit assessments in Türkiye, conducted through a combination of physical documentation and automated security screening.
Document Requirements
For work permit applications, a physical criminal record certificate from the applicant’s home country is not generally required as part of the standard electronic submission. The Ministry of Labour and Social Security and the Ministry of Interior share access to national security databases, and automated background screening by the National Intelligence Organisation (MIT) and the General Directorate of Security (EGM) takes place behind the scenes.
Residence permit applications are treated differently. The Directorate General of Migration Management reserves the right to request a criminal record certificate from the applicant’s country of nationality or any country where they have recently lived, and in practice this is frequently required. Family residence permit applications particularly require it from the sponsoring spouse or parent. For transitions to long-term residence permits, where the applicant has usually been in Türkiye for several years, a criminal record obtained through the Turkish e-Government system is generally sufficient.
Any criminal record certificate issued by a foreign authority must carry an apostille (or consular legalisation where apostille is not available) and be accompanied by a notarised sworn Turkish translation before it can be used in an application.
Grounds for Refusal
Under Articles 15, 32 and 33 of Law No 6458, an application must be refused and no visa issued where the applicant has been flagged by security or intelligence services as a threat to public order, security or health; where required documents including the criminal record are not provided within the deadline or are found to contain false information; where an existing entry ban or deportation order is in place; or where the applicant cannot demonstrate the minimum living standards required in terms of income, health cover and accommodation.
Effect of a Prior Criminal Record
Having a criminal record does not automatically mean an application will be refused. The authorities look at the nature of the offence, the sentence imposed, the circumstances and how much time has passed since the conviction. There is discretion in most cases. However, certain convictions leave no room for that discretion: terrorism financing, membership of an armed terrorist organisation, international drug trafficking, human smuggling and serious sexual offences are absolute grounds for refusal, visa rejection and an entry ban.
For work permit applications, the foreign employee is not required to provide personal bank statements or evidence of their own financial resources. The state treats the salary commitment given by the employer – which must meet the minimum multiples set out in 3.3 Sponsor Requirements as sufficient financial guarantee. The money comes from the employer, not the employee, and that is what the system is built around.
The position is different for residence permits – tourist, business visitor and family permits in particular. Here the law requires the applicant to show, with documentary evidence, that they have enough money to support themselves throughout their stay without drawing on state healthcare or social assistance. For tourist residence permit applications, a regular income of at least 1.5 times the minimum wage is the standard threshold.
For family residence permits, the financial burden does not fall on the dependent – the spouse or child applying for the permit. It rests with the sponsor, who must be legally residing or working in Türkiye and must submit their own salary slips and bank statements to show they have adequate income. Those documents underpin the application for all dependents covered by the same permit request.
Türkiye has moved most of its immigration procedures online, though the degree of digitalisation varies depending on the type of application.
Work permits are fully electronic. The authorised company representative or a notarised proxy submits the entire application online through the Ministry of Labour and Social Security’s e-Permit system, using a Registered Electronic Mail (KEP) address and an electronic signature. Supporting documents – employment contracts, diplomas, sworn translations, trade registry gazettes – are uploaded as scanned PDFs. Nothing is sent by post or courier. Residence permits and standard visa applications through consulates work differently. The process starts online with data entry and appointment booking, but a physical appearance is always required afterwards. On the appointment day, the applicant must appear in person – at the Provincial Directorate of Migration Management for residence permits, or at the Turkish diplomatic mission for visa applications – and hand over a file of original documents and wet-signed copies matching what was uploaded digitally. Fingerprints and photographs are taken at the same appointment.
As a general rule under Article 22 of Law No 6735, foreign nationals must submit their visa applications at the Turkish embassy or consulate in the country whose passport they hold.
If the applicant is living in a country where they are not a citizen, they can apply through the Turkish mission there, but only if they hold a lawful residence permit for that country – typically of at least 90 days and not a tourist visa.
Processing times vary depending on the type of application and the time of year, but the law sets maximum statutory limits for each route.
Travel restrictions once an application is filed depend entirely on what type of application has been submitted.
Türkiye does not operate a formal premium processing scheme of the kind available in the United States or the United Kingdom, where an additional government fee buys a faster decision. The Ministry of Labour and Social Security works through files in the order it receives them. That said, certain categories of application are treated as priority cases as a matter of policy.
Once the Ministry approves the work permit, the Turkish consulate stamps a work visa into the employee’s passport and they enter Türkiye through a border checkpoint.
One of the most practical features of Turkish law is the single permit principle: the work permit itself functions as a residence permit, so there is no need to file a separate residence permit application through the immigration directorate after arrival.
However, immediately after legal and physical entry into the country, two critical compliance obligations arise that must be fulfilled both by the foreign employee and the employing company, and failure to comply may result in administrative fines.
Address Registration (Employee)
Within 20 working days of entering Türkiye, the employee must register their home address in person with the Provincial or District Directorate of Population and Citizenship Affairs or the relevant immigration office, so that the address is recorded in the national Address-Based Population Registration System (ADNKS) and the MERNIS record is activated. Failure to register results in administrative fines and can lead to cancellation of the work permit.
Social Security Registration (Employer)
Within 30 days of the employee entering Türkiye on their work visa – or from the commencement date of the permit where it was obtained domestically – the employer must file the SGK employment entry declaration and begin paying social security contributions covering pension and health insurance.
The official cost of a work permit application in Türkiye breaks down into two distinct fees. The first is the work visa fee paid in foreign currency to the Turkish consulate abroad. The second is the work permit duration fee and the plastic identity card printing fee, both paid in Turkish Lira to the Ministry of Treasury and Finance through the Interactive Tax Office portal after the permit is approved.
Both fees are revised upward at the start of each calendar year in line with the official Revaluation Rate (Yeniden Değerleme Oranı – YDO) published by the Ministry of Treasury and Finance each December. Given the inflationary environment of recent years, these increases have been substantial. Companies absorb these costs as a routine operating expense, and there is no published evidence that fee increases alone have meaningfully reduced the number of work permit applications.
Based on the 2026 tariff schedule, the current figures are as follows.
Under Law No 6735, the employer is the legal entity that initiates the work permit process and signs off on the application. Once the permit is approved, the resulting fee obligations are generated through the employer’s tax number or the employee’s foreigner identification number, and the employer bears legal responsibility for payment.
Payment through the Interactive Tax Office portal can be made by bank transfer or credit card using the reference numbers the Ministry issues. Although the legal obligation sits with the employer, the Turkish system does not check or restrict who actually makes the payment. In practice, the accounting team, HR, an external adviser or even the employee can pay without the state rejecting the transaction.
What the Ministry and Treasury care about is not who pays, but whether the payment is matched correctly to the reference number and recorded within the legal deadline – generally 30 days from approval. Miss that deadline and the approved permit is automatically cancelled.
Breaching the requirements of Law No 6458 or Law No 6735 – missing a notification deadline, or working outside the scope or role defined in the approved permit – exposes both the employer and the employee to administrative sanctions. Labour Inspectors from the Ministry of Labour and Social Security, SGK auditors and law enforcement all have authority to act. The consequences run on two separate tracks: one for the employer and one for the employee.
Employer Violations
Employee Violations
Obtaining a work permit is not the end of an employer’s obligations. Compliance must be maintained continuously for as long as the permit is in force.
Throughout the permit’s validity, the employer must maintain the TRY500,000 paid-in capital and the 5:1 Turkish-employee quota. Salary payments at the committed level must flow through bank channels, and SGK contributions must be paid without interruption. Any event that affects the permit’s validity – the employee starting work, resigning, being dismissed – must be reported to the Ministry within 15 days.
The financial consequences of non-compliance are significant. Based on the 2026 Revaluation Rate schedule:
Türkiye does not have a formal Right to Work Check system of the kind used in the United Kingdom, where HR teams carry out manual document verification. Instead, the state manages the process centrally through e-Government systems – MERNİS and the Social Security Institution – in real time.
Every foreign national who holds either a residence permit or a work permit is issued a plastic Foreign Identity Card – chip-enabled or barcode-based – delivered by post. The card carries the holder’s photograph, core identity details and the precise start and expiry dates of the permit. It must be carried at all times and produced immediately on request by police or labour inspectors within Türkiye and present it immediately upon request by law enforcement authorities or labour inspectors.
Each foreign national is assigned a unique Foreign Identity Number (FIN) beginning with 99. Employers’ HR teams and public authorities can query this number through the SGK or Ministry of Interior systems in real time, getting instant confirmation of the person’s permit expiry date, legal residence category and current authorisation to work.
Under Turkish Immigration Law (Law No 6458, Article 34), while aiming to preserve family unity for professionals holding work permits, the scope of relatives eligible to apply for a “Family Residence Permit” (Dependent Visa) is defined in a very clear, narrow and non-discretionary manner.
Individuals employed in Türkiye under a work permit issued by a local employer (or Turkish citizens) are designated in the system as “Sponsors”. The following persons are eligible to apply for a Family Residence Permit under the sponsor’s insurance and income coverage:
are directly entitled to apply for a Family Residence Permit.
Relatives outside this narrowly defined scope – such as the sponsor’s parents, adult (over 18 and able-bodied) children, siblings, grandparents, or other extended family members – are not eligible under the Family Residence Permit framework. Legally, these individuals must apply independently for a “Short-Term Residence Permit” if they wish to stay in Türkiye for an extended period, demonstrating financial self-sufficiency (eg, regular income equivalent to at least 1.5 times the minimum wage, as referenced in earlier provisions).
However, in light of current migration quotas and the stricter policy approach of the administration, applications by extended family members for tourist or short-term residence purposes – particularly in restricted districts – have, in practice, a significantly low probability of approval by the Directorate General of Migration Management.
Holding a Family Residence Permit in Türkiye does not automatically confer a right to work. A spouse living here on a family permit cannot take up salaried employment or be registered with the SGK on the basis of that permit alone. This differs from some other jurisdictions, such as the United States, where certain dependent visa categories carry an automatic right to work.
What the family permit does provide is a useful procedural shortcut. Once the holder has completed at least six months of lawful residence in Türkiye, the in-country application exception becomes available. Job offer, the employing company can file a domestic work permit application directly through e-Permit in Ankara. All standard requirements still apply: the 5:1 employment quota, TRY500,000 paid-in capital, and the relevant salary minimums. Dependent status changes only where the application is filed – not the criteria for approval.
In short, a family permit holder has no inherent right to work. But when they find employment, they benefit from the practical convenience of applying from within the country rather than having to go through the consular route.
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