U.S. Government Services
A PROUD RELOCATION MANAGEMENT PROVIDER TO THOSE SERVING OUR COUNTRY
Since 1984, Sirva, dba BGRS, Inc. (“BGRS”), has been a trusted advisor and partner to the nation’s top federal agencies. Our decades-long history of serving the U.S. government is backed by our unparalleled experience in conforming to both the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) and Federal Travel Regulation (FTR) and our deep understanding of the General Services Administration’s (GSA’s) stringent relocation policy requirements and guidelines.
Since the award of our first Government contract in 1984, we have supported 40+ federal and quasi-governmental agencies and managed more than 147,500 U.S. federal moves. We have also expertly handled 280,000 moves for the Canadian Government over the past 15 years.
OUR EXPERIENCE HAS YOU COVERED
As the relocation industry’s leading federal contractor, we offer complete, reliable relocation services in full compliance with the GSA Schedule 48 and all U.S. government contracting requirements. We value our long-standing relationship with the U.S. government and take our responsibility to the federal agencies and employees we serve seriously.
Highlighting our experience and leadership in serving the government sector, we have proudly played a key role in the following federal community forums for many years:
- Senior Executives Association (SEA) Corporate Advisory Council: Serve as an advocate for our government clients’ relocation interests to federal leaders.
- Government Relocation Advisory Board (GRAB): Served as an active member focused on transforming the relocation provisions of the FTR.
Our agency clients are governed by the highest ethical standards and quality control elements:
GOVERNMENT-TRAINED AND GOVERNMENT-CLEARED PERSONNEL:
All dedicated team members are U.S. citizens and hold or are in the process of obtaining Position of Public Trust security clearances.
STRINGENT SECURITY PROTOCOLS:
All systems, facilities, personnel, and data accessibility are U.S-based and carefully constructed to adhere to government standards and protect the sensitive information entrusted to us.
SECURE RELOCATION MANAGEMENT PORTAL:
Adheres to the highest global standards for data security with multi-factor authentication, biometrics, and user-level validation.
PROPRIETARY GCERTIFIED™ PROGRAM:
All dedicated government team members and service partners are required to participate in a Sirva, dba BGRS-developed course to learn FTR/FAR requirements and understand government culture.
Sirva, dba BGRS, Inc., stands as a steadfast and proud relocation service partner to the U.S. government. With a commitment to excellence, efficiency, and unparalleled service, we have consistently demonstrated its ability to meet the unique needs and challenges of government-sponsored relocations. Through innovative solutions, rigorous adherence to compliance, and a dedicated team of professionals, we ensure that every relocation undertaken in partnership with the U.S. government is executed with precision and care.
MORE THAN A MOVER
In addition to providing relocation management services, we play a pivotal role in supporting U.S. federal government agencies in crafting relocation strategies that seamlessly integrate with overarching talent management objectives. By leveraging our expertise and experience in mobility solutions, we ensure that relocation initiatives align closely with broader talent management goals.
SPOUSE AND PARTNER ASSISTANCE:
We provide personalized services to help facilitate integration into the new community, such as mentor and support networks and career assistance, which may include resume writing and interviewing, introductions/networking opportunities, and traditional job placement services in the destination location.
CAREER ADVANCEMENT:
We support a mobile employee's career advancement through a range of relocation service solutions and policies designed to facilitate professional growth and development. We enable mobile employees to seamlessly transition to new roles and opportunities while supporting their long-term professional success within the organization.
Employee Retention:
We contribute to our government clients’ employee retention by facilitating smooth transitions and providing personalized support throughout the relocation process, enhancing job satisfaction, maintaining loyalty, and safeguarding institutional knowledge.
By connecting relocations with these critical goals, Sirva, dba BGRS, not only facilitates efficient moves but also actively contributes to the long-term success and effectiveness of U.S. federal government agencies' talent management strategies.
As we look towards the future, we remain unwavering in our dedication to facilitating seamless transitions for government employees and their families, thereby upholding our shared commitment to service, integrity, and excellence.
RELOCATION SERVICES
We have been authorized by the GSA to provide the following relocation services to the federal government under Schedule Title: Transportation, Delivery & Relocation Services; SIN 531 (Schedule 48); Contract number: GS-33F-001HA.
The following Multiple Award Schedule (MAS) outlines the Special Item Numbers (SINs) we are approved to provide to the U.S. government:

653-1 Home Sale

653-4 Entitlement Counseling

653-1B Marketing Assistance

653-5 Agency Customizes Services

653-5 Property Management

653-7 Move Management
For a complete history and listing of services, please refer to our GSA-Approved Catalog.
The Netherlands Tightens its Highly Skilled Migrant (HSM) Scheme
For 2026, the Netherlands is tightening its Highly Skilled Migrant (HSM) scheme to prioritize high-value talent, featuring significantly higher salary thresholds to focus on critical talent and "brain gain”.
As we have seen, European countries have implemented key initiatives to put greater focus on attracting and retaining highly skilled talent, so it is not a surprise to see the Netherlands is making this change.
About the Highly Skilled Migrant Program
The Netherlands is a leading global knowledge economy, where growth depends mainly on ideas, research, technology, and highly skilled people. To support this, the country has historically relied on attracting international talent.
The Highly Skilled Migrant (HSM) Scheme is a cornerstone of Dutch labor migration policy, allowing employers to attract non-EU/EEA/Swiss professional talent.
Now, the Dutch government is taking a more restrictive stance on labor migration, and its HSM Scheme is expected to be tightening access through higher salary thresholds, stricter sponsor expectations, and closer scrutiny of employer compliance.
Overview of the Changes and Government Rationale
Participating employers that obtain recognized sponsor status from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (IND) can hire qualifying foreign national workers through a comparatively streamlined residence process, provided salary thresholds and other regulatory requirements are met.
The Dutch government's latest direction is to utilize the HSM Scheme more selectively while still preserving employer access to highly qualified foreign talent. Significant proposed changes include:
- Higher minimum salary thresholds . The proposed measures to increase salary levels are not yet in force and therefore, not reflected in the salary levels published in 2026. The increases are expected to present a significant cost threshold for employers, with the monthly minimum salary at approximately €5,942 for workers aged 30 and over and €4,357 for workers under 30.
- Maximum limit on graduate salaries . The reduced salary threshold for recent graduates may be limited to a maximum of three years after graduation. Currently, graduates may continue to qualify for the reduced threshold indefinitely, provided there is uninterrupted employment. This is now under review.
- Tighter conditions for recognized sponsors . Companies may lose sponsor recognition status sooner if they do not actively employ highly skilled migrants over a defined period.
- Increased focus on employer compliance and proper use of the HSM category . Guidance on the reforms indicates that recognized sponsor status may be refused or withdrawn where employers have repeated labor, tax, or wage compliance violations. Authorities will play a more prominent role when granting permits. They will closely examine whether sponsoring employers are conforming to the market and discourage the practice of paying excessively high salaries to source talent from outside the EU.
The aim is to reshape a program that continues to serve the knowledge economy but with a more selective framework that is still open, but less flexible and less forgiving for employers.
Impact on Global Mobility Programs
For employers with established global mobility programs, the Dutch changes raise the skills bar for using the Netherlands as a destination for non-EU talent. The impact will be most pronounced where companies depend on early-career specialists, technical professionals whose compensation does not naturally align with higher salary floors.
For smaller entities, particularly firms in active growth stage and research-driven organizations, sponsorship may be harder to justify and non-EU recruitment more expensive to sustain making access to global talent more challenging. While large multinational employers may be better positioned to absorb the increased salary costs and compliance obligations, the decision for the Netherlands to be a destination location for assignees will be more deliberate.
It is important to understand the tighter measure on the HSM Scheme do not directly affect EU, EEA or Swiss nationals, who remain eligible to work in the Netherlands under free movement rules rather than the HSM program. Even so, employers may increasingly redirect recruitment toward the EU labor market where possible, while reserving HSM sponsorship for only the most specialized or business-critical roles.
Steps for HR to Address Dutch HSM Reforms
In response to the Dutch reform of the HSM Scheme, HR leaders in the Netherlands should take the opportunity to re-evaluate their foreign workforce.
Apply a segmented talent strategy
- Define which roles truly require non EU sponsorship in the Netherlands and which can be filled via EU recruitment, local hiring, or alternative workforce models.
- Use the HSM program selectively for business critical, hard to fill positions rather than as a general international hiring channel.
Introduce an immigration risk and impact assessment
- For each sponsored role, assess salary growth potential against likely future threshold increases, expected contract duration, and whether the business case remains sustainable over time.
- Build this analysis into workforce planning so immigration risk is considered alongside headcount and budget decisions.
Reassess compensation governance for Dutch sponsored hires
- Check HSM salary thresholds at the time of hiring and again at key milestones (renewals, promotions, contract changes).
- Ensure job titles, job descriptions and seniority levels clearly align with salary levels, given increasing scrutiny of job level–pay consistency.
- Avoid “edge of threshold” offers; set salaries with a buffer above the minimum to absorb annual threshold adjustments, payroll anomalies, or changes in working hours.
Treat recognized sponsor status as a regulated license
- Reposition recognized sponsor status as a regulated license, not an operational formality.
- Assign clear internal ownership (e.g., a designated sponsor/compliance owner) and define roles for HR, legal, payroll and global mobility.
- Maintain centralized sponsor documentation, including audit ready salary and payment evidence, contracts, postings and change records.
- Establish clear escalation processes for potential non compliance, salary shortfalls, changes in role or working pattern, and ensure these are acted on quickly.
Plan global mobility for a more selective HSM schematic environment
- Incorporate Dutch HSM scheme constraints into global mobility and location strategy decisions for 2026 and beyond.
- Be more intentional about where talent is placed, how assignments are structured, and when Dutch sponsorship is still the right tool versus alternative locations or models (e.g., remote or near shore EU roles).
Taken together, these steps help Dutch employers move from a transactional use of the HSM route to a more strategic, risk aware approach that protects access to international talent while staying ahead of a tightening regulatory environment.
Related articles: Ukrainian Employees in the Netherlands: Immigration Changes
For support regarding bringing international hires into the Netherlands and the Highly Skilled Migrant (HSM) scheme, contact:
Sirva's Visa and Immigration and Destination Services teams in the Netherlands
Cleo de Haan at Sirva - Manager, Relocation Customer Experience | Visa & Immigration
This article is for informational and editorial purposes only, it is not legal advice. Always check with your immigration specialist. Please contact your Sirva contact for more information.
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