رجوع
Oct 24, 2025

Bavaria Reports Record High in Deportations and Voluntary Departures

Bavaria Reports Record High in Deportations and Voluntary Departures
Bavaria’s Interior Ministry used the publication of its latest migration statistics on 24 October 2025 to declare a “turning point” in state and federal immigration policy. According to Interior Minister Joachim Herrmann, authorities removed 2,787 people without legal stay during the first nine months of 2025—25 % more than in the same period of 2024—and facilitated 11,859 voluntary departures through the federal-state Return Assistance Programme. In total, 14,646 people left Bavaria between January and September, the highest figure since the record year of 2015.

Herrmann attributes the rise to closer coordination with the federal government, more charter flights, and tighter cooperation with countries of origin. He singled out joint Bavarian–Federal Police “fast-track” operations at Munich Airport that combine final appeal hearings, medical checks and removal flights within 72 hours. The minister also praised new readmission agreements with Georgia, Moldova and Morocco that allow charter returns within weeks rather than months.

For employers, the numbers underscore a stricter enforcement climate. Companies sponsoring third-country nationals are urged to double-check residence status before seconding staff across borders or submitting Blue-Card upgrades. Immigration lawyers note that voluntary-return counselling centres are now proactively visiting asylum hostels to encourage departures before the 90-day removal deadline, shrinking the window to regularise overstayers.

Business chambers say the clamp-down is a double-edged sword. While clearer rules deter abuse, skill-shortages persist in logistics and hospitality—two sectors that rely heavily on tolerated migrants (Duldung). If removals accelerate without parallel skilled-migration inflows, they warn, labour gaps could widen. Companies therefore welcome the state’s parallel push to speed up recognition of foreign qualifications and to digitalise work-visa filings via the new Consular Services Portal.

In practical terms, HR teams should prepare for more audits. Munich’s Foreigners’ Authority has announced unannounced workplace checks from November, focusing first on construction sites and food-delivery platforms. Employers found with undocumented staff face penalties of up to €500,000 and exclusion from public tenders. Cross-border commuters with temporary Bavarian clients are advised to carry both their residence card and a copy of the posting notification at all times.
×