
Cyprus’ Migration Department suspended all public-facing services from noon on Friday 17 October until Monday 20 October as part of a sweeping upgrade of its case-management platform. The Deputy Ministry of Migration and International Protection said the shutdown was necessary to migrate 1.2 million digital records—including residence-permit files and asylum-case dossiers—to a cloud-based architecture compatible with forthcoming Schengen information systems.
Although the outage fell outside normal peak-filing season, the timing still disrupted dozens of corporate-permit renewals and Blue-Card applications. Several Big Four relocation practices confirmed they had to reschedule biometric-capture appointments, pushing start dates for new hires into November.
The ministry argued that the short-term pain will yield long-term gain: the new back-office will link directly to the EU’s Visa Information System 2.0 (VIS2) and the EES once Cyprus joins Schengen. It will also enable online uploads of employment contracts and health-insurance certificates, a long-standing demand from the island’s burgeoning fintech sector.
Businesses with urgent needs were advised to file via district police aliens-branches, which remained open for emergency travel-document issuance. However, those offices could accept only three applications per company, highlighting the fragility of contingency plans.
Firms planning bulk permit renewals are now encouraged to stage submissions throughout the quarter and use the ministry’s new appointment-booking API—scheduled to open in December—to avoid similar bottlenecks.
Although the outage fell outside normal peak-filing season, the timing still disrupted dozens of corporate-permit renewals and Blue-Card applications. Several Big Four relocation practices confirmed they had to reschedule biometric-capture appointments, pushing start dates for new hires into November.
The ministry argued that the short-term pain will yield long-term gain: the new back-office will link directly to the EU’s Visa Information System 2.0 (VIS2) and the EES once Cyprus joins Schengen. It will also enable online uploads of employment contracts and health-insurance certificates, a long-standing demand from the island’s burgeoning fintech sector.
Businesses with urgent needs were advised to file via district police aliens-branches, which remained open for emergency travel-document issuance. However, those offices could accept only three applications per company, highlighting the fragility of contingency plans.
Firms planning bulk permit renewals are now encouraged to stage submissions throughout the quarter and use the ministry’s new appointment-booking API—scheduled to open in December—to avoid similar bottlenecks.








