
In a written answer released on 27 October 2025, the Federal Government clarified that male, single, employable refugees who already hold international protection in Greece can have their German asylum applications ruled ‘manifestly inadmissible’. Citing an April ruling by the Federal Administrative Court, officials told Green-party MPs that such individuals do not currently face ‘inhuman or degrading conditions’ on return, removing the bar to Dublin-style transfers.
The clarification gives immigration authorities and courts legal cover to accelerate decisions in almost 4,000 pending cases, many involving Syrians who transited through Greece before reaching Germany. Employers sponsoring humanitarian parolees or family-reunion cases need to note that returns will not apply to vulnerable groups, families or recognised employees entering under the Skilled Immigration Act.
As Europe grapples with record secondary movements, the statement signals a tougher German stance that aligns with recent policy shifts—such as extended land-border checks and a push to designate more ‘safe countries of origin’. Mobility advisers warn that corporate transferees with dual asylum-work profiles (e.g. tech talent who first claimed protection in Greece) should regularise their status before undertaking business travel, or risk refusal at re-entry.
Law firms expect litigation, arguing that living-condition assessments in Greek camps can change rapidly. Companies employing refugees are advised to monitor forthcoming case law and, where possible, secure residence permits that are independent of the asylum system, such as the Blue Card or the new Chancenkarte.
The clarification gives immigration authorities and courts legal cover to accelerate decisions in almost 4,000 pending cases, many involving Syrians who transited through Greece before reaching Germany. Employers sponsoring humanitarian parolees or family-reunion cases need to note that returns will not apply to vulnerable groups, families or recognised employees entering under the Skilled Immigration Act.
As Europe grapples with record secondary movements, the statement signals a tougher German stance that aligns with recent policy shifts—such as extended land-border checks and a push to designate more ‘safe countries of origin’. Mobility advisers warn that corporate transferees with dual asylum-work profiles (e.g. tech talent who first claimed protection in Greece) should regularise their status before undertaking business travel, or risk refusal at re-entry.
Law firms expect litigation, arguing that living-condition assessments in Greek camps can change rapidly. Companies employing refugees are advised to monitor forthcoming case law and, where possible, secure residence permits that are independent of the asylum system, such as the Blue Card or the new Chancenkarte.










