
The European Union Agency for Asylum (EUAA) chose 24 October 2025 to roll out its annual Asylum Report, accompanied by an explainer video and podcast series. Drawing on more than 1,500 data sources, the 350-page document paints a mixed picture: overall asylum applications across the EU fell 11 % compared to 2024, yet Germany still processed the largest share—27 % of the bloc’s caseload.
Key findings for Germany include a 14-% approval rate increase for skilled-worker humanitarian applicants, thanks to streamlined remote interviews piloted by the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees. However, average first-instance processing times remain at 8.6 months, above the EU average of 6.2 months. The report applauds Germany’s digital Consular Services Portal as a “best-practice” that other member states should emulate.
The EUAA warns that the upcoming Entry/Exit System (EES) and ETIAS travel authorisation will generate a data deluge that could further strain national asylum IT systems. Germany plans to launch a €45 million upgrade in early 2026; tenders will open in December. Tech vendors specialising in cloud-scalable case-management platforms may find opportunities.
For corporates, the report reinforces Germany’s dual identity as both a magnet for skilled migration and the EU’s primary asylum hub. Relocation providers should anticipate continued scrutiny of job-offer authenticity in asylum-linked work permits. The document advocates closer cooperation between labour-market agencies and asylum authorities to match recognised refugees with the country’s 400,000-plus open positions.
Finally, the EUAA highlights a sharp rise in asylum-seekers’ secondary movements to Germany via intra-Schengen flights—a trend the Interior Ministry plans to counter with enhanced passenger-information sharing, potentially leading to more ID checks at domestic terminals.
Key findings for Germany include a 14-% approval rate increase for skilled-worker humanitarian applicants, thanks to streamlined remote interviews piloted by the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees. However, average first-instance processing times remain at 8.6 months, above the EU average of 6.2 months. The report applauds Germany’s digital Consular Services Portal as a “best-practice” that other member states should emulate.
The EUAA warns that the upcoming Entry/Exit System (EES) and ETIAS travel authorisation will generate a data deluge that could further strain national asylum IT systems. Germany plans to launch a €45 million upgrade in early 2026; tenders will open in December. Tech vendors specialising in cloud-scalable case-management platforms may find opportunities.
For corporates, the report reinforces Germany’s dual identity as both a magnet for skilled migration and the EU’s primary asylum hub. Relocation providers should anticipate continued scrutiny of job-offer authenticity in asylum-linked work permits. The document advocates closer cooperation between labour-market agencies and asylum authorities to match recognised refugees with the country’s 400,000-plus open positions.
Finally, the EUAA highlights a sharp rise in asylum-seekers’ secondary movements to Germany via intra-Schengen flights—a trend the Interior Ministry plans to counter with enhanced passenger-information sharing, potentially leading to more ID checks at domestic terminals.







