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Oct 29, 2025

Government says asylum applications to Ireland down 40 percent year-on-year

Government says asylum applications to Ireland down 40 percent year-on-year
Speaking to reporters on 29 October, officials from the Department of Justice highlighted a “marked fall” in new International Protection (IP) claims: 3,021 applications were lodged between January and March 2025 compared with 5,162 for the same period in 2024—a 41 per cent drop. Monthly figures show 847 claims in September, half the level a year earlier.

Justice Minister Jim O’Callaghan attributes the trend to tighter safe-country designations, faster first-instance decision-making and an expanded deportation programme that saw 1,040 failed applicants removed in 2024. Nigeria, Pakistan, Somalia and Afghanistan remain the top source countries, with Georgia re-entering the top five after a pause last year.

Advocacy groups question whether the decline reflects deterrence or unreported arrivals, noting continued accommodation shortages. Employers, however, fear that reduced humanitarian inflows may further squeeze Ireland’s talent pool, already hit by permit backlogs.

For mobility managers the numbers reinforce the importance of monitoring processing times: while business-class permits are prioritised, family reunification cases may face longer waits as resources shift to asylum adjudication. Companies sponsoring humanitarian pathway hires should anticipate closer scrutiny of documentation and more rapid refusal cycles.

The Department insists the tougher stance will “restore integrity” without harming Ireland’s reputation for openness, but concedes it will need to balance enforcement with labour-market needs in the forthcoming Migration Strategy 2026-2030.
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