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Dec 15, 2025

Italy’s Interior Minister Vows 28-Day Turnaround for Migrant Returns Under New EU Rules

Italy’s Interior Minister Vows 28-Day Turnaround for Migrant Returns Under New EU Rules
Speaking on 14 December at the conservative Atreju forum in Rome, Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi unveiled the government’s plan to accelerate the return of migrants whose asylum applications are rejected. Under the forthcoming EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, Italy intends to conclude all return procedures within 28 days, a dramatic reduction from the months—or even years—currently required.

Piantedosi stressed that the new rules will not erode procedural guarantees. Territorial commissions already in place will handle fast-track assessments, with human-rights observers present throughout. The minister cited Albania’s rapid-screening pilot as a procedural model and criticised what he called past “fantasy rulings” that, in his view, granted protection too liberally.

For employers that rely on non-EU talent, the 28-day target promises quicker clarity on workforce planning—especially in logistics, agriculture and hospitality, sectors that currently face lengthy uncertainty while applicants await decisions. At the same time, companies that sponsor work permits must prepare for stricter front-end screening and faster deadlines to provide documentation, or risk employee removals.

Italy’s Interior Minister Vows 28-Day Turnaround for Migrant Returns Under New EU Rules


Whether you are a company moving key staff or an individual traveler seeking the right permit, VisaHQ can simplify Italy’s evolving immigration procedures by pre-checking documentation, flagging the latest rule changes and submitting visa requests online. Their Italy hub (https://www.visahq.com/italy/) provides up-to-date forms, fee calculators and real-time status tracking—useful insurance against tighter deadlines and the risk of incomplete filings.

Legal advisers warn that accelerated returns will heighten the importance of filing complete applications from day one. Multinationals are being advised to audit their mobility programmes, ensure that humanitarian or labour-market arguments are clearly documented, and budget for potential appeals within far tighter timelines.

If fully implemented, the scheme could become a stress test for the broader EU Migration Pact, due to enter into force in June 2026. Italy’s ability to process cases in one month will be closely watched by other frontline states such as Greece and Spain, as well as by destination countries farther north that support the new solidarity-relocation pool.
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