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Jan 3, 2026

Internal memos reveal asylum-appeals backlog close to ‘breaking point’ in 2025

Internal memos reveal asylum-appeals backlog close to ‘breaking point’ in 2025
Leaked correspondence between senior officials at the Departments of Justice and Public Expenditure warns that Ireland’s International Protection Appeals Tribunal (IPAT) was on course to hit ‘unmanageable levels’ of outstanding cases by mid-2026 unless emergency funding and staffing were approved. At one stage in September 2025, 15,929 appeals awaited a hearing—more than five times the pre-pandemic norm.

The memos, dated last summer but only circulated publicly this week, prompted an immediate €25 million budget top-up and the hiring of 45 additional appeals officers. Officials noted that prolonging decisions inflated accommodation costs and lengthened eligibility for ancillary benefits, estimating the per-applicant price tag at €122,000 when housing, health and education supports are included.

From a mobility perspective, unresolved appeals delay clarity for employers who wish to hire applicants or relocate existing staff; work permission is possible after six months, but uncertainty over long-term status complicates contract duration and relocation benefits. Companies are advised to include ‘status-contingent’ clauses in employment offers.

Internal memos reveal asylum-appeals backlog close to ‘breaking point’ in 2025


Employers and applicants who need assistance with Irish visas or residence permits can streamline the process through VisaHQ’s online platform. The company’s Ireland desk (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers up-to-date guidance on application requirements, document collection and processing times, helping organisations minimise administrative delays while appeals are pending and ensuring travellers remain compliant with any interim permissions.

The backlog also risks reputational damage for Ireland’s migration system just as the country pitches itself as a post-Brexit talent magnet. The Department of Justice says a new partnership with the EU Agency for Asylum to deploy caseworkers and digital-workflow tools will begin in February 2026, aiming to clear the queue within 12 months.

Stakeholders expect the issue to feed into Cabinet’s imminent review of accommodation contracts and cost-recovery models for working asylum seekers.
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