
Fresh figures from EMN Ireland, released on 3 January, paint a nuanced picture of migration flows ahead of the Government’s upcoming asylum-system reforms. Overall immigration fell 16 % in the year to April 2025, driven largely by a slowdown in arrivals from Ukraine as the EU-wide Temporary Protection Directive passed its third year. By contrast, applications for international protection (asylum) jumped 40 % in 2024 before easing by an estimated 40 % in 2025.
The data show Ireland issued 111,480 PPS numbers to Ukrainian nationals between February 2022 and December 2024, but only 9,558 in 2024 as initial displacement pressures stabilised. Meanwhile, Nigeria, Jordan and Pakistan became the main sources of new asylum seekers, accounting collectively for nearly 38 % of applications.
For organisations needing practical support with visa or residency paperwork amid this shifting landscape, VisaHQ provides an easy-to-use online platform that lets employers and assignees check Irish entry requirements, gather the right documents and track applications in real time. Its dedicated portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) covers tourist, business and work permissions for Ireland and 200+ other destinations, helping mobility teams avoid the processing delays highlighted in this report.
For global-mobility teams the headline is volatility: housing shortages and strained reception facilities continue to shape public debate and policy risk. The Government is fast-tracking an accelerated processing model at the International Protection Office to meet EU Pact timelines and deter unfounded claims; decisions are to be issued within six months by 2027.
Employers hiring from high-asylum-intake countries should anticipate closer scrutiny of supporting documentation when switching staff from visitor status to work permission. The figures may also harden political resolve for further visa restrictions, mirroring the March 2025 requirement imposed on Eswatini, Lesotho and Nauru nationals.
Mobility professionals are advised to keep contingency plans for assignment start-dates, as increased vetting or public-policy caps could lengthen lead times for certain cohorts.
The data show Ireland issued 111,480 PPS numbers to Ukrainian nationals between February 2022 and December 2024, but only 9,558 in 2024 as initial displacement pressures stabilised. Meanwhile, Nigeria, Jordan and Pakistan became the main sources of new asylum seekers, accounting collectively for nearly 38 % of applications.
For organisations needing practical support with visa or residency paperwork amid this shifting landscape, VisaHQ provides an easy-to-use online platform that lets employers and assignees check Irish entry requirements, gather the right documents and track applications in real time. Its dedicated portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) covers tourist, business and work permissions for Ireland and 200+ other destinations, helping mobility teams avoid the processing delays highlighted in this report.
For global-mobility teams the headline is volatility: housing shortages and strained reception facilities continue to shape public debate and policy risk. The Government is fast-tracking an accelerated processing model at the International Protection Office to meet EU Pact timelines and deter unfounded claims; decisions are to be issued within six months by 2027.
Employers hiring from high-asylum-intake countries should anticipate closer scrutiny of supporting documentation when switching staff from visitor status to work permission. The figures may also harden political resolve for further visa restrictions, mirroring the March 2025 requirement imposed on Eswatini, Lesotho and Nauru nationals.
Mobility professionals are advised to keep contingency plans for assignment start-dates, as increased vetting or public-policy caps could lengthen lead times for certain cohorts.








