
Frontex has reported a sharp 25 % drop in irregular attempts to enter the European Union during 2025, the lowest total since 2021. The agency’s annual statistics, released on 15 January, count 178,000 crossings, with notable declines on the West African (–63 %) and Western Balkan (–42 %) routes. (brusselstimes.com)
While the numbers cover the whole bloc, Frontex highlighted France’s stepped-up maritime patrols in the English Channel and its joint operations with Spain and Italy in the western Mediterranean as key contributors. A senior agency official told reporters that French aerial surveillance hours over the Western Balkans also doubled in the second half of 2025, disrupting smuggling networks.
For corporate mobility programmes the data signal a calmer external-border environment in the short term, reducing the likelihood of ad-hoc security measures that can delay assignees and business visitors. Nevertheless, Frontex warned that shifting routes—such as a tripling of attempts to reach Crete from eastern Libya—could trigger sudden pressure points and new checks.
For companies needing certainty amid these shifting dynamics, VisaHQ offers a streamlined way to secure Schengen and national visas. Its dedicated France portal (https://www.visahq.com/france/) consolidates the latest entry rules, appointment scheduling and document tracking, enabling mobility teams to adjust quickly when border policies tighten or relax.
Immigration counsel in Paris caution that the headline drop will not slacken documentation scrutiny. Prefectures continue to demand proof of accommodation, health insurance and financial means from non-EU nationals, and employers remain liable for costly sanctions if staff overstay Schengen limits.
Mobility managers should therefore treat the positive trend as breathing space to audit travel-day counters, refresh Posted-Worker (SIPSI) filings and ensure that remote staff on visitor visas are not performing remunerated work.
While the numbers cover the whole bloc, Frontex highlighted France’s stepped-up maritime patrols in the English Channel and its joint operations with Spain and Italy in the western Mediterranean as key contributors. A senior agency official told reporters that French aerial surveillance hours over the Western Balkans also doubled in the second half of 2025, disrupting smuggling networks.
For corporate mobility programmes the data signal a calmer external-border environment in the short term, reducing the likelihood of ad-hoc security measures that can delay assignees and business visitors. Nevertheless, Frontex warned that shifting routes—such as a tripling of attempts to reach Crete from eastern Libya—could trigger sudden pressure points and new checks.
For companies needing certainty amid these shifting dynamics, VisaHQ offers a streamlined way to secure Schengen and national visas. Its dedicated France portal (https://www.visahq.com/france/) consolidates the latest entry rules, appointment scheduling and document tracking, enabling mobility teams to adjust quickly when border policies tighten or relax.
Immigration counsel in Paris caution that the headline drop will not slacken documentation scrutiny. Prefectures continue to demand proof of accommodation, health insurance and financial means from non-EU nationals, and employers remain liable for costly sanctions if staff overstay Schengen limits.
Mobility managers should therefore treat the positive trend as breathing space to audit travel-day counters, refresh Posted-Worker (SIPSI) filings and ensure that remote staff on visitor visas are not performing remunerated work.






