
A Reddit post by an Indian graduate of the University of Galway has gone viral, warning prospective students “do not move here with a student loan” after only 15 of 130 classmates secured tech jobs—none with visa sponsorship. The Times of India picked up the story on 15 January, noting Indian enrolments in Irish higher education rose nearly 30 % in 2024-25, making India the top source market.(timesofindia.indiatimes.com)
The student blames recent increases in Ireland’s minimum salary threshold for work-permit sponsorship and urges peers to consider the high risk of loan default if forced to leave after the two-year stay-back visa expires. According to the post, more than 500 alumni have already returned to India without repaying debts.
For universities and employers the episode is a reputational wake-up call. Ireland courts international students as a talent pipeline, but visa-sponsorship bottlenecks risk undermining that strategy. HR teams competing for tech skills may need to expand sponsorship budgets or risk candidates opting for alternative destinations such as Canada or Germany.
Amid these complexities, VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) can help students, graduates and hiring managers navigate the country’s rapidly evolving visa landscape. The service lays out up-to-date requirements for study, post-study and work permits, offers document-checking and application tracking, and provides expert guidance that can prevent costly delays—saving time and safeguarding career plans.
Practical advice for mobility managers: review salary benchmarks against new Critical Skills Permit thresholds and maintain clear communication with graduates on sponsorship timelines to avoid attrition.
The student blames recent increases in Ireland’s minimum salary threshold for work-permit sponsorship and urges peers to consider the high risk of loan default if forced to leave after the two-year stay-back visa expires. According to the post, more than 500 alumni have already returned to India without repaying debts.
For universities and employers the episode is a reputational wake-up call. Ireland courts international students as a talent pipeline, but visa-sponsorship bottlenecks risk undermining that strategy. HR teams competing for tech skills may need to expand sponsorship budgets or risk candidates opting for alternative destinations such as Canada or Germany.
Amid these complexities, VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) can help students, graduates and hiring managers navigate the country’s rapidly evolving visa landscape. The service lays out up-to-date requirements for study, post-study and work permits, offers document-checking and application tracking, and provides expert guidance that can prevent costly delays—saving time and safeguarding career plans.
Practical advice for mobility managers: review salary benchmarks against new Critical Skills Permit thresholds and maintain clear communication with graduates on sponsorship timelines to avoid attrition.






