
At an informal meeting of EU Justice and Home Affairs ministers in Larnaca, Cyprus on 23 January 2026, Ireland’s Minister of State for International Law, Law Reform and Youth Justice, Niall Collins, placed Ireland squarely in the camp calling for a faster, more coherent EU-wide returns system for migrants who have no legal right to stay. Collins told counterparts that Dublin wants “a sustainable approach to returns and reintegration” that respects human rights yet removes those who present security risks or have committed serious offences.
The meeting comes just weeks after the European Parliament and Council reached provisional agreement on the long-debated EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, a package that will overhaul screening, asylum procedures and burden-sharing. Although Ireland is outside Schengen, it has opted into large parts of the pact and is preparing domestic legislation – the International Protection Bill 2026 – to align with the new rules. Collins used the Cyprus forum to underline Ireland’s intention to “increase the pace of returns”, emphasising voluntary return programmes that include reintegration assistance as a cost-effective tool.
For multinational employers, a more streamlined EU returns framework matters because it promises clearer compliance rules and fewer last-minute disruptions when employees move across borders within the Common Travel Area or wider EU. Businesses relocating talent to Ireland will also need to watch how the forthcoming single-permit system (combining work and residence rights) interacts with stricter enforcement on overstayers.
For organisations trying to anticipate these shifts, partnering with a specialist visa facilitator can remove much of the guesswork. VisaHQ’s Ireland team (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) provides real-time guidance on entry requirements, prepares application packs and liaises with authorities, helping companies keep staff mobile and compliant as EU rules evolve.
The summit also devoted considerable time to internal-security questions such as preventing secondary movements inside the border-free area and strengthening asset-recovery mechanisms to fight organised crime. Collins signalled that Ireland, which will hold the EU Council Presidency in the first half of 2027, will prioritise measures that keep Schengen “robust and secure” while protecting the freedom of movement that underpins European business travel.
Practically, employers should expect a tighter document-verification regime at Irish ports and airports and should ensure foreign assignees’ paperwork is squeaky-clean. HR teams should also track forthcoming EU rules on carrier liability and digital travel credentials, both of which are likely to feature during Ireland’s presidency.
The meeting comes just weeks after the European Parliament and Council reached provisional agreement on the long-debated EU Pact on Migration and Asylum, a package that will overhaul screening, asylum procedures and burden-sharing. Although Ireland is outside Schengen, it has opted into large parts of the pact and is preparing domestic legislation – the International Protection Bill 2026 – to align with the new rules. Collins used the Cyprus forum to underline Ireland’s intention to “increase the pace of returns”, emphasising voluntary return programmes that include reintegration assistance as a cost-effective tool.
For multinational employers, a more streamlined EU returns framework matters because it promises clearer compliance rules and fewer last-minute disruptions when employees move across borders within the Common Travel Area or wider EU. Businesses relocating talent to Ireland will also need to watch how the forthcoming single-permit system (combining work and residence rights) interacts with stricter enforcement on overstayers.
For organisations trying to anticipate these shifts, partnering with a specialist visa facilitator can remove much of the guesswork. VisaHQ’s Ireland team (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) provides real-time guidance on entry requirements, prepares application packs and liaises with authorities, helping companies keep staff mobile and compliant as EU rules evolve.
The summit also devoted considerable time to internal-security questions such as preventing secondary movements inside the border-free area and strengthening asset-recovery mechanisms to fight organised crime. Collins signalled that Ireland, which will hold the EU Council Presidency in the first half of 2027, will prioritise measures that keep Schengen “robust and secure” while protecting the freedom of movement that underpins European business travel.
Practically, employers should expect a tighter document-verification regime at Irish ports and airports and should ensure foreign assignees’ paperwork is squeaky-clean. HR teams should also track forthcoming EU rules on carrier liability and digital travel credentials, both of which are likely to feature during Ireland’s presidency.









