Back
Jan 29, 2026

EU Migration Chief Unveils Plan for Stricter Border Controls and Speedier Deportations

EU Migration Chief Unveils Plan for Stricter Border Controls and Speedier Deportations
European Commissioner for Home Affairs and Migration Magnus Brunner used a press briefing in Brussels on 28 January 2026 to outline the most far-reaching overhaul of the EU’s migration and asylum architecture since 2015.

The package centres on three pillars. First, the Commission will ask member states—including Germany—to maintain or re-introduce targeted border checks whenever irregular arrivals spike. Second, a new legal framework will compel national authorities to issue ten-year re-entry bans to anyone who ignores a deportation order, and to detain individuals considered a security threat until removal. Third, the EU will seek agreements with third countries, modelled on the UK-Rwanda accord, to establish “return hubs” outside Europe where rejected asylum-seekers could be processed.

Although Brussels insists the proposals respect international and EU law, civil-society groups have condemned them as punitive and liable to undermine the right to claim asylum. German Interior Minister Alexander Dobrindt cautiously welcomed the initiative, arguing that “better external controls are the pre-condition for an open Schengen area.”

EU Migration Chief Unveils Plan for Stricter Border Controls and Speedier Deportations


At this juncture, organisations and individual travellers who want to stay ahead of shifting entry rules may wish to use VisaHQ’s online service for German visas and residence documents (https://www.visahq.com/germany/). The platform consolidates the latest governmental updates, streamlines application steps and provides expert support—helping clients avoid delays or compliance pitfalls as border checks become more frequent.

For employers and mobility managers, the biggest practical implication is the likelihood of more identity checks on cross-border coaches and trains in the short term. Companies moving talent into Germany from neighbouring EU states should therefore budget additional travel time and advise assignees to carry complete documentation. In the medium term, faster deportations could free up administrative capacity at Germany’s foreigners’ offices (Ausländerbehörden), potentially shortening waiting times for work-permit holders.

Whether the plan is adopted in its current form will depend on a qualified-majority vote in the Council later this year. Germany’s stance will be pivotal: Berlin must balance domestic pressure for tougher controls with its long-standing commitment to humanitarian protection.
VisaHQ's expert visas and immigration team helps individuals and companies navigate global travel, work, and residency requirements. We handle document preparation, application filings, government agencies coordination, every aspect necessary to ensure fast, compliant, and stress-free approvals.
×