
Ireland’s powerhouse services sector slipped into contraction territory in April, according to AIB’s monthly Purchasing Managers’ Index released on 6 May. The headline reading fell to 49.7—the first sub-50 score in five years—driven largely by a steep drop in the transport, tourism and leisure sub-sector. Analysts link the reversal to soaring input costs tied to blockade-related shortages of jet fuel and higher freight rates following tensions in the Gulf.
For organisations whose staff still need to travel despite these headwinds, streamlining visa and passport formalities can help reduce friction. VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) provides quick, online processing and real-time status tracking for a wide range of destinations, allowing mobility teams to focus on managing budgets and itineraries rather than paperwork.
Airlines including Aer Lingus have already trimmed summer schedules, while hotels face double-digit energy-price rises. Falling European and UK visitor numbers add to the pressure. New business in the travel-adjacent segment declined for an eleventh time in fourteen months. Although overall business sentiment remains cautiously positive, AIB economist David McNamara warned that if oil remains above $100 per barrel, recession odds rise to 35 %. For mobility managers the data translates into tighter seat availability, higher ticket prices and potentially slimmer accommodation inventories at corporate-negotiated rates. Finance teams should budget for mid-single-digit cost inflation on air and ground transport for Ireland-based assignments through Q3. The Bank’s report also notes that many service firms are successfully passing higher costs to customers, suggesting that per-diem allowances for short-term assignees may need adjustment to reflect elevated restaurant and local-travel prices.
For organisations whose staff still need to travel despite these headwinds, streamlining visa and passport formalities can help reduce friction. VisaHQ’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) provides quick, online processing and real-time status tracking for a wide range of destinations, allowing mobility teams to focus on managing budgets and itineraries rather than paperwork.
Airlines including Aer Lingus have already trimmed summer schedules, while hotels face double-digit energy-price rises. Falling European and UK visitor numbers add to the pressure. New business in the travel-adjacent segment declined for an eleventh time in fourteen months. Although overall business sentiment remains cautiously positive, AIB economist David McNamara warned that if oil remains above $100 per barrel, recession odds rise to 35 %. For mobility managers the data translates into tighter seat availability, higher ticket prices and potentially slimmer accommodation inventories at corporate-negotiated rates. Finance teams should budget for mid-single-digit cost inflation on air and ground transport for Ireland-based assignments through Q3. The Bank’s report also notes that many service firms are successfully passing higher costs to customers, suggesting that per-diem allowances for short-term assignees may need adjustment to reflect elevated restaurant and local-travel prices.