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Oct 30, 2025

Irish Immigration Service fixes online application glitch that stalled hundreds of residence renewals

Irish Immigration Service fixes online application glitch that stalled hundreds of residence renewals
Ireland’s Immigration Service Delivery (ISD) confirmed late on 30 October that a technical fault which crippled its online application portal between 24 and 29 October has been fully resolved. During the outage, applicants who had paid their fees for Irish Residence Permit (IRP) renewals and other permissions found their submissions stuck in “draft” status, preventing completion of the process. ISD says every affected user will receive a confirmation e-mail containing their official application reference and has been asked not to resubmit duplicate applications.

The timing of the glitch was especially sensitive: 31 October is the recommended cut-off date for non-EEA residents who plan to travel over the Christmas period to ensure they receive a new IRP card before the holiday rush. Employers with large cohorts of foreign staff—particularly in tech and life-sciences clusters around Dublin and Cork—had already been urging workers to renew early to avoid peak-season delays. The unexpected system failure therefore risked travel plans and, in some cases, employment continuity for those whose permission would have lapsed while abroad.

ISD has set up a dedicated customer-service channel to handle refund requests for duplicate payments and other fee issues. Immigration advisers report that cases processed during the outage should now appear as “submitted,” but warn that any un-migrated draft forms will need to be rebuilt from scratch in the new portal. Companies using batch filings through relocation vendors are being encouraged to audit pending cases and update employees on revised timelines.

Practically, travellers whose cards expire before a replacement arrives can still leave and re-enter Ireland if they carry a valid permission letter and passport, but airline check-in staff may need reassurance at overseas airports. Mobility managers should print ISD’s notice and issue it with travel packs, and may wish to stagger future renewal cycles to reduce exposure to single-system failures. ISD’s quick resolution—and public acknowledgement—has been welcomed, but the incident underscores the fragility of digital-first immigration infrastructure in the run-up to the busy Christmas season.
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