Residence rights of EU citizens and their families in Ireland

If you are an EU citizen, you have certain residency rights in Ireland. You also have residency rights if you are a citizen of the European Economic Area (EEA) and Switzerland. The EEA is made up of the member states of the EU, plus Norway, Iceland and Liechtenstein.

Your right to reside depends on what you are doing in Ireland. Your residence rights also apply to certain family members, even if they are not EEA or Swiss citizens themselves.

You can enter Ireland and stay here for up to 3 months (6 months if you are looking for a job) without restriction. If you plan to stay more than 3 months, you must either:

When you come to Ireland, you do not need to register with the local immigration office and you do not need a residence card to live here. If you have family members from outside the UK, EEA or Switzerland, they must:

They may also need to apply for a visa before travelling to Ireland.

Right to enter Ireland

You do not need a visa or preclearance to come to Ireland if you are a citizen of the EEA or Switzerland.

Ireland is not part of the Schengen Area.

Because of free movement rules in the EU, you can only be refused entry to Ireland in very limited situations:

Your family

Your family can travel with you. If members of your family are not citizens of the EEA, Switzerland or the UK, they may need a visa to enter Ireland.

If your family member has a residence card under EU regulations issued by another EEA country or Switzerland, they do not need a visa to enter Ireland. You should note that a family member normally gets this type of residence card if you are residing in a country that is not your country of nationality.

If you are not sure about the type of residence card your family members have, you should check with the immigration authorities in the country where you live.

Worker status and former worker status

If you are an EEA or Swiss citizen, you can stay in Ireland for up to 6 months if you have moved here and are looking for work. You can transfer your unemployment benefit from your country of origin and it will be paid to you in Ireland for up to 3 months (can be up to 6 months in some cases).

You have a right to live in Ireland if you are working.

In EU law, a worker is any person who undertakes ‘genuine and effective’ work for which they are paid under the direction of someone else. You do not have to be earning over a particular amount, or working a particular number of hours per week, to be an EU worker.

You are also legally resident in Ireland if you are self-employed and your work is ‘genuine and effective’.

If you have lived in Ireland as an EU worker or self-employed person for 5 years, you have a permanent right of residence in Ireland.

Former workers

You keep your worker status if you stopped working because: