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© 2026 Visa AtlasReviewed continuously. Last sweep: 14 July 2026
  1. Home/
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  3. Republic of Ireland vs United Republic of Tanzania

🇮🇪 Republic of Ireland vs 🇹🇿 United Republic of Tanzania

A neutral side-by-side of immigration systems, routes and regulators. Each row links to the underlying visa page with its primary government source.

Last reviewed: 2 June 2026

Source basis

This comparison combines Republic of Ireland and United Republic of Tanzania government portals with the primary sources for each side's dominant skilled route. Every detailed figure links through to the underlying route or data page.

Reviewed 2 June 2026

Primary sources

  • Immigration Service Delivery

    Department of Justice (Ireland) - verified 18 April 2026

  • Tanzania Immigration Department

    Immigration Department (Ministry of Home Affairs, Tanzania) - verified 2 June 2026

  • DETE — Critical Skills Employment Permit

    Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (Ireland) - verified 22 June 2026

  • Class B Residence Matrix - Tanzania Immigration Department

    Tanzania Immigration Department - verified 1 June 2026

🇮🇪

Republic of Ireland

Ireland operates an employment permits system administered by the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (DETE), with immigration permissions separately issued by Immigration Service Delivery (ISD). The Critical Skills Employment Permit is the headline route for high-skill migration.

Official portal
Department of Justice (Ireland)
Languages
Irish, English
Currency
Euro

🇹🇿

United Republic of Tanzania

Tanzania splits responsibilities between two authorities: the Immigration Department issues residence permits (Class A for investors and the self-employed, Class B for employment, Class C for students, retirees and others), while the Prime Minister's Office handles work permits. A Class B residence permit requires a work permit first. Permanent residence exists but is discretionary and granted only after long residence.

Official portal
Immigration Department (Ministry of Home Affairs, Tanzania)
Languages
Swahili, English
Currency
Tanzanian shilling

How Republic of Ireland and United Republic of Tanzania differ

Dimension🇮🇪 Republic of Ireland🇹🇿 United Republic of Tanzania
Total routes covered75
Routes without employer sponsor43
Routes leading to permanent residence61
Typical full settlement timelineArrival → Stamp 4 (2 years on CSEP, 5 on GEP) → citizenship (5 years reckonable, typically year 6–7 from arrival).—
Dominant skilled visaCritical Skills Employment PermitResidence Permit Class B (employment)
Skilled visa salary minimum€40,904/year—
Skilled visa processing timeDETE publishes current processing dates weekly; Critical Skills Employment Permits are consistently prioritised over General permits, typically 3–6 weeks for trusted-partner employers.—
Skilled visa government feesA Critical Skills Employment Permit to Ireland costs around €1,300 in government fees for a single applicant — the CSEP fee is typically employer-borne, so the worker's out-of-pocket cost is closer to €300.—
Official languagesIrish, EnglishSwahili, English
CurrencyEuroTanzanian shilling
Primary regulatorLaw SocietyTLS
Policy changes (last 12 months)10

Skilled-route head-to-head

Comparing each country’s most-used skilled-migration route side by side.

🇮🇪 Republic of Ireland

Critical Skills Employment Permit

Salary minimum
€40,904/year
Government fees
A Critical Skills Employment Permit to Ireland costs around €1,300 in government fees for a single applicant — the CSEP fee is typically employer-borne, so the worker's out-of-pocket cost is closer to €300.
Processing time
DETE publishes current processing dates weekly; Critical Skills Employment Permits are consistently prioritised over General permits, typically 3–6 weeks for trusted-partner employers.
Sponsor required
Yes
Leads to settlement
Yes

🇹🇿 United Republic of Tanzania

Residence Permit Class B (employment)

Salary minimum
—
Government fees
—
Processing time
—
Sponsor required
Yes
Leads to settlement
No

Recent policy activity

Last 6 months. Each entry links to its primary government source.

  • 28 May 2026Republic of Ireland

    Ireland announces employment-permit occupation list changes

    The Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment announced occupation-list changes to support housing, health and transport needs, including additions to the Critical Skills Occupation List and removals from the Ineligible Occupations List.

    Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (Ireland)

Routes unique to Republic of Ireland

  • Start-up Entrepreneur Programme (STEP)

    entrepreneur

  • Irish Student visa (Stamp 2)

    study

  • Join Family (Irish national or EEA national)

    family

Visa routes side by side

Republic of Ireland (7)

  • Critical Skills Employment Permit

    Sponsor · Leads to settlement · 2 years initially; leads to Stamp 4 permission and long-term residence after 2 years.

  • General Employment Permit

    Sponsor · Leads to settlement · 2 years initially; renewable; longer-term residence possible after 5 years.

  • Start-up Entrepreneur Programme (STEP)

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Initial 2-year permission; renewable; leads to Stamp 4 after 5 years.

  • Stamp 4 permission

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Typically issued for 1–5 years at a time; renewable.

  • Irish Student visa (Stamp 2)

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · Up to 1 year at a time; renewable during studies.

  • Join Family (Irish national or EEA national)

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Variable — usually 1–3 years at a time; leads to Stamp 4.

  • Immigrant Investor Programme (IIP — closed)

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Closed to new applicants.

United Republic of Tanzania (5)

  • Residence Permit Class B (employment)

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · A renewable residence permit tied to your employment; any single residence permit class has a fairly short maximum validity and is renewed rather than permanent. Confirm current validity on the official page.

  • Residence Permit Class A (self-employed and investors)

    No sponsor · Non-settlement · A renewable residence permit tied to your business or investment; standard validity is fairly short and renewed, though high-value investors may secure longer validity. Confirm current validity on the official page.

  • Residence Permit Class C (students, retirees, researchers, missionaries)

    No sponsor · Non-settlement · A renewable residence permit tied to your purpose of stay; any single residence permit class has a fairly short maximum validity and is renewed. Confirm current validity on the official page.

  • Work Permit (Prime Minister's Office - Labour)

    Sponsor · Non-settlement · A renewable work permit tied to your employment and issued for a set period; confirm current validity on the official page.

  • Long-tenure Residence (high-value investors, discretionary)

    No sponsor · Leads to settlement · Discretionary long-tenure residence for high-value investors; the official position notes total validity may exceed ten years in such cases. Confirm the current position on the official page.

Frequently asked questions

Which country has an easier skilled-migration route, Republic of Ireland or United Republic of Tanzania?+−

Republic of Ireland’s Critical Skills Employment Permit requires a salary of at least €40,904/year; United Republic of Tanzania’s Residence Permit Class B (employment) is the dominant skilled route. “Easier” depends on your salary, sponsor situation, and nationality — see each visa’s eligibility detail.

Which immigration system has changed more recently, Republic of Ireland or United Republic of Tanzania?+−

In the last 6 months: 1 logged policy change for Republic of Ireland, 0 for United Republic of Tanzania. See the recent-policy section above for the details, each linked to its primary source.

Does Republic of Ireland or United Republic of Tanzania have more visa routes without an employer sponsor?+−

Republic of Ireland has more: 4 of its covered routes can be pursued without an employer sponsor, against 3 for United Republic of Tanzania. No-sponsor routes — such as digital-nomad, self-employment, and points-based skilled migration — matter most if you do not yet have a job offer.

Cite or reuse this dataset

This comparison is free to reuse under CC BY 4.0. Cite the page for the compiled head-to-head table and use the country-comparisons JSON endpoint to retrieve the indexed pair, destination profiles and underlying source datasets.

Suggested citation

Visa Atlas, "Republic of Ireland vs United Republic of Tanzania immigration comparison", https://visaatlas.org/compare/ireland/vs/tanzania. Last verified 2 June 2026.

Page
https://visaatlas.org/compare/ireland/vs/tanzania
JSON endpoint
https://visaatlas.org/api/public/country-comparisons

Underlying comparison sources (4)

  • Immigration Service Delivery
  • Tanzania Immigration Department
  • DETE — Critical Skills Employment Permit
  • Class B Residence Matrix - Tanzania Immigration Department

This is not legal advice

We publish neutral, sourced information about immigration routes. Rules and thresholds change often — always verify details on the official government source linked on this page and consult a regulated immigration advisor before applying.