Brazilian citizens moving to Republic of Ireland
Brazilian nationals typically move to Republic of Ireland through its standard work, study, family, and skilled-migration routes rather than through a dedicated bilateral scheme. Eligibility and processing times are set by Department of Justice (Ireland), so check each route below for its primary source.
We cover 7 Ireland routes — 4 can be started without a job offer, and 6 lead to permanent residence.
Tourist entry
No. Brazilian nationals require a visa to enter Republic of Ireland, even for short tourism. A separate residence or work route is required for long-term stay.
Treaty & bilateral memberships
- Schengen Area
Consular processing: a Republic of Ireland consulate or visa application centre in your country of residence
What this means for Brazilian citizens
Of the 7 Republic of Ireland routes we cover, 4 can be started without an employer sponsor and 6 can lead to permanent residence. Relevant memberships: Schengen Area. Expect a language test or qualification-recognition step, since language alignment is only partial.
Headline figures — Critical Skills Employment Permit
Computed from our continuously re-verified, primary-sourced data. Indicative, not legal advice.
Salary you must earn
€40,904/yr
Critical Skills Employment Permit — general floor
Verified 1 March 2026 · DETE — Critical Skills Employment Permit →
Government cost
€1,300
Single applicant, non-visa-required nationality
CSEP permit holders can sponsor family immediately. Each family IRP is €300. D-visas for visa-required dependants are €60 each.
Verified 1 June 2026 · DETE — Fees for employment permits →
How long it takes
3 weeks – 6 weeks
DETE publishes current processing dates weekly; Critical Skills Employment Permits are consistently prioritised over General permits, typically 3–6 weeks for trusted-partner employers.
Verified 1 June 2026 · DETE — Employment permits current processing dates →
Time to permanent residence
Arrival → Stamp 4 (2 years on CSEP, 5 on GEP) → citizenship (5 years reckonable, typically year 6–7 from arrival).
Leads to Long-Term Residence / Stamp 4, then Irish citizenship.
Routes with nationality-specific notes
Each link opens the Brazilian-specific guide for that route.
Critical Skills Employment Permit
Fast-track employment permit for high-skill roles on the Critical Skills Occupations List.
Brazilian applicants in tech and pharma use this route as a fast track to Irish residence and, via naturalisation, an EU passport. Apostilled degree certificates from Brazil require Ministry of Foreign Affairs legalisation — plan for 4–6 weeks.
General Employment Permit
Sponsored employment permit for roles not on the Critical Skills list but above the general salary threshold.
Brazilian General Employment Permit applicants concentrate in hospitality, healthcare support, and retail roles. Labour Market Needs Test typically applies. Brazilian degree-holders in pharma or tech should compare against the Critical Skills threshold first — at the post-2024 thresholds, many Brazilian engineers and pharma roles now qualify directly for Critical Skills.
Start-up Entrepreneur Programme (STEP)
Residence programme for founders establishing a High Potential Start-Up in Ireland.
Brazilian founders use STEP particularly for SaaS, fintech, and renewable-energy ventures. Apostille via the Brazilian MFA. Enterprise Ireland engagement before the formal STEP application materially improves outcomes; many Brazilian founders also attend HPSU-style programmes via Trinity College Dublin's LaunchBox or NDRC.
Join Family (Irish national or EEA national)
Family reunification permission for spouses, civil partners, and dependants of Irish or EEA nationals resident in Ireland.
Brazilian Join Family applications include both spouses of Critical Skills holders and spouses of Brazilian-Irish dual nationals. Brazilian civil-registry marriage certificates from cartórios are accepted with Hague apostille via the Brazilian MFA. Federal Police criminal clearance is the standard police-certificate document.
All Republic of Ireland routes open to Brazilian applicants
General routes available to all nationalities. Click any to read the full guide.
Stamp 4 permission
Long-term residence permission allowing unrestricted work in Ireland.
No job offer needed · Leads to permanent residence
Irish Student visa (Stamp 2)
Study permission for international students enrolled at eligible Irish institutions on the Interim List of Eligible Programmes.
Job offer required · Temporary
Immigrant Investor Programme (IIP — closed)
Historic golden-visa equivalent; closed to new applications from 15 February 2023.
No job offer needed · Leads to permanent residence
Recent policy changes affecting this route
What changed most recently on this route — each linked to its primary government source.
- 15 October 2025In force 15 October 2025
Ireland refreshes Critical Skills Occupation List
The Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment published a refreshed Critical Skills Occupation List, adding several construction and care-related roles and tightening criteria for some ICT roles.
Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (Ireland) →
Frequently asked questions
Can Brazilian citizens enter Republic of Ireland without a visa?+
No. Brazilian nationals require a visa to enter Republic of Ireland, even for short tourism. A separate residence or work route is required for long-term stay.
Which Republic of Ireland visa routes are best suited to Brazilian applicants?+
Common general routes used by Brazilian applicants include Critical Skills Employment Permit, General Employment Permit, Start-up Entrepreneur Programme (STEP). Brazilian nationals typically move to Republic of Ireland through its standard work, study, family, and skilled-migration routes rather than through a dedicated bilateral scheme. Eligibility and processing times are set by Department of Justice (Ireland), so check each route below for its primary source.
Where do Brazilian applicants typically apply for a Republic of Ireland visa?+
Applications are typically processed at a Republic of Ireland consulate or visa application centre in your country of residence. Some digital and in-country applications can be filed directly with Republic of Ireland's immigration authority without a consular visit.
Do Brazilian citizens need a job offer to move to Republic of Ireland?+
Not necessarily. 4 of the 7 Republic of Ireland routes we cover can be started without an employer sponsor, while the rest need a sponsoring employer or job offer. If you do not have an offer yet, the no-sponsor routes are the place to start.
Can Brazilian citizens get permanent residence in Republic of Ireland?+
Yes. 6 of the 7 Republic of Ireland routes we cover lead toward settlement or permanent residence; the others are temporary. Timelines vary by route, so check the settlement detail on each visa page.
How much does the Critical Skills Employment Permit cost for a Brazilian applicant?+
Government fees for the worked example (Single applicant, non-visa-required nationality) total about €1,300. CSEP permit holders can sponsor family immediately. Each family IRP is €300. D-visas for visa-required dependants are €60 each. Figures from DETE — Fees for employment permits, verified 1 June 2026. Treat these as indicative — confirm the current schedule on the official source before budgeting.
What salary do Brazilian applicants need for the Critical Skills Employment Permit?+
The Critical Skills Employment Permit — general floor floor is €40,904/yr, effective 1 March 2026 (DETE — Critical Skills Employment Permit). Your occupation's published going rate may bind higher — whichever is greater applies.
How long does the Critical Skills Employment Permit take to process from Brazil?+
The typical published decision window is 3 weeks – 6 weeks. Brazilian applicants usually file via a Republic of Ireland consulate or visa application centre in your country of residence, and consular-post backlogs can add to the wait. Source: DETE — Employment permits current processing dates, verified 1 June 2026.
How long until permanent residence in Republic of Ireland?+
Arrival → Stamp 4 (2 years on CSEP, 5 on GEP) → citizenship (5 years reckonable, typically year 6–7 from arrival). The route leads to Long-Term Residence / Stamp 4, then Irish citizenship. See ISD — Irish citizenship by naturalisation for the qualifying-residence rules.