Critical Skills Employment Permit — 2026 Salary Update

DETE salary thresholds updated — verify before your employer submits any application

↑ Updated

Pathway 1 (roles on the Critical Skills Occupations List) — the Minimum Annual Remuneration (MAR) for listed occupations has been revised upward to €40,904 per year. This replaces the previous €36,848 threshold. Applications quoting the old figure will be refused.

Unchanged

Pathway 2 (non-listed roles, degree-qualified) — the threshold remains €44,000 per year. Base salary only. Bonuses, commission, shift allowances, and benefits in kind are excluded from both calculations.

Rule change

Employer change window reduced from 12 months to 9 months. CSEP holders can now notify DETE of an employer change after 9 months of continuous employment (down from 12), provided the new role is in the same occupational category at the same or higher salary. General Employment Permit holders are unaffected — a full new application is still required for any employer change.

Pathway 1 — Listed Roles
€40,904
Per year, base salary only
Roles on the Critical Skills Occupations List
Pathway 2 — Non-Listed Roles
€44,000
Per year, base salary only
Degree-qualified, not on ineligible list
⚠️ These figures reflect the most recent DETE update. Always verify current thresholds at enterprise.gov.ie before submitting. Threshold revisions occur without advance notice and take effect immediately.
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⭐ Irish Critical Skills Employment Permit 2026

Critical Skills Employment Permit Ireland — Complete Guide for 2026

The definitive, independently verified guide to Ireland's most valuable work permit — covering the exact salary thresholds, the Critical Skills Occupations List, how to fast-track Stamp 4 residency in 21 months, family work rights, and the most common application mistakes that lead to preventable refusals.

€36,848Min. salary — listed occupations
€44,000Min. salary — non-listed roles
6–10 wksTypical DETE processing time
21 monthsPoint to apply for Stamp 4
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All salary figures and eligibility rules reflect the January 2024 DETE updates to Irish employment permit legislation. VizGuides is not a visa agency — verify current requirements at enterprise.gov.ie before applying.
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VizGuides is not a visa agency. This is a free, independent guide sourced from official DETE and INIS documentation. Always confirm current salary thresholds and eligibility criteria directly at enterprise.gov.ie before making any decisions.

⭐ What is the CSEP

Irish Critical Skills Employment Permit Eligibility — What It Is and Who Qualifies

The Critical Skills Employment Permit (CSEP) is Ireland's flagship employment permit — designed specifically to attract highly skilled professionals in occupations where the domestic and EEA labour market cannot meet demand. It is administered by the Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (DETE) and sits at the top of the Irish work permit hierarchy because of the rights it carries: no Labour Market Needs Test, immediate family work rights, and a fast-track route to Stamp 4 residency after just two years.

Unlike the General Employment Permit — where your employer must prove they advertised the role and could not find an EEA candidate — the CSEP process is streamlined. Your employer does not need to run any advertising or prove an unsuccessful recruitment search. The trade-off is that Irish Critical Skills Employment Permit eligibility is more tightly defined: your role must either appear on the Critical Skills Occupations List, or your salary must be sufficiently high to qualify under the second pathway. Getting the right pathway for your role is the first and most important decision in this process.

💰 Critical Skills Salary Threshold

The Two CSEP Pathways — Which One Applies to You?

CSEP eligibility splits into two distinct pathways, each with a different salary threshold. Understanding which pathway your role falls into is essential — and it is not always obvious from your job title alone. The salary figures below reflect the January 2024 DETE update, which significantly increased the previous thresholds.

Pathway 1 — Occupations List

Roles on the Critical Skills Occupations List

Your occupation is specifically named on DETE's published list of eligible roles — primarily IT, engineering, healthcare, science, and finance positions experiencing verified shortages.

€36,848 minimum annual salary
  • Relevant degree required — you must hold a qualification directly relevant to the role (level 7 or above on the NFQ, or equivalent recognised international qualification)
  • Job title must match the SOC (Standard Occupational Classification) code on the Critical Skills list — a mismatched job title is a common reason for refusal
  • No Labour Market Needs Test — your employer does not need to advertise the role or prove no EEA candidate was available
  • Contract must be for at least 2 years — contracts shorter than 2 years are refused at this pathway
  • Examples: Software Developer, Data Scientist, Mechanical Engineer, Pharmacist, Registered Nurse, Financial Risk Analyst
Pathway 2 — Non-Listed Occupations

Roles NOT on the Critical Skills Occupations List

Your specific job title does not appear on the published list, but your role is high-skill, well-compensated, and not on the ineligible occupations list. The higher salary threshold acts as the qualifying criterion.

€44,000 minimum annual salary
  • Relevant degree required — NFQ Level 7 or equivalent. Unlike Pathway 1, DETE is more stringent about assessing the relevance of the degree to the specific role
  • Job must not be on the ineligible occupations list — roles such as general retail, bar staff, or general administrative roles cannot qualify regardless of salary
  • Higher salary threshold compensates for the absence of a specific occupations list entry — DETE treats the €44,000 minimum as evidence of genuine high-skill demand
  • Contract minimum 2 years — same requirement as Pathway 1
  • No Labour Market Needs Test — same advantage as Pathway 1
  • Examples: Senior Marketing Manager, Supply Chain Director, Legal Counsel, Product Manager, Operations Head — at the qualifying salary

Critical Skills Occupations List Ireland — Sector Examples

The full Critical Skills Occupations List is published and updated by DETE. Below are the key sectors and example roles — this is not exhaustive, and job titles must match the SOC codes on the official list precisely.

Sector Example Eligible Roles Pathway Min. Salary
Information Technology Software Developer, Systems Analyst, Data Scientist, Cloud Architect, Cybersecurity Analyst, DevOps Engineer Pathway 1 €36,848
Engineering Mechanical Engineer, Civil Engineer, Electrical Engineer, Chemical Engineer, Structural Engineer Pathway 1 €36,848
Healthcare & Life Sciences Pharmacist, Registered Nurse (specialist), Occupational Therapist, Physiotherapist, Speech & Language Therapist, Radiographer Pathway 1 €36,848
Finance & Economics Financial Risk Analyst, Actuary, Fund Accountant, Compliance Officer, Quantitative Analyst Pathway 1 €36,848
Science & Research Research Scientist, Biochemist, Environmental Scientist, Materials Scientist, Clinical Research Associate Pathway 1 €36,848
Senior Management (non-listed) Head of Operations, VP Engineering, Director of Finance, Legal Counsel, Chief Marketing Officer Pathway 2 €44,000
Architecture & Built Environment Registered Architect, Quantity Surveyor (senior level), Urban Planner Check List Verify with DETE

⚠️ The Critical Skills Occupations List is reviewed and updated periodically by DETE. Always check the current official list before applying — a role present today may be removed, and new roles are added as labour market needs change.

🏅 Stamp 4 Fast Track Residency

The Road to Stamp 4 — Your Fast-Track Residency Timeline

The single biggest long-term advantage of the Critical Skills Employment Permit over any other Irish work permit is the speed at which it gets you to Stamp 4 — the immigration permission that lets you work for any employer, in any role, without any further employment permit. General Employment Permit holders wait 5 years for this. On a CSEP, you can have it in approximately 2 years.

1
Month 0

CSEP Issued — You Start Work in Ireland

Your employer receives the employment permit from DETE and you begin your role. Your immigration permission is registered as Stamp 1, tied to your CSEP and your specific employer. Your initial CSEP is issued for up to 2 years. At this point, your family can also apply for their permissions — and critically, your spouse or civil partner qualifies for Stamp 1 with immediate work authorisation (more on this in the FAQ below).

Action: Register your immigration permission at the Burghquay Registration Office (Dublin) or your local ISPO office. Bring your passport, CSEP, employment contract, and proof of address. You will receive your Irish Residence Permit (IRP) card.
2
Months 1–12

First Year on CSEP — Employment Restrictions Apply

During the first 12 months of your CSEP, you are tied to the specific employer named on the permit and to the occupational category of the role. You can change employer within the first 12 months only if the new role is in the same occupational category and at the same salary or above — and you must notify DETE promptly. This is not the time to jump roles unless the change is clearly within the same field and salary band.

Key milestone: After 12 months, you can change employer within your occupational category with notification to DETE — you do not need to apply for a new permit, but the move must be documented.
3
Month 21

Apply for a DETE Support Letter — The Critical Step

At the 21-month mark of continuous employment on your CSEP, you become eligible to apply to DETE for a Support Letter. This is not the Stamp 4 itself — it is a letter from the Department confirming your eligibility to transition to Stamp 4 residency. You apply for this letter through DETE while still on your Stamp 1, and it is issued to you for submission to the Irish Naturalisation and Immigration Service (INIS) / Immigration Service Delivery (ISD).

Why 21 months, not 24? Processing times at the ISD take approximately 3 months. Applying for the Support Letter at month 21 means your Stamp 4 can be granted at or near the 24-month mark — preventing any gap in your immigration permission.
4
Month 21–24

Submit Stamp 4 Application to ISD

Once you receive the DETE Support Letter, submit your Stamp 4 application to the Immigration Service Delivery (ISD). Your application must include your current passport, IRP card, the DETE Support Letter, proof of continuous employment (payslips covering the 21-month period), your tax compliance documentation (P60 or online Revenue statement), and proof of address in Ireland. The ISD processes this application — if approved, your Stamp 1 is cancelled and Stamp 4 is stamped in your passport and reflected on your new IRP card.

5
Month 24 — Goal

Stamp 4 Granted — Full Freedom to Work in Ireland

With Stamp 4 in your passport, you can work for any employer in Ireland in any role — without any employment permit. You can start a business, work for yourself, change careers entirely, or take time between jobs without your immigration permission being immediately at risk. Stamp 4 is typically granted for a period of 5 years and is renewable. After accumulating 5 years of lawful residency in Ireland (which your time on CSEP counts toward), you may be eligible to apply for long-term residency or Irish citizenship — subject to the standard residency and character requirements.

Important: The 5-year path to citizenship counts your Stamp 1 time on CSEP, not just your Stamp 4 time. Your clock started the day you arrived and registered in Ireland — not the day you received Stamp 4.
✅ Why the CSEP Stands Apart

Six Advantages That Make the CSEP Ireland's Best Work Permit

Compared to every other employment permit Ireland offers, the Critical Skills Employment Permit provides the most rights with the least bureaucratic burden. Here is exactly what you get.

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No Labour Market Needs Test

Your employer never has to advertise your role or prove that no EEA candidate was available. This removes weeks of pre-application preparation and removes one of the most common sources of GEP application failure.

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Immediate Family Reunification

Your spouse, civil partner, and dependent children can apply to join you in Ireland immediately — without waiting. No 12-month qualifying period. Your family does not have to remain separated while you establish yourself.

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Spouse Has the Right to Work

Your spouse or civil partner is granted a Stamp 1 immigration permission with automatic work authorisation. They can work for any employer in any role without needing their own separate employment permit — a right that General Employment Permit family members do not have.

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Stamp 4 After 2 Years

The fastest path to unrestricted residency in Ireland. After just 21 months of employment, you can begin the Stamp 4 process — giving you the right to work for any employer, in any role, without a permit. GEP holders wait 5 years for the same outcome.

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Change Employer After 12 Months

After the first 12 months, you can change employer within your occupational category with notification to DETE — no new permit application required. This gives you genuine career mobility that GEP holders simply do not have.

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Path to Irish Citizenship

Your time on a CSEP counts toward the 5-year lawful residency requirement for Irish citizenship. Combined with your Stamp 4 years, a CSEP holder can realistically become eligible for Irish citizenship — and with it, full EU freedom of movement — within 5–7 years of first arriving in Ireland.

⚠️ Application Pitfalls & Resources

Rejection-Proof Your Application — Common CSEP Refusal Reasons

DETE refusals are frustrating, costly (fees are non-refundable), and often entirely avoidable. These are the specific failure points that consistently appear in refused CSEP applications.

🚨 CSEP Application — Most Common Refusal Reasons

Every item below has appeared in DETE refusal letters. Review this list carefully before your employer submits the application — correcting these issues after submission is not possible, and the €1,000 fee is not returned if your application is refused.

  • Job title does not match the SOC code on the Critical Skills Occupations List. Your role may be eligible in substance, but the job title in your contract must align with how the occupation is described on the official DETE list. "Developer" and "Software Developer" may be treated differently.
  • Employment contract is shorter than 2 years. A contract for 12 or 18 months — even with a renewal clause — is refused. The contract must state a minimum 2-year duration on its face.
  • Salary does not meet the threshold at time of application. If your contract states a starting salary below €36,848 (Pathway 1) or €44,000 (Pathway 2) — even by €1 — the application is refused. Bonuses, commission, and benefits are not counted toward the salary threshold.
  • Degree is not in a relevant field. DETE assesses the relevance of your qualification to the specific role. A computer science degree for a software development role is straightforward. A general business degree for a data science role will be scrutinised and may be refused.
  • Employer does not meet the 50:50 rule. If more than 50% of your employer's workforce is already non-EEA, the permit cannot be issued. This catches startups and newer companies with international founding teams off guard. Check headcount before applying.
  • Employer is not properly registered with Revenue and Companies Registration Office. Both the employer's Tax Registration Number and CRO registration must be valid and active at the time of application.
  • Application submitted with inconsistent documents. The salary in the job offer letter, the employment contract, and the EPOS application form must all match exactly. Any discrepancy — even a different job title between documents — causes an automatic return or refusal.
  • Applying for a role on the ineligible occupations list. Some applicants attempt to frame an ineligible role with a different title. DETE assesses the substance of the role, not just the title — this approach leads to refusal and potential future scrutiny.

📋 Download Our Comprehensive CSEP Application Checklist

Our solicitor-reviewed CSEP checklist covers every document your employer needs, the exact EPOS submission sequence, how to phrase your employment contract to meet DETE requirements, and a pre-submission review framework that flags the most common refusal triggers before your application goes in.

VizGuides is an independent resource. Checklist and consultation links may be affiliate partnerships. We only recommend products we have reviewed.

📬 How to Apply for an Irish Work Permit — CSEP

How to Apply for a Critical Skills Employment Permit — Step by Step

The application is submitted through DETE's EPOS (Employment Permits Online System) by either the employer or the employee. Most applications are submitted by the employer. Here is the exact sequence.

1

Confirm Pathway 1 or Pathway 2 Eligibility

Check whether your specific job title and SOC code appear on the Critical Skills Occupations List. If yes, Pathway 1 applies at €36,848 minimum salary. If your title is not listed but your salary is €44,000 or above and your role is not on the ineligible list, Pathway 2 applies. This determination drives everything else — your contract terms, your degree relevance argument, and the specific fields you complete on the EPOS form.

2

Prepare the Employment Contract and Job Offer

The employment contract must state a minimum 2-year duration, the role title matching the SOC code, and a base salary meeting the applicable threshold. Bonuses, commission, overtime, and benefits in kind are not counted toward the minimum salary — the base contractual salary must meet the threshold on its own. Have your employer prepare a cover letter explaining why the candidate was selected, their qualifications, and how the role meets the critical skills criteria.

3

Gather All Required Documents

Your passport (with at least 6 months validity beyond the permit period), degree certificates and transcripts relevant to the role, your current immigration permission if you are already in Ireland, any previous Irish employment permits, proof of your current immigration status, and the employer's Tax Registration Number and CRO Business Registration Number. Use our downloadable checklist above to verify nothing is missing before submission.

4

Submit the Application via EPOS

The employer or employee submits through epos.enterprise.gov.ie. The application fee is €1,000 for a permit of over 6 months duration (€500 for 6 months or less). Fees are non-refundable if refused. You receive a reference number on submission — use this to track your application. DETE work permit processing times are published weekly on the DETE website.

5

Monitor DETE Work Permit Processing Times and Respond to Queries

Current DETE work permit processing times for the CSEP are typically 6–10 weeks for straightforward applications. If DETE sends a query requesting additional information, respond within the timeframe specified — failure to respond promptly halts processing and can lead to the application being withdrawn. Do not give notice at your current employer until the permit is issued.

6

Receive Your Permit and Register Immigration Permission

DETE issues the permit electronically and by post. Once you have the permit, register your immigration permission at the Burghquay Registration Office (Dublin) or your local Immigration Service Delivery office (outside Dublin). You will transition to Stamp 1 tied to your CSEP. Bring your passport, permit letter, employment contract, and two passport photographs to the appointment. Keep your IRP card safe — you will need it at month 21 when applying for the DETE Support Letter.

🏢 Top Sectors

Critical Skills in Demand — Sectors and Salary Expectations

Ireland's economy continues to attract global investment in specific high-skill sectors. These are the industries where CSEP applications are most common and most consistently approved — along with realistic salary ranges you can expect when negotiating with Irish employers.

💻 Information Technology

€45,000–€90,000

Dublin's Silicon Docks houses the European HQs of Google, Meta, Amazon, and Microsoft. Demand for software engineers, data scientists, cloud architects, and cybersecurity professionals consistently outstrips supply.

  • Software Developer / Engineer
  • Data Scientist / ML Engineer
  • Cloud / DevOps Engineer
  • Cybersecurity Analyst

⚙️ Engineering

€44,000–€80,000

Infrastructure investment and Ireland's manufacturing base — including Intel, Apple, and the medtech sector — create consistent demand for qualified engineers across multiple disciplines.

  • Mechanical / Civil Engineer
  • Electrical Engineer
  • Process / Chemical Engineer
  • Structural Engineer

🏥 Healthcare & Pharma

€40,000–€85,000

Ireland hosts 9 of the world's top 10 pharmaceutical companies. The HSE also actively recruits internationally for specialist clinical roles across nursing, allied health, and pharmacy.

  • Pharmacist
  • Specialist Nurse
  • Clinical Research Associate
  • Regulatory Affairs Specialist

📈 Finance & FinTech

€45,000–€90,000

Dublin's IFSC employs over 35,000 people across 500+ financial firms. Fund administration, risk, compliance, and quantitative finance are consistently in demand in both traditional and emerging fintech roles.

  • Financial Risk Analyst
  • Actuary
  • Compliance Officer
  • Quantitative Analyst

🔬 Life Sciences & Research

€38,000–€75,000

Ireland's R&D ecosystem — anchored by university research centres and global pharma investment — creates ongoing demand for scientists and clinical researchers at all career stages.

  • Research Scientist (Biochemistry / Molecular)
  • Clinical Trials Monitor
  • Biostatistician
  • Materials Scientist

🏗️ Architecture & Built Environment

€40,000–€70,000

Ireland's housing and infrastructure pipeline is creating sustained demand for registered architects and senior built environment professionals — particularly those with experience in sustainable design and planning.

  • Registered Architect
  • Senior Quantity Surveyor
  • Urban / Town Planner
  • BIM Manager
❓ Frequently Asked Questions

CSEP FAQ — Questions People Actually Search For

Direct answers to the questions that come up most often — covering fees, the 50:50 rule, spouse work rights, and diploma eligibility.

Does my employer have to pay the €1,000 application fee, or can I pay it myself? +
Either party can pay the application fee — DETE does not require it to be the employer. The fee is €1,000 for a permit of more than 6 months duration (and €500 for a permit of 6 months or less). Whether the employer or employee pays is a matter of private agreement between the parties. However, if your application is refused, the fee is not refunded to either party — and DETE does not require you to demonstrate who paid it as part of the application. In practice, most Irish employers cover this cost as part of the sponsorship arrangement, particularly for roles where the company is actively recruiting internationally. If your prospective employer is asking you to fund the €1,000 fee as a condition of sponsorship, that is worth noting — it is not illegal, but it is less common among established employers with organised permit processes.
What is the 50:50 rule, and are there any exceptions for startups or early-stage companies? +
The 50:50 rule requires that at least 50% of an employer's total workforce in Ireland is made up of EEA nationals at the time of the permit application. This catches startup and scale-up companies off guard more than any other requirement — particularly those founded by international teams or those that have grown quickly by hiring internationally. There is a limited exception for startups that are supported by Enterprise Ireland or IDA Ireland — these companies can apply for a waiver of the 50:50 rule in certain circumstances. Outside of this specific carve-out, the rule applies universally. If your employer's current headcount does not satisfy the 50:50 threshold and they are not EI/IDA-supported, the CSEP application cannot proceed until the workforce composition is corrected — which may mean hiring additional EEA staff first. It is worth your employer doing a precise headcount before any application is submitted, as this is one of the more common reasons for applications being returned.
Can my spouse or de facto partner work in Ireland immediately when they arrive under my CSEP? +
Yes — your spouse or civil partner can work in Ireland immediately upon arrival, without needing a separate employment permit. This is one of the most significant advantages of the CSEP over the General Employment Permit (where the accompanying spouse does require their own separate permit to work). When your spouse or civil partner applies to join you in Ireland, they are granted Stamp 1 (or Stamp 3 in some circumstances, depending on the specific situation at the time of registration) with permission to work for any employer in any role. They should register their immigration permission as soon as they arrive. The position for de facto partners (unmarried partners) is more nuanced — de facto partners can apply to join CSEP holders, but the immigration permission and associated work rights can be slightly different depending on the duration and documentation of the relationship. If you are in a long-term de facto relationship, get specific advice from an immigration solicitor before your partner applies — the application process is manageable but requires careful documentation of the relationship.
Can I apply for a Critical Skills Employment Permit if I only have a diploma instead of a degree? +
This depends entirely on which pathway you are applying under and how DETE assesses your specific qualification. For Pathway 1 (roles on the Critical Skills Occupations List), DETE requires a relevant qualification at NFQ Level 7 or above — which corresponds to an ordinary bachelor's degree in Ireland. Some diplomas, particularly Higher National Diplomas (HND) or Level 7 awards from Irish institutions, may meet this threshold. A standard QQI Level 5 or Level 6 diploma would not. International qualifications are assessed on the basis of their equivalence to Irish NFQ levels — and this assessment is done by DETE on a case-by-case basis. For Pathway 2, a relevant degree is explicitly required as part of the qualifying criteria, and there is less scope for diploma equivalence arguments. If your highest qualification is a diploma, the most practical path is to have NARIC (the Irish National Academic Recognition Centre) assess your qualification and issue a comparability statement before your application is submitted. This gives DETE a formal reference point rather than leaving the assessment entirely to their discretion. Applying without this documentation when your qualification may be borderline is a risk that costs you €1,000 if the application is refused.
How long does DETE take to process a Critical Skills Employment Permit application? +
DETE work permit processing times for the CSEP are published weekly on the DETE website and fluctuate based on application volumes. As a general guide, straightforward CSEP applications typically take 6 to 10 weeks from the date of a complete, valid application being received. Complex applications — or those where DETE issues a query requiring additional documentation — can take longer, with each query response adding time to the process. The most important thing you can do to ensure the fastest possible processing is to submit a complete, consistent application with no missing documents. Applications that arrive with inconsistencies between documents, missing employer declarations, or unclear salary information are often returned rather than refused — meaning the clock restarts. Check the current processing times on the DETE website before planning your start date with your new employer.