Irish Immigration Stamps Explained — Stamp 1, 2, 3, 4, 4EUFAM and Stamp 5
Stamp Types in Ireland Explained — 2026 Guide
Your Irish immigration stamp determines what you can do in Ireland — whether you can work, what social welfare you can access, and when you can apply for long-term residence. Here is every stamp type explained in plain language, with a full decision matrix and real immigrant scenarios.
Irish stamp types 2026 — At a glance
- Stamp 1
- Work permit holder — one employer only
- Stamp 2
- Student — 20hrs/week term, 40hrs holiday
- Stamp 4 / 4 EUFAM
- Full work rights — access to most welfare
- Stamp 5
- Permanent long-term residence — no expiry, no renewal needed
Quick reference — Irish stamp types
Stamp rights decision matrix
The table below shows what each stamp allows you to do in Ireland at a glance.
| Stamp | Can work? | Can study? | Access to welfare? | Path to Stamp 4? | Can bring family? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stamp 1 | Yes — one employer only | Yes (part-time) | Very limited — PRSI builds entitlements | Yes — after 2 or 5 years | Yes (with permit conditions) |
| Stamp 1A | Training only — no commercial work | Yes | Minimal | Via training completion to other permit | Limited |
| Stamp 1G | Yes — any employer, job-searching | Yes | Limited | Via Critical Skills job offer → Stamp 1 → Stamp 4 | Limited |
| Stamp 2 | 20hrs term / 40hrs holiday only | Yes — full-time | Minimal | Via Stamp 1G (graduate) after course | No |
| Stamp 3 | No | Yes (part-time) | Very limited | Via marriage or family application | Case-by-case |
| Stamp 4 | Yes — any employer, any role | Yes | Full access (subject to HRC) | Already Stamp 4 — path to Stamp 5 or citizenship | Yes (full family reunification) |
| Stamp 4 EUFAM | Yes — full rights from day 1 | Yes | Full access (subject to HRC) | Already equivalent to Stamp 4 | Yes |
| Stamp 5 | Yes — full rights, no expiry | Yes | Full access | Already highest level — apply for citizenship | Yes |
Each stamp explained in detail
Stamp 1 — Work permit holder
- Issued to non-EEA workers holding a valid Irish Employment Permit
- You can only work for the employer named on your permit
- Changing jobs requires a new Employment Permit (except after redundancy or employer insolvency in limited cases)
- You pay PRSI, building future entitlements to Maternity Benefit, State Pension and others
- If you lose your job, your right to remain in Ireland is immediately at risk — seek advice immediately
Stamp 2 — Student
- For non-EEA students enrolled full-time at a recognised institution in Ireland
- Work limited to 20 hours per week during term time
- Work limited to 40 hours per week during holiday periods (June, July, August, September)
- Cannot switch to a full-time role without changing immigration permission
- Must renew each year — tied to course enrolment
Stamp 3 — No right to work
- Issued to visitors and some family reunion visa holders
- Stamp 3 holders cannot work in Ireland in any capacity
- Very limited access to social welfare
- Partners and spouses of work permit holders may initially receive Stamp 3 — this can be upgraded after their EU/Irish partner satisfies residence thresholds
Stamp 4 — Full work and residence rights
Stamp 4 is the most important immigration permission for people who want to settle and work freely in Ireland.
- Work in any job, for any employer, without a permit
- Start your own business
- Access most social welfare payments, subject to the Habitual Residence Condition
- Apply for Irish citizenship after 5 years of reckonable residence
- Renewable; can progress to Stamp 5 after 8 years
Stamp 5 — Long-term residence
- Granted after 8 years of legal residence (5 years for some routes)
- No expiry date — permanent residence
- Full access to employment, study and welfare
- Cannot be revoked except in the most extreme circumstances
- Still a separate step from Irish citizenship (requires a naturalisation application)
Immigrant scenarios — which stamp applies?
Ana is from Brazil and has been accepted to an English language school in Dublin. She will receive Stamp 2. She can work 20 hours per week during term. After completing a recognised course of at least 1 year, she can apply for Stamp 1G (graduate permission), which allows her to job-search for 2 years. If she gets a job on the Critical Skills Eligible Occupations list, she can apply for a Critical Skills Employment Permit and Stamp 1, then progress to Stamp 4 after 2 years.
Jose has a General Employment Permit to work as a nurse at a Dublin hospital. He receives Stamp 1. He can only work for that specific hospital. He pays PRSI and after 2 years in a Critical Skills-eligible nursing role, he can apply for a Critical Skills Employment Permit and ultimately Stamp 4. After 5 years on a General Permit, he may apply directly for Stamp 4. His spouse in the Philippines can apply to join him once his permit is issued.
Carla is Brazilian and married to a Portuguese national who has been working in Ireland for 2 years. As the non-EEA spouse of an EU citizen exercising Treaty rights, Carla qualifies for Stamp 4 EUFAM from the day she arrives. She can work in any job without a permit, start a business, and access most social welfare payments immediately (subject to Habitual Residence Condition).
How to upgrade your stamp
| From | To | Typical route | How long |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stamp 1 (Critical Skills permit) | Stamp 4 | Apply to ISD after 2 years | 2 years |
| Stamp 1 (General permit) | Stamp 4 | Apply to ISD after 5 years | 5 years |
| Stamp 2 (student) | Stamp 1G | Graduate permission after recognised course | End of course |
| Stamp 3 (family) | Stamp 4 | Apply when EU family member meets thresholds | Varies |
| Stamp 4 (any) | Stamp 5 | Apply after 8 years cumulative legal residence | 8 years |
| Any stamp | Irish Citizenship | Naturalisation — 5 years reckonable residence on Stamp 4/5 | 5 years on Stamp 4+ |
Frequently asked questions
What stamp allows you to work freely in Ireland?
Stamp 4 gives full rights to live and work in Ireland for any employer without restriction. Stamp 4 EUFAM (for non-EEA family of EU/EEA citizens) has the same rights from day one. Stamp 5 is permanent long-term residence with no expiry.
Can I claim social welfare on Stamp 2?
No. Stamp 2 (student) gives very limited access to social welfare. You can work 20 hours during term and 40 hours in holiday periods, but you cannot access means-tested payments like Jobseeker's Allowance.
What is the difference between Stamp 4 and Stamp 5?
Stamp 4 must be renewed and has an expiry date. Stamp 5 is permanent long-term residence with no expiry, granted after 8 years of legal residence. Both give full work and welfare access.
Can I get Stamp 4 as a spouse of an EU citizen?
Yes. Non-EEA spouses of EU/EEA citizens exercising Treaty rights in Ireland can apply for Stamp 4 EUFAM, which gives full work rights and access to most welfare payments from the date of issue.
What social welfare can I claim on Stamp 4?
Most payments — Jobseeker's Allowance, Child Benefit, Medical Card, HAP, Disability Allowance, Carer's Allowance and others — subject to the Habitual Residence Condition and individual payment criteria.
Can I change jobs on Stamp 1?
Not without a new Employment Permit, except in certain circumstances such as redundancy or employer insolvency. Changing jobs without a new permit is a breach of your immigration conditions and can affect your right to remain.
What happens to my welfare if I am on Stamp 1 and lose my job?
Losing your job on Stamp 1 affects both your welfare entitlement and your right to remain in Ireland. Contact your Intreo Centre and an immigration solicitor immediately. You may qualify for Supplementary Welfare Allowance as a short-term support while you resolve your immigration status.
Does the Habitual Residence Condition apply to Stamp 4 holders?
Yes. Having Stamp 4 does not automatically mean you satisfy the Habitual Residence Condition for welfare payments. HRC is based on your centre of life being in Ireland, assessed over the last 5 years. New arrivals on Stamp 4 EUFAM may not immediately satisfy HRC — allow at least 6 to 12 months before applying for HRC-based payments.
- Stamp 4 does not automatically satisfy the Habitual Residence Condition for welfare payments — HRC is a separate assessment based on your centre of life in Ireland.
- EU citizens do not receive Stamp 4 — EU/EEA nationals exercise their Treaty rights directly and are not issued Irish immigration stamps in the same way. Non-EEA family members of EU citizens receive Stamp 4 EUFAM.
- Stamp 2 students cannot switch to full-time work without changing their permission — working beyond the 20-hour term-time limit is a breach of immigration conditions.
- Changing jobs on Stamp 1 requires a new Employment Permit — except in narrow cases such as redundancy. Changing without a new permit risks your right to remain.
- Stamp 5 is not the same as Irish citizenship — it is permanent long-term residence, but you must apply separately for naturalisation to become an Irish citizen.
This page was reviewed against official Irish government guidance and updated to reflect 2026 Irish immigration stamp types and welfare access rights.