The Government has approved a National Implementation Plan (NIP) for the EU’s that will be submitted to the European Commission.
The pact is aimed at harmonising and improving the management of migration across the EU.
Ireland has opted in to seven of the deal’s legislative measures.
The Department of Justice says that the NIP will ensure Ireland’s readiness for when the pact comes into effect in June 2026.
Minister for Justice Jim O’Callaghan said that the Irish plan would ultimately result in “the most significant reform of Irish asylum laws in decades”.
"The current system is not working effectively, with decisions taking far too long. We need to ensure that applications are processed in a swift fashion,” he added.
Under the NIP, there will be a mandatory 12-week time limit under the new border-procedure mechanism.
This provides for completed first-instance and appeal decisions for those applicants from countries of origin with an application success rate of 20% or less across the EU, those who have no documents or false documents, and those who are deemed a security risk.
“This provision will go a long way in making our immigration laws more robust in the future,” the minister said.
The plan also provides for the replacement of the current international-protection decision process with what the department describes as “a streamlined single first-instance decision” on refugee status, subsidiary protection, and return/permission to stay.
There will also be a single appeal process for such decisions.
Other measures in the plan include: