Egyptian Embassy in Dublin

Ambasciata de Egito em Dublin, Irlanda

Panoramica

The Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt in Dublin is the principal channel through which Irish residents apply for Egyptian visas — e-visa via Egypt's official e-Visa portal for tourist or business stays up to 30 days, visa on arrival in USD cash at Cairo, Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheikh airports for most short visits, and longer-stay or non-tourist visas handled directly by the consular section at 12 Clyde Road in Ballsbridge. The Dublin embassy is a resident Egyptian mission and supersedes any prior accreditation-chain arrangement from London; the Irish-Egyptian visa pathway now sits entirely within Ireland. The chancery occupies a Georgian-era diplomatic villa on Clyde Road in Ballsbridge — Dublin's historical embassy district, walking distance from the Aviva Stadium, the RDS (Royal Dublin Society) grounds, and the Ballsbridge–Donnybrook residential-and-academic corridor. Other foreign missions cluster in the same area, and the location is well-served by the Dublin Bus 4/7 corridor along Pembroke Road and the Aircoach bus connection from Dublin Airport. The Egyptian community in Ireland is small but established — estimated at 1 500 to 3 000 ethnically Egyptian or Egyptian-descent residents, concentrated in Dublin (the largest national pool, particularly Egyptian medical doctors and consultants in the HSE hospital network, Egyptian-Coptic and Egyptian-Muslim community networks, and an emerging tech-sector cluster of Egyptian software professionals working with the Dublin multinational tech hub), Cork (smaller Egyptian medical and academic community linked to University College Cork and the Cork University Hospital), Galway (very small but established community linked to the University of Galway and the Galway-Mayo Institute of Technology), and Limerick (linked to the University of Limerick medical school and the regional hospital network). For Irish travellers planning to visit Egypt, the embassy is most relevant when the trip exceeds the standard 30-day tourist allowance, mixes work or study with the visit, requires a multi-entry visa, or involves passport edge cases. Standard leisure visits — Cairo and Giza, a Nile cruise from Luxor to Aswan, a week of diving in Hurghada or Sharm el-Sheikh — are typically handled through the e-visa applied online a few days before departure. Ireland is a growing European outbound market for Egyptian tourism — no direct year-round flights operate between Ireland and Egypt; Irish travellers route via London Heathrow (BA, EgyptAir LHR-CAI), Amsterdam (KLM), Paris (Air France), Frankfurt (Lufthansa), Istanbul (Turkish Airlines direct from Dublin), Doha (Qatar Airways direct from Dublin), or Dubai (Emirates direct from Dublin).

Servizi Visto

Irish residents have three practical routes to an Egyptian visa. First, the e-Visa is the most convenient option for most leisure and business visits up to 30 days. Applications are submitted online to Egypt's official e-Visa portal — visa2egypt.gov.eg — with a scanned passport (minimum six months validity beyond the intended stay), recent passport photo, flight and hotel confirmation, and the fee paid by card. Processing typically takes a few business days; the e-Visa is then sent by email and printed for presentation on arrival. Second, Visa on Arrival in USD cash is available at Cairo (CAI), Hurghada (HRG), Sharm el-Sheikh (SSH), Luxor (LXR), Aswan and Marsa Alam (RMF) international airports. Irish passport-holders pay the current fee at a clearly marked bank counter just before passport control, in exact USD cash — neither euro nor card is accepted at the bank counter. The visa allows a single entry up to 30 days. A free 15-day Sinai-only permit is issued at SSH for travellers staying within South Sinai. Third, regular consular visa via the embassy is needed for stays beyond 30 days, multi-entry tourist visas, work visas, student visas, family reunification and residence permits. Applicants book an appointment via info@embegyptireland.ie (or the consular section's egyptianconsulatedublin@yahoo.ie address for consular-specific enquiries), submit a completed application form, passport with six months validity and blank pages, two recent passport photos on white background, travel itinerary and accommodation, travel insurance covering medical evacuation, proof of financial means, and any purpose-specific documents. For visa renewal or extension while already in Egypt, applicants apply at the Mogamma in Tahrir Square (Cairo) or regional Passport Authority offices — not at the embassy in Dublin.

Servizi Consolari

The Consular Section serves Egyptian nationals across Ireland and Egyptian-Irish dual nationals with the standard range of consular work: ordinary and emergency passports, national ID cards, birth registration for children born in Ireland to Egyptian parents, marriage registration including civil marriages contracted under Irish law, divorce registration, death registration for Egyptian nationals deceased in Ireland, Egyptian nationality matters, and legalisation of Irish documents for use in Egypt after prior apostille from the Department of Foreign Affairs in Dublin. Notarial services include powers of attorney drafted in Arabic, English or Irish, sworn declarations, affidavits for Egyptian courts, certified copies, and translations. The embassy works with Irish translators registered with the Irish Translators' and Interpreters' Association (ITIA) for Arabic-English document translation when the original Irish document must be presented to Egyptian authorities. For emergencies affecting Egyptian nationals in Ireland — arrest, hospitalisation, death, lost passport, victim of crime — the embassy can be contacted during business hours; outside business hours, Egyptian nationals are directed through the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs emergency line in Cairo. The Egyptian community in Ireland is anchored on the Dublin Egyptian-medical-professional network within the HSE hospital system (Egyptian-trained consultants, specialists and registrars working across major Dublin teaching hospitals including the Mater, St James's, St Vincent's, Beaumont and Tallaght), the Egyptian-Coptic community linked to the Coptic Orthodox Church of St Mark in the Dublin region, and the broader Egyptian-Muslim community network linked to the Islamic Cultural Centre of Ireland at Clonskeagh.

Supporto Commerciale ed Esportazione

Ireland-Egypt trade has grown under the broader EU-Egypt Association Agreement framework and Egypt's 2024 BRICS accession. Irish exports to Egypt are dominated by pharmaceuticals (Ireland is the world's largest exporter of pharmaceuticals per capita, with all the global pharma majors operating Irish manufacturing footprints — Pfizer, MSD, Janssen, AbbVie, GSK, Sanofi, Lilly, BMS — exporting active pharmaceutical ingredients and finished products to Egypt), medical devices (Irish medtech cluster producing for the Egyptian healthcare market), dairy products (Glanbia, Kerry Group, Ornua exporting whey-protein, milk-powder, butter and cheese to Egyptian buyers), beef (Irish grass-fed beef under EU export protocols), and increasingly software and IT services (the Dublin tech hub with EMEA HQ operations of Google, Meta, Microsoft, LinkedIn, AWS, Salesforce, Stripe). Egyptian exports to Ireland include phosphates and fertilisers, citrus and dates, textiles and ready-made garments, marble and granite, and aromatic essential oils. The embassy's economic section coordinates with the Irish-Arab Business Council, Enterprise Ireland (the Irish state-owned export-promotion agency), the Irish Exporters Association, the Department of Foreign Affairs trade-promotion unit, and the EU-Egypt Association Council framework. Practical services include market intelligence on Irish regulatory developments, business matchmaking, trade-mission organisation, and Egyptian participation in Irish trade events (the Bord Bia trade missions, the Enterprise Ireland export-promotion programme) and Irish participation in Cairo events. Key sectoral priorities are pharmaceuticals (Irish manufacturing-scale meeting Egyptian healthcare-demand), medical devices (Irish medtech cluster + Egyptian hospital network), dairy and food (Glanbia/Kerry-scale dairy exports), software and IT services (Dublin tech hub + Egyptian software-development demand), and education (Irish universities attracting Egyptian students).

Opportunità di Investimento

Ireland-Egypt investment ties have grown modestly under the EU-Egypt Association Agreement framework. Irish companies in Egypt are concentrated in dairy and food (Kerry Group, Glanbia, Ornua trading relationships), pharmaceuticals (Irish-manufactured products distributed through Egyptian medical-products distribution networks), and the early-stage software-services sector via Dublin-EMEA-HQ technology multinationals with Egyptian operations. New investment opportunities for Irish capital cluster in Egyptian healthcare modernisation (Irish pharma, medtech, hospital-management know-how applicable to Egypt's healthcare-system expansion), software-and-IT services (the Dublin EMEA-tech-hub model and Egyptian software-development talent and the Cairo-Smart-Village cluster), agricultural and dairy modernisation (Irish dairy expertise applicable to Egyptian dairy-sector expansion under New Delta), and education-and-training (Irish universities and English-language schools with Egyptian-market presence). For Egyptian investors looking at Ireland, the embassy facilitates contact with IDA Ireland (Irish Development Authority — the FDI promotion agency), Enterprise Ireland (for joint-venture and partnership pathways), regional development agencies in Cork, Galway and Limerick, and sector clusters in Dublin (finance, technology, pharmaceuticals), Cork (pharma, life sciences, technology), Galway (medtech, financial services), and Limerick (medtech, manufacturing).

Supporto alle Imprese

The embassy's economic section serves Irish companies exploring Egyptian markets and Egyptian companies looking at Ireland. Core activities include sector working groups, business matchmaking, trade-mission organisation, EU-Egypt Association Agreement utilisation guidance, and one-to-one company introductions. Key sectors include pharmaceuticals (Irish manufacturing scale + Egyptian healthcare market), medical devices (Irish medtech cluster + Egyptian hospital network), dairy and food (Glanbia/Kerry/Ornua-scale dairy exports + Egyptian food-security demand), software and IT services (Dublin tech hub + Egyptian software talent), and education-and-training. The Irish-Arab Business Council is the principal bilateral business chamber and convenes regular sector-focused events; the Irish-Egyptian Business Council operates as a sub-chapter for direct Egypt-focused engagement. For Irish business visitors to Egypt, the embassy facilitates Egyptian business-visa applications, introductions to GAFI and the Suez Canal Economic Zone authority, and connections to Egyptian law firms with English-language capacity. Annual touchpoints include the Bord Bia Irish food-and-drink trade missions, the Irish Medtech Association annual conference (Galway/Dublin), the Cairo International Fair (Irish Pavilion via Enterprise Ireland coordination), Food Africa Cairo, and Sahara Expo.

Programmi Culturali ed Educativi

Ireland-Egypt cultural and educational ties draw on three layers: the Irish-Egyptian medical community within the HSE network, academic Egyptology and Mediterranean-and-Middle-Eastern studies at Irish universities, and contemporary cultural diplomacy. Trinity College Dublin (TCD), University College Dublin (UCD), and the University of Galway hold the principal Irish academic programmes in Egyptology, classical archaeology, and Middle Eastern studies. The Chester Beatty Library in Dublin Castle — one of the world's great manuscript and rare-book collections — holds significant Coptic, Arabic, and ancient Egyptian holdings, and is a frequent meeting point for the Irish-Egyptian and broader Arab-Irish cultural communities. The National Museum of Ireland on Kildare Street holds a small but notable Egyptian collection, and the Hunt Museum in Limerick includes Egyptian-themed pieces. Cultural diplomacy through the embassy includes Egyptian National Day on 23 July, Egyptian film weeks at the Irish Film Institute (IFI) in Temple Bar, the Galway Film Fleadh, and the Cork International Film Festival, Coptic-cultural events with the Dublin-area Coptic community, and academic conferences with TCD, UCD and the University of Galway. Egyptian students in Irish universities are modest in number but concentrate at TCD, UCD (medicine, business, computer science), the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (RCSI — which has a substantial Middle Eastern student community), and the University of Limerick.

Area di Servizio

The Embassy in Dublin serves the entire Republic of Ireland — all 26 counties of the Republic. There is no separate Egyptian consulate-general in Cork, Galway, Limerick or any other Irish city; the embassy in Dublin is Egypt's only diplomatic representation in Ireland. Note that the Republic of Ireland's jurisdiction is separate from Northern Ireland (which is part of the United Kingdom and falls under the Egyptian Embassy and Consulate-General in London); Egyptian nationals resident in Belfast, Derry/Londonderry or other Northern Ireland cities coordinate consular work through London, not Dublin.

Informazioni sugli Appuntamenti

Consular and visa services are appointment-based via email at info@embegyptireland.ie with the requested service in the subject line; the consular section also operates a secondary email at egyptianconsulatedublin@yahoo.ie for consular-specific enquiries. The consular section operates Monday-Friday 09:30-12:30 within general embassy hours; confirm current hours by phone before visiting. For e-Visa enquiries, the Egyptian e-Visa portal visa2egypt.gov.eg is the operating system. For Visa on Arrival, no advance booking is needed — Irish passport-holders pay at the airport bank counter on arrival in USD cash. Emergency assistance for Egyptian nationals in Ireland is handled during business hours through the consular section; outside business hours, contact the Egyptian Ministry of Foreign Affairs consular emergency line in Cairo.

Note Speciali

The embassy is located at 12 Clyde Road in Ballsbridge — Dublin's historical embassy district, walking distance from the Aviva Stadium, the RDS Royal Dublin Society grounds, and the Ballsbridge–Donnybrook residential-and-academic corridor. Access by Dublin Bus 4/7 along Pembroke Road or the Lansdowne Road DART station; from Dublin Airport (DUB) by Aircoach 700/702 or taxi: normally 30-45 minutes traffic-dependent. For Irish travellers visiting Egypt, an administrative fee may apply to all visa applications submitted at the embassy in addition to the specific visa-type fee. Visa on Arrival fees are paid in USD cash directly at the airport bank counter and are subject to change. No direct year-round flights operate between Ireland and Egypt; Irish travellers route via Istanbul (Turkish Airlines direct from Dublin), Doha (Qatar Airways direct from Dublin), Dubai (Emirates direct from Dublin), London Heathrow (BA + EgyptAir LHR-CAI connection), Amsterdam (KLM), Paris (Air France) or Frankfurt (Lufthansa). Seasonal charter flights from Dublin to Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheikh have operated periodically through tour-operator demand. Total travel time Dublin-Cairo is typically 7-11 hours including connection time. Travel insurance covering medical evacuation is strongly recommended — Irish public-health coverage and the European Health Insurance Card (EHIC/GHIC) do not extend to Egypt. For cultural preparation before travel, the Chester Beatty Library in Dublin Castle is the principal Irish institution holding significant Coptic, Arabic and ancient Egyptian collections, with a long-standing reputation as one of Europe's foremost manuscript-and-rare-book repositories; the National Museum of Ireland and the Hunt Museum in Limerick hold smaller Egyptian collections. Trinity College Dublin and the University of Galway are the main academic Egyptology and Middle Eastern studies anchors.