What's in the EU's landmark asylum reform?

Newsworm
Newsworm
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AFP
June 12, 2026
The European Union's most significant migration reform in decades took effect on June 12, introducing mandatory border screening, accelerated asylum procedures and a solidarity mechanism to redistribute migrants across member states. Backed by EU migration chief Magnus Brunner, the pact promises greater control — but rights groups warn it puts vulnerable people at serious risk.
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What's in the EU's landmark asylum reform?
Migrants irregularly entering the EU will have their fingerprints taken under new rules coming into force on June 12 - AFP

A major reform of European migration rules aimed at hardening border procedures and overhauling the asylum process comes into force on Friday. "For the first time we have a comprehensive European system," said the EU's migration chief Magnus Brunner, maintaining the reform would hand EU nations more control over comings and goings.

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Here is an overview of the main changes:

Border procedures

Migrants irregularly entering the European Union will undergo identity and security checks in a process lasting up to seven days. Identity documents and biometric readings of their faces and fingerprints will be recorded in a database. The screening aims to determine who should receive an accelerated or normal asylum application process, and who should be sent back to their country of origin or transit.

Rights groups complain this will de facto result in most migrants, including children, being detained for the duration of the process.

Fast-track rejection

Asylum-seekers considered a security risk or with lower chances of receiving refugee status, those coming from countries such as Morocco and Bangladesh whose nationals are declined protection in at least 80 percent of cases, will be processed faster. Their applications would be processed in centres close to the EU's "external borders", meaning land frontiers, ports and airports, in a process taking up to 12 weeks.

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Rights groups say this will in most cases result in a further period of detention and a rushed decision. For other asylum seekers, the standard procedure will continue to apply.

Solidarity mechanism

Under EU rules, the country in which an irregular migrant first sets foot is responsible for handling their case. That places stress on Italy, Greece and Malta, which have received the bulk of land and sea arrivals in recent years. To ease that burden, the reform introduces a solidarity mechanism compelling member states to take in a certain number of asylum-seekers arriving in the outer-rim countries.

Alternatively, they can pay 20,000 euros ($23,000) per asylum-seeker to the countries under pressure. At least 30,000 asylum-seekers a year will come under this relocation system. Related negotiations have already proven difficult, with a first round held last year seeing several countries refusing to accept any relocations.

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Surge response

The package establishes an emergency response in the event of unexpected migration surges, the same sort of crisis the EU faced in 2015-2016 when more than two million asylum-seekers entered the bloc, many from war-torn Syria and Afghanistan. It will allow member states to reduce protections for asylum-seekers, making it possible to hold them longer than usually permitted in detention centres on the EU's external borders.

The system will also apply to the so-called "instrumentalisation" of migratory flows, an accusation often leveled at Belarus and Russia, which EU neighbours say push migrants across the border in a bid to destabilise the 27-nation bloc.

Concerns

A dozen member states are yet to finalise preparations, including setting up the necessary infrastructure, to accommodate the new screening procedures. Others have experienced troubles with the biometric database. Public opinion has further hardened on migration since the changes were adopted, pushing EU states to demand further action.

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A new package of measures aimed at boosting deportations of failed asylum-seekers is currently rushing through the EU's legislative process. This has added to rights groups' worries that humanitarian concerns were taking the back seat to politics in Europe. "The Pact takes a sledgehammer to the right to asylum at a time when the world needs Europe more than ever to champion human rights," Judith Sunderland of Human Rights Watch said of the measures coming into force on June 12.

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