Education State
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What Happens After You Land in Dublin

Most education agencies handle your application, take their fee, and that is the last you hear from them. We work differently in one specific way. Our office is in Dublin, and we are still around after you arrive.

Moving to a new country is two problems at once. The first is getting in: the application, the offer, the visa. Most agencies solve that one. The second is everything after you land, and it is the one nobody helps with. We do.

Settling in and integration support in Ireland

Why that matters more than it sounds

Once you have landed, the real work starts: finding accommodation, opening a bank account, registering with immigration, learning the transport system, and building the professional network that turns your degree into a career. The second problem is harder than the first, and it gets a lot less attention. That is where having people on the ground in Dublin changes things.

What our Dublin office does

Employer visits

We organise visits to major employers around Dublin. You walk into their offices, meet people who work there, and hear from Education State graduates who finished their degree, stayed on, and built careers there. These are not marketing events, they are introductions. Dublin packs a huge concentration of employers a short commute from campus: the European headquarters of Google, Meta, Apple, Amazon, LinkedIn, Microsoft, Deloitte, PwC and dozens more.

Networking events

We run regular events bringing together current students, recent graduates, and alumni now working in Ireland. The network builds itself. You meet people a year or two ahead of you who have already navigated the job search, the visa, and the transition from student to employee. For international students, connecting with that community early changes the whole experience.

CV workshops and career support

Workshops led by people who have actually hired for Irish and multinational companies. They know what Irish employers look for, how Irish CVs differ from what you are used to, and how to position an international background as a strength. This support continues during your Stamp 1G Graduate visa. Job search guidance, interview prep, and introductions do not stop when you graduate.

The practical stuff

The first weeks in Ireland are a blur of admin. We sit down with you and work through the list below, one item at a time, so nothing gets lost in the move.

  • Bank account. Irish banks have specific requirements for international students. We walk you through which bank, which account, and what documents to bring.
  • PPS number. You need it to work legally. Straightforward, but not obvious if you have never done it.
  • Immigration registration (IRP). Booking the appointment, preparing documents, knowing what to expect.
  • Accommodation. Finding a room in Dublin is competitive. We give realistic guidance on where to look, what to pay, and what to watch for.
  • SIM card, transport card, grocery orientation. The small things nobody explains that make your first week easier.

A community, not just a service

We have placed thousands of students in Ireland. A good number are still here, working at companies they first walked into on one of our employer visits, earning in euros, building lives they did not expect when they applied. We are still here too. Our office is at 23 Marlborough Street, Dublin 1. If you are in the city, you can walk in. If you are not here yet, that is what WhatsApp is for.

The degree is the reason you come to Ireland. The network, the employer introductions, and the community of people who have done what you are about to do are the part most graduates say made the biggest difference.

Thinking about studying in Ireland? Let's talk through what comes after you land.

Get your free consultation

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