Verified facts on banking in Ireland for non-residents — community reports fill in as members share their experience. Reviewed for 2026.
Ireland: banking for non-residents and digital nomads. Ireland is an EU member where, for a foreigner, accounts open easily. Local banks are used to internationally mobile customers.
Opening an account and going remote. Whether you can open remotely varies bank by bank; EMI and fintech accounts (e.g. Wise, Revolut) are a lighter-touch fallback for everyday spending and currency exchange.
Reporting, AML and stability. Ireland takes part in CRS automatic exchange, so an account here is reported to your tax-residence country each year; it is not on the FATF/EU AML high-risk lists, so onboarding follows standard due-diligence rather than enhanced scrutiny; political and economic stability is rated high (World Bank governance indicators), which shapes the risk of capital controls, abrupt banking-rule changes or currency turmoil affecting your account.
What applicants report. There are no first-hand community reports yet for Ireland — this section fills in as members share their experience.
Bottom line. Ireland is a comparatively easy place for a foreigner to open an account; an EMI like Wise or Revolut covers everyday needs while a local account is arranged.
Grouped by bank — each applicant type is a row. Colour shows the reported outcome.
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