What the EU does
The EU aims at ensuring the security of the Schengen area, developing a common EU migration and asylum policy, building a safer Europe and promoting cooperation with non-EU countries. The European Commission works closely with the EU countries and European agencies, international organisations and other stakeholders to develop and implement these policies. They help protect and sustain the area of freedom, security and justice.

Facts about home affairs
Sources: Eurostat; European Parliament
Areas of action
Area of freedom, security and justice without internal frontiers
Policies and actions aimed at ensuring a safer and more secure Europe
Rules managing migration and establishing a common asylum system at EU level
Facilitating quicker, safer, and more structured law enforcement cooperation to combat cross-border crime and terrorism in the EU
Partnering globally to tackle the external dimension of our Home Affairs policies
Key achievements
- In 2025, the EU celebrated the 40th anniversary of Schengen. 29 countries (25 EU and 4 associated) are full members of the Schengen area where 450 million people can travel without passport control. It helps millions of people who cross borders daily and 31 million enterprises who may benefit from easier access to the internal market.
- The Pact on Migration and Asylum entered into force in 2024, offering a comprehensive approach that aims at strengthening and integrating key EU policies on migration, asylum, border management and integration. With firm but fair rules, it is designed to manage and normalise migration for the long term.
- More recently, in 2025, the Commission proposed a Common European System for Returns, a new legal framework with the aim to have swifter, simpler and more effective return procedures across the European Union, complementing the new EU rules on migration and asylum.
- In 2025, the Commission presented ProtectEU, the new European Internal Security Strategy. The strategy sets out a vision for a stronger EU. Its goals are to jointly anticipate, prevent and respond to security threats, ensuring peace, stability and prosperity for EU citizens.
In focus
ProtectEU addresses the evolving threat landscape and has three main objectives: stepping up capabilities to protect people, mainstreaming security considerations in EU policy and external action, and reinforcing a whole-of-society approach to ensure comprehensive security and safety.
Topics covered by the strategy include:
- Hybrid threats and other hostile acts
- Cyber and online security, including cybercrime
- Organised crime and drug-trafficking
- Terrorism and radicalisation
- Firearms
- Trafficking in human beings
- Child sexual abuse
- Financial crimes
- Innovation and foresight
- Supporting police cooperation

This page was last reviewed on 8 April 2026