PayMetric Labs
Ireland · Security8 min read12 June 2026

Cybersecurity Salaries in Ireland 2026: Why AI Security Skills Are Earning a Premium

By PayMetric Labs Research Desk

From SOC analysts to CISOs, cybersecurity pay in Ireland has never been more stable. DORA, NIS2, and the rise of AI-specific threats are driving non-discretionary hiring demand across every tier. Here are the exact 2026 salary benchmarks.

Security is no longer a discretionary budget line

Something significant has shifted in how Irish employers think about cybersecurity hiring. For most of the 2010s, security was a cost centre: funded when budgets allowed, cut when they did not. In mid-2026, that calculus has changed entirely. GDPR enforcement is established. DORA is live and being audited in the IFSC. NIS2 has expanded the compliance perimeter far beyond financial services. Security professionals in Ireland now sit in a category of hiring that companies cannot defer.

The practical effect is some of the most stable salary floors in Irish tech. Our State of Tech Salaries Mid 2026 data shows cybersecurity as the fastest-growing discipline by year-on-year pay movement in the first half of 2026. Year-on-year growth at the Security Architect level is running at 7.4%, higher than any other role in the broader engineering market.

Cybersecurity salary benchmarks by tier: Ireland 2026

Median gross annual salary in €K · permanent roles

RoleMedianRangeYoY
SOC Analyst (Tier 1 / Tier 2)€60K€50K – €70K+4.1%
Penetration Tester / Ethical Hacker€87K€75K – €100K+5.8%
Security Architect / GRC Lead€120K€105K – €135K++7.4%
CISO (Chief Information Security Officer)€165K€150K++6.2%

SOC Analyst (Tier 1 / Tier 2)

€60K€50K – €70K

The entry point into defensive security operations. Tier 1 analysts monitor alerts and triage incidents; Tier 2 analysts investigate, correlate across data sources, and begin threat hunting. Dublin's concentration of global tech companies means SOC roles are often embedded inside EMEA security operations centres with 24/7 rotation requirements, which lifts the base above equivalent roles in other Irish industries.

Certifications that move compensation

CompTIA Security+SC-200 (Microsoft Sentinel)GCIH

Penetration Tester / Ethical Hacker

€87K€75K – €100K

Offensive security professionals simulating real-world attacks against systems, applications, and networks. In Ireland, pentesting demand is strongest in financial services, regulated pharma, and enterprise tech, where external assessments are a compliance requirement rather than a discretionary exercise. Specialists with cloud pentesting capability (AWS, Azure environment testing) are commanding a further premium above this band.

Certifications that move compensation

OSCPCEHCREST CRT

Security Architect / GRC Lead

€120K€105K – €135K+

Designs security controls at the enterprise level: zero-trust architecture, identity and access management frameworks, cloud security posture, and regulatory compliance programmes (DORA, NIS2, GDPR). GRC Leads who can translate security posture into board-level risk language are among the most sought-after profiles in Dublin's IFSC financial cluster and in the large-scale tech employers along the Grand Canal Dock.

Certifications that move compensation

CISSPCISMSABSA

CISO (Chief Information Security Officer)

€165K€150K+

Board-facing security leadership with full ownership of an organisation's security strategy, incident response posture, regulatory relationships, and security culture. In mid-2026, CISO hiring in Ireland has been driven almost entirely by DORA and NIS2 compliance obligations. Financial institutions in the IFSC now treat a credible CISO as a regulatory necessity rather than a discretionary executive hire.

Certifications that move compensation

CISSPCISMCRISC

What do these salaries look like after Irish tax?

All benchmarks above are gross. After Income Tax, USC, and PRSI, a €105K Security Architect package takes home roughly €64,500 to €66,000 per year. Use our Ireland take-home calculator to model your specific number, including pension contributions and any additional tax credits.

DORA and NIS2: the compliance wave driving 2026 hiring

Two pieces of European legislation are reshaping cybersecurity hiring in Ireland in ways that go beyond the typical compliance-driven demand cycle.

DORA (Digital Operational Resilience Act)

Effective from January 2025 with enforcement ramping through 2026, DORA applies to financial institutions and their critical ICT service providers. It mandates digital operational resilience testing, ICT risk management frameworks, and stringent third-party risk oversight. Dublin's IFSC, as one of Europe's largest concentrations of financial services firms, is directly in scope.

The hiring impact: DORA requires documented threat-led penetration testing (TLPT), ICT risk registers, and incident classification frameworks. Financial institutions that do not have qualified GRC and security architecture staff in place face regulatory action. This is entirely non-discretionary demand, which is why Security Architect and GRC Lead salaries at IFSC firms have jumped sharply in the first half of 2026.

NIS2 (Network and Information Security Directive 2)

NIS2 expands the scope of the original NIS directive dramatically, pulling in sectors that were previously outside it: food supply chains, postal services, waste management, digital infrastructure providers, and more. For Ireland, this means a significant expansion of the number of organisations now legally required to maintain documented cybersecurity programmes and incident reporting processes.

The practical result is a pool of companies that have never needed dedicated security professionals suddenly needing to hire them quickly. Supply has not expanded at the same rate, which is pushing mid-market cybersecurity salaries up across the board, not just in financial services and big tech.

The rise of AI security: protecting the LLM pipeline

The newest high-paying niche in Irish cybersecurity is one that barely existed 18 months ago: AI security engineering. As companies deploy large language models and AI-powered products into production, they have discovered that traditional application security frameworks are not designed to handle the specific risk surfaces that these systems introduce.

Security engineers who specialise in protecting corporate AI pipelines from the following categories of attack are commanding a 15 to 20% premium over equivalent application security roles:

Prompt injection

Attackers using crafted inputs to override system instructions and exfiltrate data or trigger unintended model behaviour in production applications.

Training data poisoning

Adversarial manipulation of training datasets or fine-tuning data to introduce backdoors or biased outputs into deployed models.

Sensitive data leakage

Models memorising and reproducing personally identifiable information (PII) or proprietary data from training, creating GDPR exposure.

Model inversion attacks

Techniques that attempt to reconstruct training data from model outputs, particularly relevant for models trained on healthcare or financial datasets.

This niche is emerging fast enough that formal accreditation pathways are still maturing. Engineers entering it today are largely doing so by combining traditional application security depth (OWASP expertise, secure SDLC experience) with hands-on knowledge of LLM architecture and inference pipelines. That combination is rare and priced accordingly. For more on the cloud and platform engineering context that underpins AI security work, see the cloud engineer salary and skills breakdown.

Which certifications are actually moving Irish security salaries?

Not all certifications carry equal weight in the Irish market. Based on our data, these are the credentials that consistently correlate with salary premiums rather than just marking a checkbox:

CertificationBest forSalary impact
CISSPSecurity Architect / CISO track+€8K – €15K
OSCPPenetration testing roles+€5K – €12K
CISMGRC and security management+€6K – €10K
CEHEthical hacking (entry-level signal)+€3K – €6K
CRISCRisk and compliance leadership+€5K – €9K
SC-200Azure / Microsoft Sentinel SOC roles+€2K – €5K

To benchmark your current security profile against the broader Irish market, see the full cybersecurity engineer salary data and compare your numbers against the State of Tech Salaries in Ireland: Mid 2026 report.

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Frequently asked questions

1

What does a cybersecurity engineer earn in Ireland in 2026?

Cybersecurity salaries in Ireland range from €60,000–€75,000 at junior/mid level to €90,000–€120,000 at senior level. Security architects and principal security engineers earn €115,000–€155,000+. Cybersecurity professionals with cloud security specialisation (AWS Security, Azure Security, GCP Security) and AI security experience command the highest premiums. The Irish market is particularly strong for cloud-native security and GRC roles driven by hyperscaler demand and Ireland's role as Europe's data centre hub.

2

Which cybersecurity certifications command the highest pay in Ireland?

The certifications with the largest salary premiums in the Irish market are: CISSP (€6,000–€12,000 premium for cloud-focused roles), AWS Security Specialty (€7,000–£13,000), CISM (€5,000–€9,000), CCSP (€5,000–€10,000), and Microsoft SC-100 for Azure environments (€5,000–€9,000). The highest-value profile combines a recognised security qualification (CISSP, CISM) with hands-on cloud platform experience. Standalone security certifications without cloud depth carry smaller premiums in the current Irish market.

3

Is cybersecurity a well-paid specialism in Ireland's tech market?

Yes, and it is one of the most supply-constrained specialisms in the market. Ireland hosts a large concentration of US multinational European headquarters, financial services firms, and data centres, all of which have significant and growing security requirements. Demand consistently exceeds supply at the senior and specialist level. Cybersecurity roles also tend to be more resilient to tech hiring slowdowns than product engineering roles, as security is increasingly treated as non-discretionary.

4

How does cybersecurity pay in Ireland compare to the UK?

Ireland pays approximately 10–15% more in gross terms for equivalent cybersecurity roles, reflecting Ireland's hyperscaler concentration and the cost-of-living premium employers factor into Dublin packages. A Senior Security Engineer in Dublin earns approximately €95,000–€115,000; the equivalent in London earns approximately £78,000–£95,000 (roughly €91,000–€110,000 at current exchange rates). After tax, the difference narrows to approximately €3,000–€7,000 per year in take-home for Senior Engineers.

5

Do AI security skills command a premium in Ireland in 2026?

Yes, increasingly so. AI security encompasses two distinct areas: securing AI and ML systems (model safety, prompt injection defence, training data integrity) and using AI tools to enhance traditional security capabilities (AI-powered threat detection, automated incident response). Both are driving demand. Irish companies with significant AI infrastructure — particularly the major hyperscalers — are actively hiring security engineers who understand AI-specific attack surfaces. This is a small but fast-growing premium area where supply is extremely limited relative to demand.

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