Image source, Getty ImagesPeople granted asylum in the UK will be required to pay back around £10,000 towards the cost of their accommodation and support once they start earning, the government has announced.
Adults who have sufficient funds will be asked to pay off the sum over time under new rules included in the upcoming Immigration and Asylum Bill, which will be put before Parliament on Tuesday.
It will apply to asylum seekers who have the right to work in the UK, and must be paid off before they can become eligible to settle here permanently.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood said the changes would demonstrate “asylum support is a right, but it is also a responsibility”.
She added: “Once people can contribute and repay the generosity of the British people, we expect them to do so.”
The plans will mean migrants working and earning a specific amount will be required to pay back a flat-rate sum, which is expected to be set at £10,000.
The Home Office has not determined how much they would need to earn before making monthly instalments.
The home secretary would have the power to adjust the charge and the repayment thresholds in the future to ensure “they are both fair to the taxpayer and will not force any migrant into destitution”.
Those whose claims have been rejected will also have to pay back the costs if their income matches the government threshold.
Around £4bn of taxpayers’ money was spent on supporting asylum seekers last year, according to the Home Office.
The average cost of housing an asylum seeker for one night in publicly-owned accommodation is £23.25, and £144 in a hotel – while subsistence payments range from £9.95 to £49.18 for each person per week.
The Refugee Council said the “unfair, impractical” plans amounted to an “extra tax on refugees”, and would make it “harder for families to rebuild their lives and stand on their own feet”.
Its director of external affairs Imran Hussain said: “The reason why many need asylum support is because the Home Office itself bans asylum seekers from working while their claims are being assessed.
“Asylum support is only given to people who are at risk of being destitute, so this new financial burden would only harm those who arrive on our shores with nothing.”
The University of Oxford’s Migration Observatory questioned how much money the government would actually be able to recoup through the system, pointing to the low rates of employment and earning among refugees.
Dr Madeleine Sumption said: “In 2023, for example, an estimated 13% of people granted refugee status five years earlier were earning at least £20,000, with the rest either not working or on lower earnings.
“The data suggests that unless thresholds were significantly below the minimum wage, a relatively small share of people granted asylum would earn enough to make contributions to the scheme.”
According to the Home Office, a quarter of 16 to 64-year-olds granted asylum between 2015 and 2023 were in employment within the same calendar.
That number rose to 50% two years after refugee status was granted.
Of those who were in employment eight years after receiving refugee status, 37% had been in full-time work with median earnings of £23,000, with just 40% earning more than the minimum wage.
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp said Labour had “adopted yet another” Conservative policy, adding: “This precise scheme was proposed by us in an amendment to the Immigration Bill last year, which Labour blocked.”
Ministers hope the Immigration and Asylum Bill will bring into force proposals that will create a firm but fair asylum system, and which will reduce the pull factors driving illegal migration.
However, parts of the bill are expected to draw opposition from some Labour MPs opposed to some of the strictest measures it will contain.
Last week, the Home Office revealed it was planning to use more former military barracks to house thousands of asylum seekers after closing 20 more hotels in England.
It also said the new the immigration law would include plans for new “capped safe and legal” routes to the UK for refugees, which would involve organisations like universities, community groups and businesses sponsoring a person to reduce costs for the taxpayer.
UK migration data at a glance
Net migration (change in population), January 2025 to December 2025
48% over 12 months
as of 21 May 2026
Immigration (people arriving), January 2025 to December 2025
20% over 12 months
as of 21 May 2026
Emigration (people leaving), January 2025 to December 2025
6% over 12 months
as of 21 May 2026
Asylum applications, April 2025 to March 2026
12% over 12 months
as of 21 May 2026
Returns and deportations from the UK, April 2025 to March 2026
7% over 12 months
as of 21 May 2026
Arrivals by small boat, 1 January 2026 to 25 June 2026
37% same period 2025
as of 26 June 2026
Small boat crossings and other illegal arrivals
How many people cross the English Channel in small boats?
Boats that arrived in the UK from 26 June 2025 to 25 June 2026 carried an average of 65 people. This has more than doubled since 2021.
Experts say overcrowding in boats makes crossings riskier. At least 84 people died while attempting to cross the Channel in 2024, according to the United Nations (UN).
When looking at the scale of small boats crossings, the number of these arrivals is about 5% of the size of total immigration into the UK from January 2025 to December 2025.
The government has pledged to “smash the gangs” behind these crossings in order to reduce the numbers.
Who is arriving in the UK on small boats?
In the latest figures covering January 2025 to December 2025, at least 2,000 people who arrived by small boat were found to be potential victims of human trafficking or other forms of modern slavery, according to the Home Office.
How else do people stay in the UK without permission?
Asylum applications and hotels
How many people are in asylum accommodation?
Numbers of asylum seekers in hotels by council area
Type in a postcode or the name of a local council below to see how many asylum seekers are housed in the area
How many people apply for asylum in the UK?
Most people who arrive in the UK by small boat claim asylum, but they were only 42% of all asylum seekers from April 2025 to March 2026.
The rest include people who arrived by other illegal means or who came to the UK legally and applied for asylum while holding, or just after holding, a valid visa.
How big is the asylum backlog?
Returns and deportations from the UK
How many people are returned or deported from the UK?
Who is returned from the UK?
What is the ‘one in, one out’ deal with France?
How do people leave the UK under immigration control?
Visas for legal migration
How do people come to the UK legally?
What are the most common reasons for entry each year?
Who gets the most common UK visas?
Migration to Europe
How many people cross to Europe illegally in boats?
How many people apply for asylum in Europe?
How does net migration compare across Europe?
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