Illegal immigration to the United Kingdom refers to the unauthorised entry, residence, or employment of foreign nationals in contravention of British laws and border protocols. Proponents of border enforcement argue that illegal immigration undermines the principle of national sovereignty and places an unsustainable burden on public infrastructure, social contract, and poses a threat to public safety. Discussion also often focuses on illegal immigrations impact on the UK’s social fabric and national identity.
Pew Research Centre, an American think tank, estimated in 2019 that in 2017 there were between 800,000 and 1,200,000 illegal immigrants in the UK, before the English Channel illegal immigrant crossings that proliferated from 2018 onwards. Pew Research Centre later released a new estimate of between 700,000 and 900,000 illegal immigrants in the UK in 2017. [1] Between 2018 and 2025, over 190,000 illegal immigrants reached the UK via small boat Channel crossings. [2] Illegal immigrants enter the UK through a variety of clandestine and exploitative routes, by crossing the English Channel in small boats, stowing away in the back of heavy goods vehicles (HGVs) or on international trains, utilising counterfeit or stolen identity documents to bypass airport security, or by legally arriving on short-term visas and subsequently overstaying their leave to remain. Furthermore, some claim asylum at a designated port of entry, such as an airport, immediately upon arrival.
People smugglers promote the UK, claiming it is the ultimate asylum destination, as working in the gig economy is "easy" and that the government will provide a "free" hotel room. One Istanbul-based smuggler said, "all you need is a mobile phone and a bike" to make "good money". Illegal immigrants housed in Home Office-funded UK hotels bypass standard right-to-work checks by paying between £75 and £100 a week to work using the food delivery app accounts of riders who are legally registered with the delivery platforms. They use bikes and illegal e-bikes, many modified to exceed speed limits. A resident based in a London hotel, in which hundreds of male illegal immigrants live, said "nearly all" of them were working as couriers. [3]
According to the House of Commons Library, several definitions for a migrant exist in United Kingdom so that a migrant can be:
Illegal immigrants in the UK include those who have:
In February 2008, the government introduced new £10,000 fines for employers found to be employing illegal immigrants where there is negligence on the part of the employer, with unlimited fines or jail sentences for employers acting knowingly. [8]
Organised efforts of illegal immigrants attempting to clandestinely enter the UK from Calais date back to at least the late 1990s, primarily by concealing themselves within freight lorries or cross-border trains before the illegal small boat channel crossings proliferated from 2018 onwards. The situation at Calais escalated significantly in 2015 with the establishment of a large-scale informal camp, the Calais Jungle. [9]
In 2015, the newly-elected Conservative government announced it would be requiring landlords to confirm the immigration status of tenants. Those failing to do so, or knowingly or unknowingly housing illegal immigrants could face criminal prosecution. This policy is called "Right to Rent", part of the Home Office hostile environment policy.[ citation needed ]
The UK has long suffered from widespread student visa abuse; in 2024, 16,000 foreign students, after entering the UK on student visas, applied for asylum. "We've seen visa abuse in the case of legal routes, where people have gone legally and then sought to overstay when their visas weren't extended", said the UK's Indo-Pacific Minister in November 2025. [10]
It is difficult to measure how many people reside in the UK without authorisation, although a Home Office study based on Census 2001 data released in March 2005 estimated a population of between 310,000 and 570,000. [11] [12] The methods used to arrive at a figure are also much debated. [13] Problems arise in particular from the very nature of the target population, which is hidden and mostly wants to remain so. [14] The different definitions of 'illegality' adopted in the studies also pose a significant challenge to the comparability of the data. However, despite the methodological difficulties of estimating the number of people living in the UK without authorisation, the residual method has been widely adopted. [15] [16] [12] This method subtracts the known number of authorised migrants from the total migrant population to arrive at a residual number which represents the de facto number of illegal migrants. [17]
Migration Watch UK, a think tank opposed to a large scale of immigration, [18] has criticised the Home Office figures for not including the UK-born dependent children of illegal migrants. They suggested in 2007 that the Home Office had underestimated the numbers of illegal migrants by between 15,000 and 85,000. [19]
A study carried out by a research team at LSE for the Greater London Authority, published in 2009, estimated the illegal migrant population of the UK by updating the Home Office study. [16] The LSE's study takes into account other factors not included in the previous estimate, namely the continued arrival of asylum seekers, the clearance of the asylum applications backlog, further illegal migrants entering and leaving the country, more migrants overstaying, and the regularisation of EU accession citizens.
The most significant change in this estimate is, however, the inclusion of children born in the UK to illegal immigrants. For the LSE team illegal migrants oscillate between 417,000 and 863,000, including a population of UK-born children ranging between 44,000 and 144,000. Drawing on this and taking stock of the outcome of the recent Case Resolution Programme, [20] a University of Oxford study by Nando Sigona and Vanessa Hughes estimated at the end of 2011 a population of illegal migrant children of 120,000, with over half born in the UK to parents residing without legal immigration status. [21] A Greater London Authority-funded study by researchers at the University of Wolverhampton's Institute for Community Research and Development updated these figures in 2020, and estimated that the figure in April 2017 was between 594,000 and 745,000 [15] including between 191,000 and 241,000 children. [15] A January 2025 study commissioned by Thames Water to identify "hidden" and "transient" users of water, suggested that London is home to as many as 585,000 illegal migrants, the equivalent to one in twelve of the city's population. [22]
The Conservative party claimed that Channel migrants are 24 times more likely to go to prison than British citizens. [23] This was then covered by news sources such as the Daily Express, [24] GB News, [25] and the Telegraph. [26] This was debunked however as the analysis used out of date statistics for their claim and compared general foreign national imprisonment rates to small boat migrants specifically. [27] The Home Office also rebuked these claims with a spokesperson saying "The comparison of these two data sets is completely unfounded. It is inappropriate to apply foreign imprisonment rates to small boat arrival data as these consist of very different groups of people." [27]
The illegal small boat crossings were first reported on in 2015 when a sporadic number of small boats arrived off the Kent coast from France. [28]
In November and December 2018, there was a surge in illegal immigrant channel crossings. On 28 December 2018, the UK Home Secretary declared a "major incident" regarding illegal immigrants attempting to cross the channel. [29]
The largest number of illegal immigrants to illegally enter the UK by crossing the English Channel on a single day in 2025 was 1,195 on 19 different boats on 31 May 2025. [30]
As of 2 February 2026, the Home Office has detected 193,599 migrants who have crossed the English Channel in small boats since 2018. [31] [32] Crossing the Channel without permission is a criminal offence under UK law, as is to attempt to use a dangerous type of vessel or any unregistered craft under French law. [33]
Deaths have been reported in every year since the crossings began increasing in 2018.
In October 2019 in a single incident, 39 migrants from Vietnam suffocated together in a lorry trailer travelling from Belgium to Essex. The Vietnamese leader of the smuggling gang was jailed in Belgium while a Romanian smuggler of the ring was sentenced at the Old Bailey. [34] [35]
A report in 2020 found that almost 300 people had died crossing the English Channel on small boats in the twenty years prior. [35] In November 2021 when 28 people drowned during one crossing attempt. [36] 2024 saw a significant increase in channel crossing deaths, with 61 dead by the end of the year. [37] [38]
{{cite news}}: |last= has generic name (help)UNORTHODOX CROSSINGS OF THE DOVER STRAIT TRAFFIC SEPARATION SCHEME Strictly prohibited in the French part of the Dover strait. Strictly prohibited for, scuba divers windsurfs, kitesurfs (or similar), hydroplanes (or similar), fly-boards (or similar), personal watercrafts, towed leisure crafts, crafts exclusively propelled by human energy, beach crafts, and all unregistered crafts