Migrant crisis as council spending hits ยฃ134m โ€“ nearly tripled in just 5 years | Politics | News


A proposed overhaul of what Labour calls Britainโ€™s โ€œbrokenโ€ asylum system has triggered warnings of a looming clash with local councils, with local authorities now spending nearly ยฃ134million more on social care for adult asylum seekers than they were five years ago. And research by the TaxPayers Alliance has indicated that Kent alone is shelling out more than ยฃ40million a year.

As councils draw up budgets for 2026โ€“27, campaigners warned the rising bill for asylum-related social care is becoming โ€œyet another ticking time bombโ€ for town halls already under severe financial strain. The analysis shows total council spending on social care for adult asylum seekers reached almost ยฃ134 million in 2024โ€“25, up from ยฃ50.6 million five years earlier. Although that figure is below a peak of nearly ยฃ191 million in 2022โ€“23, it remains far higher than pre-pandemic levels.

Spending on asylum-seeking children is significantly higher. Councils now spend more than ยฃ600 million a year on social care for these children, including ยฃ287.2 million for those living with their families and ยฃ322.6 million for unaccompanied children.

Prior to 2022โ€“23, councils did not separately record spending on unaccompanied asylum-seeking children, with costs absorbed into wider childrenโ€™s social care budgets. Since the category was introduced, spending on unaccompanied children has risen by 32 %.

The TaxPayersโ€™ Alliance said asylum-related social care is distinct from Home Office asylum support, such as hotels, dispersal accommodation, meals and subsistence payments. Council-funded support can include interpretation and language services, as well as help accessing healthcare, housing, education and legal advice. Where asylum-seeking children enter care, councils must also cover accommodation and care placement costs.

Kent was the highest-spending authority on asylum seeker social care in 2024โ€“25, with costs of ยฃ41.6 million. Hampshire followed with ยฃ23.9 million, while Manchester spent ยฃ23.2 million.

Kent also recorded the largest increase since 2019โ€“20, with spending quadrupling from ยฃ9.9 million to ยฃ41.6 million. Hampshireโ€™s costs rose from zero to ยฃ23.9 million over the same period, while Surreyโ€™s spending surged from ยฃ1,243 to ยฃ22.6 million.

Overall, directly reported asylum-related social care spending has more than doubled in real terms since 2019โ€“20. Total expenditure rose from ยฃ299 million to ยฃ744 million in 2024โ€“25, a real-terms increase of 148 %.

Much of the growth followed 2021โ€“22, driven by sharp rises in adult social care costs and the introduction of a separate category for unaccompanied children.

Adult asylum seeker support alone rose by 165 % in real terms between 2019โ€“20 and 2024โ€“25, while spending on unaccompanied children has become the single largest component of asylum-related social care.

Spending is heavily concentrated among a small number of councils, with the top ten authorities accounting for 27 % of the total.

Per-household costs vary widely, ranging from ยฃ400 in the City of London to ยฃ133 in Islington, compared with a national average of ยฃ34.

Anne Strickland, a researcher at the TaxPayersโ€™ Alliance, said: โ€œThe escalating costs of providing social care for asylum seekers represents yet another ticking time bomb in town hall budgets, with local residents suffering the consequences.

โ€œTaxpayers have watched on with dismay at the failure of successive governments to get a grip on this issue, knowing that they will inevitably end up picking up the tab.

โ€œWith councils essentially helpless in the face of this ongoing crisis, itโ€™s imperative that Whitehall urgently finds a way to stop the migration crisis.โ€

Leave comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked with *.