The TRUE Cost of Housing Asylum Seekers
Estimates have risen 1,757% from £70M to BILLIONS!
As Britain grapples with housing shortages, NHS waiting lists, and squeezed public services, the UK's asylum system has become a financial black hole. What started as a modest unrealistic government forecast of up to £70 million annually for housing asylum seekers in hotels back in 2021 has exploded into a multi-billion-pound burden. Today, as of July 2025, costs have escalated by an eye-watering 1,757% based on early estimates, with taxpayers footing daily bills that once hit £8.3 million. But recent reductions offer a glimmer of hope—or do they?
I want to dive into the numbers and offer you my thoughts.
From Forecast to Financial Fiasco
Back in March 2021, the UK government projected hotel costs for asylum seekers in the 2021-22 financial year would range between £40 million and £70 million—a seemingly manageable sum amid supposed efforts to handle rising arrivals. That being said, I think the government were overly ambitious to keep their estimates so low. Fast forward to 2022, and Migration Watch UK estimated the annual tab had rocketed to nearly £1.3 billion, over 1,757% higher than the upper forecast. This wasn't a one-off; costs kept climbing.
By 2022-23, hotel spending alone hit £2.3 billion, part of a £4.7 billion total for asylum support. In 2023-24, it peaked at £3.1 billion for hotels (£8.3 million per day on average), with overall asylum support steady at £4.7 billion. The 2023-24 asylum system as a whole cost £5.4 billion—more than double the 2021-22 figure.
By the financial year ending March 2025 (2024-25), hotel costs dropped 30% to £2.1 billion, averaging £5.77 million daily, thanks to hotel closures and shifts to other accommodations. Still, the Home Office projects £3.1 billion for hotels in 2025-26. Over a decade, accommodation contracts originally pegged at £4.5 billion are now forecast to hit £15.3 billion—more than triple the estimate.
To put it in perspective, here's a breakdown of the numbers:
Backlogs, Boats, and Budget Loopholes
Small boat crossings surged from around 8,400 in 2020 to over 45,000 in 2022, creating a backlog of more than 175,000 asylum claims by mid-2023. This forced reliance on expensive hotels, where per-person nightly costs averaged £132 in 2022-23, rose to £127-£156 by 2024—seven times more than dispersed housing (used often by domestic abuse victims) at £19 per night.
Adding fuel to the fire: A chunk of these costs—£4.3 billion in 2023 alone—came from the UK's Official Development Assistance (ODA) budget, up from £918 million in 2021 and representing 28% of aid spending. In 2024, it was £2.8 billion (20% of aid), with £2.2 billion planned for 2025-26. Critics, including aid groups, slam this as "unsustainable" and poor value, diverting funds from global poverty relief. The Independent Commission on Aid Impact (ICAI) warns that without control, refugee costs could absorb one-fifth of the reduced aid budget.
Fiscal oversight? The Home Office overspent its asylum budget by billions from 2021-24, planning just £110 million annually at the start of each year.
Government Efforts and Future Projections
Progress is slowly being made. By April 2024, over 150 hotels were closed, slashing daily costs by £8 million. The hotel closures figure is plausible, if unbelievable, whilst the £8 million figure is likely an overestimate. The government aims to end hotel use entirely by 2029, which I find unlikely and more of a headline grab, shifting to dispersed housing, former military bases (like RAF Scampton, costing £260 million despite overruns), and other large sites. Asylum seekers receive minimal support: £49.18 weekly for essentials, with no benefits until claims are resolved.
The National Audit Office (NAO) forecasts £15.3 billion over 10 years for contracts, with hotels still 76% of costs but only 35% of accommodations in 2024-25. ODA spending on UK-hosted refugees could hit 20% of the aid budget if unchecked.
Sansom’s Final Thought
Now I’ve got the numbers out of the way I can give you some opinion on all of this data. It’s overwhelming at times but it’s there for you to analyse.
As has been my feeling for a long time now when it comes to asylum seekers, refugees, illegal immigrants (we don’t use the term ‘irregular migrants’ around here) - I don’t believe the government has any idea what they’re doing. It seems as though those in charge of the pursestrings don’t know how to budget, count or do simple maths. How do you go from an estimated £70m cost only a few years ago to multiple billions today?
One thing that is for sure: you and I will be paying for it. We’re already paying for people to break into our country and stay in our hotels; we’re feeding them and providing the circumstances in which to work on the black market; and when they commit a crime we’ll put them up in one of our prisons at a cost of £55,000-per-year. How’s that for value for money on your taxes? It’s a never-ending expense that we should NOT be paying.
And what has the government just announced? Sanctions on the people smugglers. It’s laughable! These people are criminals. How do you sanction what I would imagine is cash-in-hand income collected by gangs using burner phones? Scooby Doo is less confused than this Parliament and there’s no mystery on how to solve this issue—deport, deport, deport!
My future prediction is that these costs will rise as more and more people illegally arrive in the UK. The problems we see developing on our streets will inevitably get worse as crime continues to climb with rape and sexual abuse a prevalent concern.
The overarching sentiment among many, myself included, is that we are paying for those who hate us to live here and abuse us. And all the while we’re being told to keep our mouths shut, that our anger is racist and “diversity is our strength.”
We shouldn’t. It’s not. And it isn’t.
If you enjoyed this article, please consider sharing it. This information is important. The British taxpayer should not be footing the bill for illegal migrants.
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Sources:
Below is a comprehensive list of the key sources mentioned or implied in the article, along with direct links to the relevant reports, briefings, and accounts. I've focused on official and primary sources for accuracy and included the most recent or directly applicable versions based on the data discussed.
Migration Watch UK - Briefing on the Cost of Housing Asylum Seekers in Hotels (September 2022): This provides the £1.3 billion annual estimate for 2022 and contrasts it with the 2021 forecast. Link: https://www.migrationwatchuk.org/briefing-paper/509/cost-of-housing-asylum-seekers-in-hotels
National Audit Office (NAO) - The Home Office’s Asylum Accommodation Contracts Report (May 2025): This details the escalation from £4.5 billion to £15.3 billion over 10 years, hotel cost breakdowns, and future projections. Link: https://www.nao.org.uk/reports/the-home-offices-asylum-accommodation-contracts/ PDF Version: https://www.nao.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/home-offices-asylum-accommodation-contracts.pdf
National Audit Office (NAO) - Investigation into Asylum Accommodation (March 2024): Covers hotel usage reductions, per-person costs, and the 30% spending drop in 2024-25. Link: https://www.nao.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/investigation-into-asylum-accommodation.pdf
Home Office - Annual Report and Accounts 2023 to 2024 (July 2024): Includes total asylum support costs for 2023-24 (£4.7 billion) and overspend details. Link: https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/home-office-annual-report-and-accounts-2023-to-2024 PDF Version: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/66b249b40808eaf43b50de07/2023-24_Home_Office_Annual_Report_and_Accounts.pdf
Independent Commission on Aid Impact (ICAI) - Report on UK Aid Spending Target Management (July 2025): Warns about refugee costs absorbing up to 20% of the aid budget and details ODA diversion (£4.3 billion in 2023). Link: https://icai.independent.gov.uk/?p=15619 - **Migration Observatory - Briefing on Asylum Accommodation in the UK** (April 2025): Discusses average daily costs (£132 per person in hotels vs. £19 in dispersed housing) and system pressures. Link: https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/asylum-accommodation-in-the-uk/
Migration Observatory - Briefing on the Fiscal Impact of Immigration in the UK (October 2024): Notes that immigrants overall contribute positively to UK finances, though short-term asylum costs create strains. Link: https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/briefings/the-fiscal-impact-of-immigration-in-the-uk/ PDF Version: https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/2024-Briefing-The-fiscal-impact-of-immigration-to-the-UK.pdf