Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a policy paper published on Nov. 17 that the new approach was designed to restore “order and control” at the border while preserving the principle that people fleeing genuine danger should still find refuge in the UK.
Starmer said the existing system had become a “pull factor” for people who cross the English Channel in small boats or arrive legally and then claim asylum, arguing that Britain’s more generous rules compared with European neighbors were drawing migrants north and west across the continent.
Reforms
The UK asylum system, according to Mahmood, was designed for “an earlier and simpler era” and had left the country as “the destination of choice in Europe” for asylum seekers.Under the new “core protection” model—a basic and temporary level of protection for asylum seekers—refugees who are granted asylum will get 30 months of permission to stay, instead of the current five years.
Their status will be renewed only if the government decides they still need protection. If not, they could be removed from the UK.
The path to permanent settlement will also become much longer.
Refugees will have to spend 20 years in the UK before being allowed to apply for settled status, rather than about five years today. They will have to meet extra “earned settlement” requirements that will be decided later, according to the UK government.
Refugees receiving core protection will no longer have an automatic right to bring family members to the UK.
Asylum seekers will no longer be guaranteed housing and weekly payments, and people who can work or have savings will need to contribute to their own living costs.
Removals
Between June 2024 and June 2025, about 58,000 people had their asylum claims refused, but fewer than 11,000 were removed, leaving tens of thousands in limbo, according to the Home Office paper.The UK government now plans to expand a French “returns pilot” under which some people who arrive by small boat can be detained and returned to France.
The government is also considering forcibly returning Syrians who have no legal right to remain in the UK, following the fall of Bashar Assad’s regime.
The plans have been met with resistance from a number of Labour backbenchers.







