(UNITED KINGDOM) Asylum seekers in the United Kingdom receive housing and financial support while the Home Office reviews their claims, along with healthcare access and help from charities. People who do not have money or a safe place to stay can be placed in Home Office accommodation, and most receive a small weekly allowance for basic needs. They cannot choose where they live, and they are generally not allowed to work while waiting for a decision, leaving many families dependent on this system for months at a time. According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, this support acts as a basic safety net during the claim process but comes with strict limits, especially around work and choice of location.
What the Home Office Provides

The core package includes housing, financial support, and access to the National Health Service (NHS).
- The Home Office can provide accommodation through the National Asylum Support Service (NASS) to people who are destitute. Housing may be in flats, shared houses, hostels, or hotels.
- As part of the dispersal system, many asylum seekers are placed outside London and the South East; however, recent trends show more people living in London and in hotels. Placement is not optional—individuals and families must go where space is available.
Most people who receive accommodation also get a weekly allowance on an ASPEN card, which works like a prepaid card for essentials such as food, clothing, and toiletries.
- Typical amount: £49.18 per week per person.
- If accommodation includes meals (often in hotels), the allowance is lower: £9.95 per week per person.
- Pregnant women and mothers with children under three can receive extra weekly payments.
- Some may get a one-off £300 maternity grant for items like a cot, pram, or baby clothes.
As long as their asylum claim or appeal is active, asylum seekers can use the NHS without charge. This includes registering with a GP and accessing other services. Healthcare access is a lifeline for those who may be dealing with trauma, chronic illness, or pregnancy without family support nearby.
Employment is restricted. Asylum seekers are generally not allowed to work while their claim is pending. Campaigns push for change, but the ban remains. For many families, this means total reliance on financial support and charity help to cover day-to-day needs.
Legal support exists for the most vulnerable. Children, survivors of trafficking, and stateless people can access specialist legal help through organisations such as Asylum Aid. Legal advice helps people gather evidence and understand next steps if a claim is refused.
Charities and community groups fill many gaps. Groups like The Salvation Army and the International Rescue Committee offer:
- English classes
- Social activities
- Food banks
- Job readiness workshops
These programmes help people prepare for the future and stay connected while they wait, even when they cannot usually work.
Some people remain eligible for help even after a refusal. Those who cannot leave immediately or are taking steps to depart can receive housing and financial support while they prepare to leave the UK, avoiding rough sleeping and enabling safe planning.
Unaccompanied children—those arriving without a parent or guardian—are the responsibility of social services. Local authorities provide accommodation, school places, medical care, and a trusted adult to help stabilise their lives while their immigration cases are assessed.
Daily Life Under Support Rules
Life under the asylum system often means tight budgets, limited privacy, and frequent moves.
- The dispersal rule can separate people from relatives or community networks.
- Shared housing brings stress; hotels often include meals but reduce the allowance to £9.95 per week per person, leaving little for personal needs, transport, or phone credit.
- In flats or shared houses, the £49.18 weekly rate must cover food, clothing, toiletries, and other essentials. Parents frequently rely on school breakfast clubs and charity food banks.
The ASPEN card helps track spending and reduces the chance of theft, but it can limit where people shop. Community groups often provide donated clothing, baby items, and bus passes. The £300 maternity grant can help with essential baby equipment, although many families still depend on second‑hand items and local support.
The dispersal policy aims to share responsibility across the country, but moves disrupt schooling and healthcare. Living far from major cities can make it harder to find legal help. While the system intends fair access, the reality varies by location and housing type.
Key takeaway: the system offers a basic safety net—a roof, a small weekly budget for essentials, and free healthcare—but it includes strict limits on work and choice of location, and often depends on charities to fill gaps.
Guidance and How to Seek Support
Applying for support depends on being destitute or at risk of destitution. People who cannot pay for basic needs or have no safe place to live can ask the Home Office for help.
- Official guidance on asylum support is available at GOV.UK. This resource outlines the kinds of support available and eligibility while cases are active.
- Community organisations play a key role in explaining the process in plain language and helping people fill in applications.
- They also signpost healthcare registration, schooling for children, and mental health support.
Legal support is particularly important for vulnerable groups. For children without parents, survivors of trafficking, and stateless people, specialist legal representation can shape both the asylum claim and the support they receive while they wait. Charities with experienced caseworkers can coordinate with councils, schools, and doctors to maintain services during moves.
Campaigners continue to press for the right to work during long waits, arguing it would help people maintain skills and reduce reliance on financial support. For now, asylum seekers must plan based on current rules: basic housing, a modest allowance, NHS access, and community help.
Summary
The system’s main aim is to keep people safe and healthy while claims are processed. That means:
- Government-backed housing and financial support
- Free NHS care while a claim or appeal is active
- Community programmes to help people cope with the wait
However, the support comes with clear limitations: no choice of location, no general right to work, and significant reliance on charities and community groups to meet everyday needs. Families adapt by sharing resources, using local support services, and leaning on volunteers and charities for clothing, school supplies, and social contact.
Frequently Asked Questions
This Article in a Nutshell
The UK asylum support system provides housing, financial assistance and free NHS care to asylum seekers while their claims or appeals are active. Accommodation via NASS can include flats, shared houses, hostels or hotels, with placements determined by available space under the dispersal policy. Most recipients get an ASPEN card allowance—about £49.18 weekly, reduced to £9.95 if meals are provided—plus extra support for pregnant women and a £300 maternity grant in eligible cases. Asylum seekers are typically not permitted to work, increasing reliance on charities for English classes, food banks and job readiness help. Vulnerable groups, including unaccompanied children, trafficking survivors and stateless people, access specialist legal support. After refusals some people may still receive limited support while preparing to leave. The system ensures basic safety but limits choice of location and employment, making community organisations essential to fill gaps.