
In a searing report published late on 27 October, the House of Commons Home Affairs Committee concluded that the Home Office “squandered billions” through poorly designed and weakly managed contracts for asylum accommodation. Contract values with providers Clearsprings, Mears and Serco ballooned from £4.5 billion to £15.3 billion since 2019 without effective performance monitoring, the MPs found.
Hotel use—intended as a short-term emergency measure—now accounts for 75 % of spending, incentivising providers to keep people in costly rooms rather than moving them to cheaper housing. The committee highlighted the £48.5 million spent on the abandoned RAF Scampton site and £15.4 million on the Northeye facility in Bexhill as emblematic of “reactive, crisis-driven policymaking.”
Safeguarding failures were also catalogued: inspectors uncovered minors wrongly placed in adult facilities and inadequate security leading to exploitation risks. Only four asylum seekers have so far chosen voluntary relocation to Rwanda despite a £290 million budget allocation.
The committee urges the government to publish a long-term accommodation strategy within three months, introduce claw-back clauses for poor performance, and accelerate decision-making to cut the £8 million-per-day hotel bill.
For corporates, the findings matter because spiralling accommodation costs divert Home Office resources from processing Skilled Worker, Global Talent and Sponsor-Licence applications. Delays already stretch to 12 weeks for some in-country routes. The report increases pressure on ministers to redirect staff towards casework and could hasten forthcoming fee hikes for sponsorship, meaning employers should budget for higher immigration costs in 2026.
Hotel use—intended as a short-term emergency measure—now accounts for 75 % of spending, incentivising providers to keep people in costly rooms rather than moving them to cheaper housing. The committee highlighted the £48.5 million spent on the abandoned RAF Scampton site and £15.4 million on the Northeye facility in Bexhill as emblematic of “reactive, crisis-driven policymaking.”
Safeguarding failures were also catalogued: inspectors uncovered minors wrongly placed in adult facilities and inadequate security leading to exploitation risks. Only four asylum seekers have so far chosen voluntary relocation to Rwanda despite a £290 million budget allocation.
The committee urges the government to publish a long-term accommodation strategy within three months, introduce claw-back clauses for poor performance, and accelerate decision-making to cut the £8 million-per-day hotel bill.
For corporates, the findings matter because spiralling accommodation costs divert Home Office resources from processing Skilled Worker, Global Talent and Sponsor-Licence applications. Delays already stretch to 12 weeks for some in-country routes. The report increases pressure on ministers to redirect staff towards casework and could hasten forthcoming fee hikes for sponsorship, meaning employers should budget for higher immigration costs in 2026.








