PolicyLens

Reform UK - Migration

Abolish ILR and migrant benefits

End indefinite leave to remain and bar foreign nationals from welfare access in the central scenario.

Last updated: May 2026.

Read the policy-specific methodology note

Policy scope

Reform's live page pledges to abolish indefinite leave to remain, rescind awards after two years, require renewable visas and apply no recourse to benefits for foreign nationals.

  • ILR route is removed or reversed.
  • Five-year visas replace settlement.
  • Benefit access is heavily restricted.

Core trade-offs

Some migrant-household spending may fall, but the policy risks deterring skilled workers, increasing churn and reducing tax receipts from migrants who stay and work.

  • Benefit and housing costs may fall.
  • Migrant workers and employers bear costs.
  • Tax receipts may weaken if workers leave.

Illustrative fiscal impact

-GBP 10.0bn to +GBP 7.0bn. Central estimate: -GBP 3.0bn.

  • Positive numbers mean public-finance pressure; negative numbers mean Exchequer savings.
  • ILR abolished is the main scale marker.
  • Gross costs and receipt offsets are separated in methodology.
  • Behaviour and pass-through widen the range.
  • This is not an official costing.

Economic impact by 2027-28

  • Jobs: Likely reduces migrant labour supply; shortages may increase in exposed sectors.
  • Wages: Some domestic wage pressure possible, but vacancies and prices may rise.
  • Prices: Higher labour costs likely in care, hospitality, agriculture and professional services.
  • GDP / productivity: Likely negative if skilled and working-age migrants leave or do not arrive.

Assessment

The fiscal direction is not straightforward. Restricting settlement and benefits may cut spending, but migrants also pay taxes, fill vacancies and support output. A broad anti-settlement policy is likely negative for GDP if it reduces working-age labour supply, especially in high-skill and shortage sectors.

Confidence: Low. Reform gives policy direction and lifetime claims, but annual implementation, legal constraints and cohort behaviour are unresolved.

Main risks

  • Tax-base loss: Working migrants who leave or never arrive no longer pay UK tax.
  • Service shortages: Care, health, hospitality, agriculture and universities could face more vacancies.
  • Legal failure: Retrospective settlement changes may face litigation and transitional costs.

Safeguards

  • Publish a cohort-by-cohort fiscal model.
  • Protect high-skill and shortage-sector routes.
  • Avoid retrospective changes without legal review.

Academic evidence

Dustmann and Frattini, Economic Journal, 2014

Fiscal effects of immigration

Immigrant fiscal effects depend on employment, age, public-service use and contribution histories.

Relevant to benefit-access savings, but not a direct costing of ILR removal.

The Fiscal Effects of Immigration to the UK (2014)

UK government evidence

Reform UK, 2026

Current immigration plan

Reform pledges detention, deportation, treaty changes, no free housing or benefits, and stricter visas.

Current policy anchor.

Our Policies (2026)

Reform UK, 2025

Boriswave fiscal claim

Reform estimates a GBP 154bn discounted lifetime cost for a medium Boriswave settlement scenario.

Party-side context, not official costing.

The Cost of the Boriswave (2025)

Sources

Other Reform UK policies

PolicyLens estimates are illustrative and not official costings.