Taxpayer pays for new clothes and shoes for every Channel migrant
The taxpayer is providing new clothes and shoes to illegal Channel migrants at a cost of more than £3,000 a day, The Telegraph can reveal.
Men, women and children arriving at Dover have been handed the free clothes – including puffer coats, hats and gloves in winter and flip-flops in summer – at a total cost of almost £4 million over the past three years.
They are kept in a quayside store house, said by one former official to be as big as a Matalan or M&S store, with changing rooms to try the clothes on.
The Home Office stocks thousands of different sizes and shapes to replace all the migrants’ clothing, which it says is necessary because they are often soaked through with sea water and “occasionally” splashed with fuel, posing a health and safety risk.
Some are also offered free mobile phones to ensure that “ongoing contact” with immigration officials can be maintained, although the Home Office said this was rare and it could provide no figures on these costs.
The figures have prompted calls for migrants to be required to reimburse the taxpayer if they are subsequently granted the right to remain in the UK as a refugee. About 66 per cent of Channel migrants in the year to September 2024 were granted asylum.
Tony Smith, a former director general of Border Force, said: “If they are allowed to stay, then they are going to be able to work and earn money. To me, that’s a chargeable deduction on our investment in them like universities, where you have to borrow £30,000 to get your child in to study.”
The new clothes cost the taxpayer £3,733,145 for 2022-23 and the first 10 months of 2024, equivalent to £3,624 a day for the 105,853 migrants who crossed the Channel during that period. It works out at £35.27 per migrant.
In 2022, the record year for crossings when 45,755 migrants reached the UK in small boats, the clothing cost the Home Office £2,047,756.77. In 2023, when crossings fell to 29,437 migrants, the bill dropped to £959,327.66 and for the first 10 months of 2024, it was £726,062.79.
It is understood the migrants are allowed to keep their old clothes, which are stored while the migrants are processed at the Manston reception centre in Kent.
Each migrant who arrives first hands back their life jacket, then has to point on a board to the number for their age and a flag for their nationality. They are checked by medics before going to the clothing store, where they check they have the correct fitting clothes in a changing room. They are then transferred to Manston.
In its FoI response, the Home Office said: “They are provided with a basic clothing pack similar to those issued via the Prison Service, consisting of underwear, socks, T-shirt, trousers/jogging bottoms, sweatshirt and weather-appropriate footwear such as flip-flops/sliders, plimsolls or trainers.
“In colder weather, a coat, hat and gloves are included in the clothing pack. Children are also provided with age and weather-appropriate clothing packs, and – where necessary – nappies are also provided for babies.”
Critics demanded that the costly practice stop, and the Government should use the voluntary and charity sector to provide second-hand clothes instead of the taxpayer picking up the bill.
Richard Tice, the deputy leader of Reform UK, said: “The taxpayer should not be footing any new clothing bill.
“If Care for Calais and other Leftie luvvies care so much, they can source clothing from their donations.
“Hard-working British taxpayers are sick and tired of being ripped off by these illegal arrivals.”
Alp Mehmet, the chairman of Migration Watch, said: “There seems to be no end to the Government’s largesse with taxpayers’ money. You arrive illegally, get dried off, re-clothed and put up in comfort to await the inevitable good news that you can stay for good.
“That’s why record numbers will continue to come, and ‘smashing the gangs’ is a pipe dream.”
