National statistics

How many people come to the UK each year (including visitors)?

Updated 18 June 2021

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Data relate to the year ending March 2021 and all comparisons are with the year ending March 2020, unless indicated otherwise.

On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak as a global pandemic. A range of restrictions were implemented in many parts of the world, and the first UK lockdown measures were announced on 23 March 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the UK immigration system, both in terms of restricting migrant movements to and from the UK and the impact on operational capacity.

Year ending comparisons that follow will include impacts resulting from the restrictions put in place during this period of the pandemic.

This section contains data on:

  • Passenger arrivals to the UK
  • Grants of Entry clearance visas to individuals outside the UK
  • Visitors to the UK

1. Passenger arrivals to the UK

There were an estimated 18.0 million passenger arrivals in the year ending March 2021 (including returning UK residents), an 87% (123.2 million) decrease compared with the previous year. This was due to the travel restrictions imposed as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Additional information on monthly air passenger arrivals during this period is provided in the separate Home Office report Immigration and border statistics relating to COVID-19. These data show that there were 447,300 air passenger arrivals to the UK in April 2021. This is four times (298%) higher than the total number of air arrivals for April 2020, immediately following the start of the first UK lockdown, when there were 112,300 arrivals. However, this remains around 5% of the number of arrivals in April 2019 (9,120,400).

Figure 1: Passenger arrivals to the UK, by nationality group1, years ending March 2012 to March 2021

Source: Passenger arrivals (admissions) summary table – Adm_01_q

Notes:

  1. Nationality breakdowns for 2019 onwards are not available (see ‘Landing cards’).

Figure 1 shows that arrivals had generally been increasing each year. However, the number of passenger arrivals over the course of the year ending March 2021, following the introduction of COVID-19 travel restrictions from March 2020, was around one eighth of the number in a normal year.

In 2018, the latest full period for which a nationality breakdown is available, there were 142.9 million passenger arrivals, of which 81.7 million (57%) were returning British citizens, 40.8 million (29%) other EEA nationals and 20.4 million (14%) from outside the EEA. Only certain nationalities (‘visa-nationals’) are required to obtain an Entry clearance visa before coming to the UK, which is why there are considerably more passenger arrivals than visas granted.

There were 668,979 visas granted in the year ending March 2021, 78% fewer than the previous year, a similar reduction to overall arrivals. Of the visas granted in this last 12 months, 38% were for study, 26% were to visit, 18% were to work, 6% were for family, and 12% for other reasons.

Figure 2: Entry clearance visas granted, years ending March 2012 to March 2021

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes – Vis_D02

Figure 2 shows that the total number of visas granted was stable between 2013 and 2016 at around 2.5 million, it then rose steadily to a peak of 3.2 million in 2019. The number then fell significantly due the COVID-19 pandemic to below 1 million in the year ending March 2021.

2. Visitors to the UK

Many nationalities, including US nationals (who accounted for over a quarter of non-EEA passenger arrivals in 2018) do not normally require a visa to visit the UK; consequently, there are considerably fewer Visitor visas granted than visitor arrivals. Nonetheless, in the year ending March 2021, there were 243,774 applications for Visitor visas, less than a tenth (9%) of the number in the previous year, a reduction largely a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Over the same period, there were 175,005 Visitor visas granted, 92% lower than the previous year with particular falls for Chinese (down 574,828 or 98%) and Indian (down 464,887 or 93%) nationals. Indian (32,600) and Nigerian (22,126) nationals together accounted for 31% of all Visitor visas granted.

Additional information on visitors to the UK is published by the Office for National Statistics (ONS) in its quarterly bulletin Overseas travel and tourism statistics.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, visa application centres were closed by 31 March 2020 and only began gradually reopening from June 2020.

In Q1 (January to March) 2021, the number of Visitor visa applications was 85% lower than the same period in 2020 and there were 90% fewer Visitor visas granted.

Figure 3: Visitor visas issued, by month, 2019, 2020 and 2021

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes: Vis_D02

Figure 3 shows that Visitor visa grants were close to zero during April and May 2020. The number of Visitor visa applications granted in each month of the year ending March 2021 was only a small fraction compared to the same month a year earlier.

3. British National Overseas (BN(O)) route

On 31 January 2021 the UK Government introduced a new immigration route for British National (Overseas) (BN(O)) status holders, providing the opportunity for them and their family members to live, work and study in the UK. The data below relates to the first quarter of 2021, January to March and is derived from management information. This data is rounded to the nearest hundred. Data for Q2 2021 will be published on 26th August 2021.

There were 34,300 applications for the BN(O) route in Q1 of 2021, with 20,600 out of country applications, and 13,700 in country applications. Of the total, 20,000 were main applicants and 14,300 were dependants.

There were 5,600 grants of out of country BN(O) visas made in Q1 of 2021, of which 3,600 were for main applicants and 2,000 were for dependants. There were 1,600 grants of in country BN(O) visas made in Q1 of 2021, of which 1,200 were main applicants and 400 were dependants.

As expected, the majority of grants (86%) were to BN(O) and/or Hong Kong Special Administrative Region (HKSAR) passport holders. Dependants holding passports for countries other than HKSAR accounted for 41% of grants to dependants.

In Q1 of 2021, an estimated 5,500 BN(O) and/or HKSAR passport holders were granted “leave outside the rules” at the UK border. This figure is taken from the latest internal management information and is subject to revision.

4. About these statistics

The statistics in this section provide an indication of the number of people who enter the UK.

The data do not show whether, or when, an individual arrived in the UK, what they did on arrival to the UK or how long they stayed in the UK.

Many non-EEA nationals do not normally require a visa to visit the UK. As a result, they will be counted in the passenger arrivals data but not in the visa data. A list of designated nationalities referred to as ‘visa nationals’ who do require a visa in order to visit the UK can be found in Immigration Rules Appendix V: visitor rules.

EEA and Swiss nationals do not require a visa to visit the UK.

For several reasons, data on passenger arrivals are not directly comparable with data on Entry clearance visas granted. A summary of what each dataset counts is provided below.

4.1 Passenger arrivals

Data on passenger arrivals relate to the number of arrivals into the UK. The data include British, EEA and Swiss nationals, as well as non-EEA nationals. For non-EEA nationals who are subject to immigration controls, more detailed information is available on their nationality and purpose of their journey up until 2018.

Passenger arrivals are counted each time an individual enters the UK. Where an individual enters the UK more than once in a period, they will be counted each time they enter (but if they arrive each time on the same visa, they will be counted once in the visas data).

Visitor arrivals data included in this topic are based on landing cards completed as people cross the border. In light of the introduction of new digital systems at the border, the use of landing cards was reviewed (see Landing cards). The review resulted in the decision to remove the need for non-EEA nationals to complete a landing card on arrival into the UK. Further data relating to visitor arrivals will not be available until an alternative method of collection is developed.

4.2 Entry clearance visas

Data on Entry clearance visas in this section refer to the number of visas granted for all reasons within the period. If an individual was granted multiple visas in a given period, this will be counted as multiple grants in the statistics. If an individual entered the UK multiple times within the period for which a visa was valid, this will be counted as one grant in the visa statistics, but multiple arrivals in the passenger arrivals data.

Year-on-year comparisons of the number of decisions can be affected by quarterly fluctuations in the data. Such fluctuations can be examined in more detail in the quarterly data that are available in the published tables.

Several known factors may have affected the number of applications and outcomes of visit-related visas over time. For example, the Home Office launched a two-year Chinese visa pilot in January 2016 for Chinese nationals. The increase in longer-term Visitor visas may affect the number of subsequent re-applications by Chinese nationals.

More information on non-visitor arrival and visa data by category is included in ʻWhy do people come to the UK? To work’, ʻWhy do people come to the UK? To study’ and ʻWhy do people come to the UK? For family reasons’.

In January 2021 the UK Government introduced a new immigration route for British National (Overseas) (BN(O)) status holders, providing the opportunity for them and their family members to live, work and study in the UK. This route opened on 31 January 2021 and is open to individuals who hold a BN(O) passport and are, or have recently been, resident in Hong Kong, and their dependants.

4.3 Landing cards

On 5 August 2017, the Home Office launched the ‘Consultation on Home Office’s Immigration Statistics - arrivals data’, on ending the requirement for non-EEA passengers to present a paper landing card on arrival into the UK from 1 October 2017. The consultation set out the statistical implications of the change and closed on 2 September 2017. The government confirmed in the Spring Statement 2019 that to coincide with the ePassport gates expansion, the government would begin to abolish landing cards for non-EEA travellers. On 20 May 2019, it removed the need for all non-EEA travellers to fill in landing cards upon arrival in the UK and expanded the use of ePassport gates to seven more countries. The government’s response to the consultation was published in May 2019. As anticipated in the original consultation, ahead of new electronic data sources being developed, the withdrawal of landing cards has resulted in a temporary loss to the passenger arrivals data broken down by nationality and reason for travel. The last set of published data on non-EEA nationals arriving in the UK (based on Landing Cards), cover the period 2004 to 2018) are available in ‘Immigration statistics, year ending June 2019 second edition’. Data on the total number of passenger arrivals will continue to be available as this comes from a different source.

5. Data tables

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