Asylum Accommodation in Newcastle-under-Lyme
Source: Home Office, people in receipt of Section 95/98/4 asylum support (dataset Asy_D11), as at 31 March 2026Accommodation breakdown
People in receipt of Home Office asylum support in Newcastle-under-Lyme by accommodation type, as at 31 March 2026.
| Accommodation type | People | Share of council total |
|---|---|---|
| Contingency hotels | 0 | 0% |
| Dispersal accommodation | 176 | 97.2% |
| Initial accommodation | 0 | 0% |
| Other contingency accommodation | 0 | 0% |
| Subsistence only (no accommodation) | 5 | 2.8% |
| Other support | 0 | 0% |
| Total | 181 | 100% |
Copy-ready sentences
Fixed-template sentences built directly from the Home Office data, free for reuse with attribution.
As at 31 March 2026, no asylum seekers were housed in contingency hotels in Newcastle-under-Lyme. Source: Home Office.
As at 31 March 2026, Newcastle-under-Lyme was supporting 181 asylum seekers, 0.2% of the UK total and the 149th highest of 344 UK local authorities. Source: Home Office.
As at 31 March 2026, 176 asylum seekers were living in dispersal accommodation in Newcastle-under-Lyme, the 108th highest of any UK local authority. Source: Home Office.
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Free for reuse with attribution to Deported.co.uk (underlying data: Home Office, Open Government Licence v3.0).
Newcastle-under-Lyme: asylum support data (CSV)
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Data Limitations & Caveats
- Supported asylum seekers only. Counts are people in receipt of Section 95, Section 98 or Section 4 support. Asylum seekers not receiving Home Office support (for example those staying with family or friends without support) are not counted.
- Snapshot, not flow. Figures are a point-in-time count as at 31 March 2026; they are revised in later quarterly releases.
- "Hotel" means contingency hotel accommodation as categorised by the Home Office. Initial accommodation and other contingency accommodation are separate categories; hotels are reported separately in the published series from December 2022.
- No per-capita adjustment. The table is not adjusted for local authority population, so larger councils naturally tend to rank higher.
- Subsistence only means no accommodation. These people receive cash support but are not housed by the Home Office; they are included in each council's total.
- Missing councils. Local authorities with no supported asylum seekers at the snapshot date do not appear in the published dataset.