Asylum Accommodation in Spelthorne
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 Spelthorne by accommodation type, as at 31 March 2026.
| Accommodation type | People | Share of council total |
|---|---|---|
| Contingency hotels | 40 | 51.3% |
| Dispersal accommodation | 31 | 39.7% |
| Initial accommodation | 0 | 0% |
| Other contingency accommodation | 0 | 0% |
| Subsistence only (no accommodation) | 7 | 9% |
| Other support | 0 | 0% |
| Total | 78 | 100% |
Copy-ready sentences
Fixed-template sentences built directly from the Home Office data, free for reuse with attribution.
As at 31 March 2026, 40 asylum seekers were housed in hotels in Spelthorne, the 104th highest of any UK local authority. Source: Home Office.
As at 31 March 2026, Spelthorne was supporting 78 asylum seekers, 0.1% of the UK total and the 196th highest of 344 UK local authorities. Source: Home Office.
As at 31 March 2026, 31 asylum seekers were living in dispersal accommodation in Spelthorne, the 219th 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).
Spelthorne: 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.