This question was answered on 20th October 2025
The Department recently published Universal Credit Immigration status and nationality summary statistics and the relevant information from those statistics is displayed in Table 1 below.
For the purpose of statistical production, immigration status data has been categorised into the following 8 groups:
- CTA – UK, Ireland, Right of Abode (British nationals, Irish nationals, and people with a right of abode in the UK do not need an immigration status to claim Universal Credit)
- EU Settlement Scheme (People with EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) Settled Status have a right to reside in the UK. People with EUSS pre-settled status, a certificate of application to the EUSS, or relevant joining family members with temporary protection will only have a qualifying right to reside if they are additionally undertaking a relevant activity, such as being a worker or self-employed, or they can derive a qualifying right to reside from a relevant family member)
- Humanitarian (includes people who hold an immigration status under safe and legal humanitarian immigration routes, for example schemes for Ukrainian and Afghan nationals and eligible members of their families)
- Refugee (includes individuals granted refugee status due to being forced to flee their country because of a well-founded fear of persecution, war, or violence)
- Indefinite Leave to Remain (not EU Settlement Scheme) (includes any individual that has Indefinite Leave to Remain in the UK. This is also called ‘settlement’. It gives a person the right to live, work and study here for as long as they like and apply for benefits if they are eligible)
- Limited Leave to Remain (not EU Settlement Scheme) including family reunion (includes individuals that have a temporary immigration status in the UK with a no recourse to public fund condition but in certain circumstances may have applied to have that condition lifted and others who due to the conditions of their visa are not restricted from accessing benefits. Not included in this group are people with temporary leave categorised by DWP as Refugee, Humanitarian Protection, Afghan Scheme and Ukraine Scheme).
- Other (includes those no longer receiving UC payments, ineligible partners of an eligible UC claimant and claimants who have their decision overturned at Mandatory Reconsideration or Appeal stage)
- No immigration status recorded on digital systems (includes cases where a recorded immigration status is not held on DWP administrative data).
Table 1: Number and proportion of People on Universal Credit by immigration status and employment status June 2025, Great Britain
Immigration status | Not in employment | % of all on UC | In employment | % of all on UC | Total |
CTA - UK, Ireland, Right of Abode | 4,418,544 | 56.3% | 2,148,966 | 27.4% | 6,567,506 |
EU Settlement Scheme | 403,956 | 5.1% | 360,473 | 4.6% | 764,429 |
Humanitarian | 32,085 | 0.4% | 21,726 | 0.3% | 53,810 |
Refugee | 90,403 | 1.2% | 27,214 | 0.3% | 117,623 |
Indefinite Leave to Remain (not EU Settlement Scheme) | 141,958 | 1.8% | 68,558 | 0.9% | 210,513 |
Limited Leave to Remain (not EU Settlement Scheme) including family reunion | 50,010 | 0.6% | 24,692 | 0.3% | 74,694 |
Other | 21,705 | 0.3% | 11,289 | 0.1% | 32,998 |
No immigration status recorded on digital systems | 19,258 | 0.2% | 10,646 | 0.1% | 29,912 |
Total | 5,177,927 | 65.9% | 2,673,559 | 34.1% | 7,851,487 |
Source: Universal Credit Full Service (UCFS) Extract
Notes
- The latest nationality recorded on the UC system, as declared by the claimant, reported across all previous UC claims.
- Immigration status is sourced from Habitual Residence Test (HRT) data. The latest immigration status is recorded and reported against the corresponding claim at the point in time it applied.
- Cells in these tables have had statistical disclosure control applied to avoid the release of confidential data. Due to adjustments totals may not be the sum of the individual cells.
- Percentages are shown to 1 decimal place.
- Figures for the most recent month are provisional. These figures will be subject to revision in subsequent releases in line with our statistical revisions policy.
- HRT revisions can occur and can be retrospectively applied and supersede previous decisions. Hence changes to previous months are possible.
- If a claimant has dual nationality and one is CTA then they will be recorded as CTA - UK, Ireland, Right of Abode.
- Non-EU individuals can be in the EUSS, and non-EU family members of EU citizens can have EUSS status through family routes.
- Non-Ukrainians/Non-Afghans can be in resettlement schemes
- Right of Abode individuals include some Commonwealth citizens, assuming they fulfil the necessary criteria.