69 datasets found
  1. Immigration system statistics data tables

    • gov.uk
    Updated Nov 27, 2025
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    Home Office (2025). Immigration system statistics data tables [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/immigration-system-statistics-data-tables
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    Dataset updated
    Nov 27, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Home Office
    Description

    List of the data tables as part of the Immigration system statistics Home Office release. Summary and detailed data tables covering the immigration system, including out-of-country and in-country visas, asylum, detention, and returns.

    If you have any feedback, please email MigrationStatsEnquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk.

    Accessible file formats

    The Microsoft Excel .xlsx files may not be suitable for users of assistive technology.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of these documents in a more accessible format, please email MigrationStatsEnquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk
    Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Related content

    Immigration system statistics, year ending September 2025
    Immigration system statistics quarterly release
    Immigration system statistics user guide
    Publishing detailed data tables in migration statistics
    Policy and legislative changes affecting migration to the UK: timeline
    Immigration statistics data archives

    Passenger arrivals

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691afc82e39a085bda43edd8/passenger-arrivals-summary-sep-2025-tables.ods">Passenger arrivals summary tables, year ending September 2025 (ODS, 31.5 KB)

    ‘Passengers refused entry at the border summary tables’ and ‘Passengers refused entry at the border detailed datasets’ have been discontinued. The latest published versions of these tables are from February 2025 and are available in the ‘Passenger refusals – release discontinued’ section. A similar data series, ‘Refused entry at port and subsequently departed’, is available within the Returns detailed and summary tables.

    Electronic travel authorisation

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691b03595a253e2c40d705b9/electronic-travel-authorisation-datasets-sep-2025.xlsx">Electronic travel authorisation detailed datasets, year ending September 2025 (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 58.6 KB)
    ETA_D01: Applications for electronic travel authorisations, by nationality ETA_D02: Outcomes of applications for electronic travel authorisations, by nationality

    Entry clearance visas granted outside the UK

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6924812a367485ea116a56bd/visas-summary-sep-2025-tables.ods">Entry clearance visas summary tables, year ending September 2025 (ODS, 53.3 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691aebbf5a253e2c40d70598/entry-clearance-visa-outcomes-datasets-sep-2025.xlsx">Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes detailed datasets, year ending September 2025 (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 30.2 MB)
    Vis_D01: Entry clearance visa applications, by nationality and visa type
    Vis_D02: Outcomes of entry clearance visa applications, by nationality, visa type, and outcome

    Additional data relating to in country and overse

  2. U

    United States Immigrants Admitted: All Countries

    • ceicdata.com
    Updated Oct 15, 2025
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    CEICdata.com (2025). United States Immigrants Admitted: All Countries [Dataset]. https://www.ceicdata.com/en/united-states/immigration/immigrants-admitted-all-countries
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    Dataset updated
    Oct 15, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    CEICdata.com
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Sep 1, 2005 - Sep 1, 2016
    Area covered
    United States
    Variables measured
    Migration
    Description

    United States Immigrants Admitted: All Countries data was reported at 1,127,167.000 Person in 2017. This records a decrease from the previous number of 1,183,505.000 Person for 2016. United States Immigrants Admitted: All Countries data is updated yearly, averaging 451,510.000 Person from Sep 1900 (Median) to 2017, with 118 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 1,827,167.000 Person in 1991 and a record low of 23,068.000 Person in 1933. United States Immigrants Admitted: All Countries data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by US Department of Homeland Security. The data is categorized under Global Database’s United States – Table US.G087: Immigration.

  3. Migrant recruitment

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jun 15, 2024
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    willian oliveira (2024). Migrant recruitment [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/willianoliveiragibin/migrant-recruitment
    Explore at:
    zip(330 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 15, 2024
    Authors
    willian oliveira
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    this graph was created in R:

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F16731800%2Fc3cb7f2679c1878d969c59cae6c2add8%2Fgraph1.png?generation=1718485702995950&alt=media" alt=""> https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F16731800%2F105fbad8ac1c22cf9c99db9abe4b5e8f%2Fgraph2.png?generation=1718485708327395&alt=media" alt=""> https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F16731800%2F16f4d8e38b98e38536a0040c000fdf3f%2Fgraph3.png?generation=1718485713357616&alt=media" alt="">

    Hundreds of millions of people live in a country that is different from the one in which they were born. In some countries, the majority of the population are immigrants.

    Migration has played a crucial role in economic development, education and mobility. The transfer of money from migrants working overseas to family or friends in their home country – remittances – can be an important source of income in many countries.

    On this page you can find all our data and visualizations relating to migration.

    The estimates of the number (or “stock”) of international migrants disaggregated by age, sex and country or area of origin are based on national statistics, in most cases obtained from population censuses. Additionally, population registers and nationally representative surveys provided information on the number and composition of international migrants.

    The dataset presents estimates of international migrant by age, sex and origin. Estimates are presented for 1990, 1995, 2000, 2005, 2010, 2015 and 2020 and are available for 232 countries and areas of the world. The estimates are based on official statistics on the foreign-born or the foreign population.

  4. countries measure immigration

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Nov 12, 2024
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    willian oliveira (2024). countries measure immigration [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/willianoliveiragibin/countries-measure-immigration
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    zip(15765 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 12, 2024
    Authors
    willian oliveira
    License

    https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/

    Description

    Debates about migration are often in the news. People quote numbers about how many people are entering and leaving different countries. Governments need to plan and manage public resources based on how their own populations are changing.

    Informed discussions and effective policymaking rely on good migration data. But how much do we really know about migration, and where do estimates come from?

    In this article, I look at how countries and international agencies define different forms of migration, how they estimate the number of people moving in and out of countries, and how accurate these estimates are.

    Migrants without legal status make up a small portion of the overall immigrant population. Most high-income countries and some middle-income ones have a solid understanding of how many immigrants live there. Tracking the exact flows of people moving in and out is trickier, but governments can reliably monitor long-term trends to understand the bigger picture.

    Who is considered an international migrant? In the United Nations statistics, an international migrant is defined as “a person who moves to a country other than that of his or her usual residence for at least a year, so that the country of destination effectively becomes his or her new country of usual residence”.1

    For example, an Argentinian person who spends nine months studying in the United States wouldn’t count as a long-term immigrant in the US. But an Argentinian person who moves to the US for two years would. Even if someone gains citizenship in their new country, they are still considered an immigrant in migration statistics.

    The same applies in reverse for emigrants: someone leaving their home country for more than a year is considered a long-term emigrant for the country they’ve left. This does not change if they acquire citizenship in another country. Some national governments may have definitions that differ from the UN recommendations.

    What about illegal migration? “Illegal migration” refers to the movement of people outside the legal rules for entering or leaving a country. There isn’t a single agreed-upon definition, but it generally involves people who breach immigration laws. Some refer to this as irregular or unauthorized migration.

    There are three types of migrants who don’t have a legal immigration status. First, those who cross borders without the right legal permissions. Second, those who enter a country legally but stay after their visa or permission expires. Third, some migrants have legal permission to stay but work in violation of employment restrictions — for example, students who work more hours than their visa allows.

    Tracking illegal migration is difficult. In regions with free movement, like the European Union, it’s particularly challenging. For example, someone could move from Germany to France, live there without registering, and go uncounted in official migration records.2 The rise of remote work has made it easier for people to live in different countries without registering as employees or taxpayers.

  5. G

    Immigrants to Canada, by country of last permanent residence

    • open.canada.ca
    • www150.statcan.gc.ca
    • +1more
    csv, html, xml
    Updated Jan 17, 2023
    + more versions
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    Statistics Canada (2023). Immigrants to Canada, by country of last permanent residence [Dataset]. https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/fc6ad2eb-51f8-467c-be01-c4bda5b6186b
    Explore at:
    csv, xml, htmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 17, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics Canada
    License

    Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Canada
    Description

    This table contains 25 series, with data for years 1955 - 2013 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (1 items: Canada ...) Last permanent residence (25 items: Total immigrants; France; Great Britain; Total Europe ...).

  6. Regional and local authority data on immigration groups

    • gov.uk
    Updated Nov 27, 2025
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    Home Office (2025). Regional and local authority data on immigration groups [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/immigration-system-statistics-regional-and-local-authority-data
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 27, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Home Office
    Description

    Immigration system statistics quarterly release.

    Accessible file formats

    The Microsoft Excel .xlsx files may not be suitable for users of assistive technology.
    If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of these documents in a more accessible format, please email migrationstatsenquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk
    Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

    Latest table

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691c5c1f84a267da57d706a1/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-sep-2025.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending September 2025 (ODS, 265 KB)
    Reg_01: Immigration groups, by Region and Devolved Administration
    Reg_02: Immigration groups, by Local Authority

    Please note that the totals across all pathways and per capita percentages for City of London and Isles of Scilly do not include Homes for Ukraine arrivals due to suppression, in line with published Homes for Ukraine figures.

    Previous tables

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/68a6ecc6bceafd8d0d96a086/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-jun-2025.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending June 2025 (ODS, 264 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6825e438a60aeba5ab34e046/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-mar-2025.xlsx">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending March 2025 (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 279 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/67bc89984ad141d90835347b/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-dec-2024.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending December 2024 (ODS, 263 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/69248038367485ea116a56ba/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-sep-2024.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending September 2024 (ODS, 263 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/66bf74a8dcb0757928e5bd4c/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-jun-24.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending June 2024 (ODS, 263 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691db17c2c6b98ecdbc5006e/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-mar-2024.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending March 2024 (ODS, 91.4 KB)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/65ddd9ebf1cab3001afc4795/regional-and-local-authority-dataset-dec-2023.ods">Regional and local authority data on immigration groups, year ending December 2023 (ODS, 91

  7. Long-term international immigration, emigration and net migration flows,...

    • ons.gov.uk
    xlsx
    Updated May 22, 2025
    + more versions
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    Office for National Statistics (2025). Long-term international immigration, emigration and net migration flows, provisional [Dataset]. https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/populationandmigration/internationalmigration/datasets/longterminternationalimmigrationemigrationandnetmigrationflowsprovisional
    Explore at:
    xlsxAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    May 22, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Office for National Statisticshttp://www.ons.gov.uk/
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    Estimates for UK immigration, emigration and net migration, year ending June 2012 to year ending December 2024. These are official statistics in development. To access the most up-to-date data for each time period, please use the most recently published dataset.

  8. Immigration system statistics, year ending March 2023

    • gov.uk
    Updated Sep 4, 2023
    + more versions
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    Home Office (2023). Immigration system statistics, year ending March 2023 [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/immigration-system-statistics-year-ending-march-2023
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 4, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Home Office
    Description

    Immigration system statistics, year ending March 2023: data tables

    This release presents immigration statistics from Home Office administrative sources, covering the period up to the end of March 2023. It includes data on the topics of:

    • work
    • study
    • family
    • passenger arrivals and visitors
    • asylum
    • extensions of stay
    • settlement
    • citizenship
    • detention
    • returns

    Further information

    User Guide to Home Office Immigration Statistics
    Policy and legislative changes affecting migration to the UK: timeline
    Developments in migration statistics
    Publishing detailed datasets in Immigration statistics

    A range of key input and impact indicators are currently published by the Home Office on the Migration transparency data webpage.

    If you have feedback or questions, our email address is MigrationStatsEnquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk.

  9. w

    Migration Household Survey 2009 - South Africa

    • microdata.worldbank.org
    • catalog.ihsn.org
    Updated Jun 3, 2019
    + more versions
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    Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) (2019). Migration Household Survey 2009 - South Africa [Dataset]. https://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/96
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    Dataset updated
    Jun 3, 2019
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC)
    Time period covered
    2009
    Area covered
    South Africa
    Description

    Abstract

    The Human Sciences Research Council (HSRC) carried out the Migration and Remittances Survey in South Africa for the World Bank in collaboration with the African Development Bank. The primary mandate of the HSRC in this project was to come up with a migration database that includes both immigrants and emigrants. The specific activities included: · A household survey with a view of producing a detailed demographic/economic database of immigrants, emigrants and non migrants · The collation and preparation of a data set based on the survey · The production of basic primary statistics for the analysis of migration and remittance behaviour in South Africa.

    Like many other African countries, South Africa lacks reliable census or other data on migrants (immigrants and emigrants), and on flows of resources that accompanies movement of people. This is so because a large proportion of African immigrants are in the country undocumented. A special effort was therefore made to design a household survey that would cover sufficient numbers and proportions of immigrants, and still conform to the principles of probability sampling. The approach that was followed gives a representative picture of migration in 2 provinces, Limpopo and Gauteng, which should be reflective of migration behaviour and its impacts in South Africa.

    Geographic coverage

    Two provinces: Gauteng and Limpopo

    Limpopo is the main corridor for migration from African countries to the north of South Africa while Gauteng is the main port of entry as it has the largest airport in Africa. Gauteng is a destination for internal and international migrants because it has three large metropolitan cities with a great economic potential and reputation for offering employment, accommodations and access to many different opportunities within a distance of 56 km. These two provinces therefore were expected to accommodate most African migrants in South Africa, co-existing with a large host population.

    Analysis unit

    • Household
    • Individual

    Universe

    The target group consists of households in all communities. The survey will be conducted among metro and non-metro households. Non-metro households include those in: - small towns, - secondary cities, - peri-urban settlements and - deep rural areas. From each selected household, one adult respondent will be selected to participate in the study.

    Kind of data

    Sample survey data [ssd]

    Sampling procedure

    Migration data for South Africa are available for 2007 only at the level of local governments or municipalities from the 2007 Census; for smaller areas called "sub places" (SPs) only as recently as the 2001 census, and for the desired EAs only back so far as the Census of 1996. In sum, there was no single source that provided recent data on the five types of migrants of principal interest at the level of the Enumeration Area, which was the area for which data were needed to draw the sample since it was going to be necessary to identify migrant and non-migrant households in the sample areas in order to oversample those with migrants for interview.

    In an attempt to overcome the data limitations referred to above, it was necessary to adopt a novel approach to the design of the sample for the World Bank's household migration survey in South Africa, to identify EAs with a high probability of finding immigrants and those with a low probability. This required the combined use of the three sources of data described above. The starting point was the CS 2007 survey, which provided data on migration at a local government level, classifying each local government cluster in terms of migration level, taking into account the types of migrants identified. The researchers then spatially zoomed in from these clusters to the so-called sub-places (SPs) from the 2001 Census to classifying SP clusters by migration level. Finally, the 1996 Census data were used to zoom in even further down to the EA level, using the 1996 census data on migration levels of various typed, to identify the final level of clusters for the survey, namely the spatially small EAs (each typically containing about 200 households, and hence amenable to the listing operation in the field).

    A higher score or weight was attached to the 2007 Community Survey municipality-level (MN) data than to the Census 2001 sub-place (SP) data, which in turn was given a greater weight than the 1996 enumerator area (EA) data. The latter was derived exclusively from the Census 1996 EA data, but has then been reallocated to the 2001 EAs proportional to geographical size. Although these weights are purely arbitrary since it was composed from different sources, they give an indication of the relevant importance attached to the different migrant categories. These weighted migrant proportions (secondary strata), therefore constituted the second level of clusters for sampling purposes.

    In addition, a system of weighting or scoring the different persons by migrant type was applied to ensure that the likelihood of finding migrants would be optimised. As part of this procedure, recent migrants (who had migrated in the preceding five years) received a higher score than lifetime migrants (who had not migrated during the preceding five years). Similarly, a higher score was attached to international immigrants (both recent and lifetime, who had come to SA from abroad) than to internal migrants (who had only moved within SA's borders). A greater weight also applied to inter-provincial (internal) than to intra-provincial migrants (who only moved within the same South African province).

    How the three data sources were combined to provide overall scores for EA can be briefly described. First, in each of the two provinces, all local government units were given migration scores according to the numbers or relative proportions of the population classified in the various categories of migrants (with non-migrants given a score of 1.0. Migrants were assigned higher scores according to their priority, with international migrants given higher scores than internal migrants and recent migrants higher scores than lifetime migrants. Then within the local governments, sub-places were assigned scores assigned on the basis of inter vs. intra-provincial migrants using the 2001 census data. Each SP area in a local government was thus assigned a value which was the product of its local government score (the same for all SPs in the local government) and its own SP score. The third and final stage was to develop relative migration scores for all the EAs from the 1996 census by similarly weighting the proportions of migrants (and non-migrants, assigned always 1.0) of each type. The the final migration score for an EA is the product of its own EA score from 1996, the SP score of which it is a part (assigned to all the EAs within the SP), and the local government score from the 2007 survey.

    Based on all the above principles the set of weights or scores was developed.

    In sum, we multiplied the proportion of populations of each migrant type, or their incidence, by the appropriate final corresponding EA scores for persons of each type in the EA (based on multiplying the three weights together), to obtain the overall score for each EA. This takes into account the distribution of persons in the EA according to migration status in 1996, the SP score of the EA in 2001, and the local government score (in which the EA is located) from 2007. Finally, all EAs in each province were then classified into quartiles, prior to sampling from the quartiles.

    From the EAs so classified, the sampling took the form of selecting EAs, i.e., primary sampling units (PSUs, which in this case are also Ultimate Sampling Units, since this is a single stage sample), according to their classification into quartiles. The proportions selected from each quartile are based on the range of EA-level scores which are assumed to reflect weighted probabilities of finding desired migrants in each EA. To enhance the likelihood of finding migrants, much higher proportions of EAs were selected into the sample from the quartiles with the higher scores compared to the lower scores (disproportionate sampling). The decision on the most appropriate categorisations was informed by the observed migration levels in the two provinces of the study area during 2007, 2001 and 1996, analysed at the lowest spatial level for which migration data was available in each case.

    Because of the differences in their characteristics it was decided that the provinces of Gauteng and Limpopo should each be regarded as an explicit stratum for sampling purposes. These two provinces therefore represented the primary explicit strata. It was decided to select an equal number of EAs from these two primary strata.

    The migration-level categories referred to above were treated as secondary explicit strata to ensure optimal coverage of each in the sample. The distribution of migration levels was then used to draw EAs in such a way that greater preference could be given to areas with higher proportions of migrants in general, but especially immigrants (note the relative scores assigned to each type of person above). The proportion of EAs selected into the sample from the quartiles draws upon the relative mean weighted migrant scores (referred to as proportions) found below the table, but this is a coincidence and not necessary, as any disproportionate sampling of EAs from the quartiles could be done, since it would be rectified in the weighting at the end for the analysis.

    The resultant proportions of migrants then led to the following proportional allocation of sampled EAs (Quartile 1: 5 per cent (instead of 25% as in an equal distribution), Quartile 2: 15 per cent (instead

  10. Immigration Statistics: study - Dataset - data.gov.uk

    • ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Updated Sep 4, 2012
    + more versions
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    ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk (2012). Immigration Statistics: study - Dataset - data.gov.uk [Dataset]. https://ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk/dataset/immigration-statistics-study
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 4, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    CKANhttps://ckan.org/
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This release replaces the previous annual and quarterly publications Control of Immigration Statistics and the annual British Citizenship, following a public consultation. Each topic now has its own entry, links to these related reports can be found under the "additional links" section. There are a number of different measures that can be used to monitor numbers of people coming to the United Kingdom for study. For those students who are subject to immigration control, administrative information is available on student visas and visa extensions, as well as records of students admitted. The International Passenger Survey (IPS), run by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), provides estimates of all students arriving in the UK, with the ONS migration statistics focussing on those who intend to stay for a year or more. Research into students has also been published, for example Migrant Journey Analysis that involved linking records to give a more complete picture as to what happened to a group of students over a five year period. These various statistics and research can appear to give different pictures of student immigration. Often this is because the latest data for different measures cover different time periods. In addition, they also count different aspects of the immigration process, with some showing intentions or permissions, whilst others show actual events.

  11. Estimates of interprovincial migrants by province or territory of origin and...

    • www150.statcan.gc.ca
    • datasets.ai
    • +2more
    Updated Sep 24, 2025
    + more versions
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    Government of Canada, Statistics Canada (2025). Estimates of interprovincial migrants by province or territory of origin and destination, annual [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.25318/1710002201-eng
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 24, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics Canadahttps://statcan.gc.ca/en
    Area covered
    Canada
    Description

    Annual number of interprovincial migrants by province of origin and destination, Canada, provinces and territories.

  12. Immigration statistics data tables, year ending March 2021

    • gov.uk
    • s3.amazonaws.com
    Updated Jun 18, 2021
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    Home Office (2021). Immigration statistics data tables, year ending March 2021 [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/immigration-statistics-data-tables-year-ending-march-2021
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Jun 18, 2021
    Dataset provided by
    GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
    Authors
    Home Office
    Description

    The Home Office has changed the format of the published data tables for a number of areas (asylum and resettlement, entry clearance visas, extensions, citizenship, returns, detention, and sponsorship). These now include summary tables, and more detailed datasets (available on a separate page, link below). A list of all available datasets on a given topic can be found in the ‘Contents’ sheet in the ‘summary’ tables. Information on where to find historic data in the ‘old’ format is in the ‘Notes’ page of the ‘summary’ tables.

    The Home Office intends to make these changes in other areas in the coming publications. If you have any feedback, please email MigrationStatsEnquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk.

    Related content

    Immigration statistics, year ending March 2021
    Immigration Statistics Quarterly Release
    Immigration Statistics User Guide
    Publishing detailed data tables in migration statistics
    Policy and legislative changes affecting migration to the UK: timeline
    Immigration statistics data archives

    Asylum and resettlement

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60cc8a3e8fa8f57ce63f19e0/asylum-summary-mar-2021-tables.ods">Asylum and resettlement summary tables, year ending March 2021 (ODS, 81.2 KB)

    Detailed asylum and resettlement datasets

    Sponsorship

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60a51d788fa8f56a3f720ca2/sponsorship-summary-mar-2021-tables.ods">Sponsorship summary tables, year ending March 2021 (ODS, 48.1 KB)

    Detailed sponsorship datasets

    Entry clearance visas granted outside the UK

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60a51db9d3bf7f28890dac6c/visas-summary-mar-2021-tables.ods">Entry clearance visas summary tables, year ending March 2021 (ODS, 48 KB)

    Detailed entry clearance visas datasets

    Passenger arrivals (admissions)

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60a51df18fa8f56a39f362c3/passenger-arrivals-admissions-summary-mar-2021-tables.ods">Passenger arrivals (admissions) summary tables, year ending March 2021 (ODS, 39.3 KB)

    Detailed Passengers initially refused entry at port datasets

    Extensions

    https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60a51e51e90e07357519a26a/extentions-summary-mar-2021-tables.ods">Extensions summa

  13. US Immigration Statistics (1980-2021)

    • kaggle.com
    zip
    Updated Jan 8, 2023
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    The Data Wrangler (2023). US Immigration Statistics (1980-2021) [Dataset]. https://www.kaggle.com/datasets/justin2028/us-immigration-statistics-1980-2021/data
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    zip(1468 bytes)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 8, 2023
    Authors
    The Data Wrangler
    License

    Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    United States
    Description

    https://www.googleapis.com/download/storage/v1/b/kaggle-user-content/o/inbox%2F12064410%2F468b9ab69fbaa3eea94ab7c13537052f%2Fimmigration%20flag.png?generation=1673145948097950&alt=media" alt="">

    15,341 DAYS (October 1st, 1979 - September 30th, 2021)

    This is a dataset that describes annual statistics regarding US immigration between the 1980-2021 fiscal years.

    All data are official figures from the Department of Homeland Security's government website that have been compiled and structured by myself. There are several reasons for the decision to only examine immigration data from 1980 to 2021. Since 1976, a fiscal year for the US government has always started on October 1st and ended the following year on September 30th. If the years prior to 1976 were included, the data may be incorrectly represented and cause further confusion for viewers. Additionally, the United States only tracked refugee arrivals after the Refugee Act of 1980, a statistic that is prominently featured in the dataset. As a result, the start date of 1980 was chosen instead of 1976.

    Data Sources

    The primary data sources used were the "Yearbook of Immigration Statistics" webpages from the Department of Homeland Security. As a whole, the website not only provided figures about US immigration that were perfect for making time series analyses, but also explored the logistics behind the annual trends found.
    1. The Department of Homeland Security's 2021 Yearbook of Immigration Statistics - The Office of Immigration Statistics' 2021 Flow Reports and Population Estimates provide text, tables, and charts on lawful permanent residents, refugees and asylees, nonimmigrant admissions, naturalizations, enforcement actions, and the unauthorized population. Being the latest version released to date, the 2021 yearbook is the most comprehensive report publicly available and tends to feature data of past years for reference.
    2. The Department of Homeland Security's Directory of Past Immigration Yearbooks - Past yearbooks were referenced in order to find the missing data from the fiscal years during 2000-2021. There is a single yearbook covering the fiscal years during 1996-1999, but that was the oldest publications featured in the directory.
    3. The Center for Immigration Studies's File Library - In order to procure immigration data during the fiscal years of 1980-1999, I found free versions of the Immigration and Naturalization Service's paywalled yearbooks from the Center for Immigration Studies. By doing so, I was able fill in the missing values and finish the dataset.

    Statistics Being Tracked

    • Immigrants Obtaining Lawful Permanent Resident Status - Number of immigrants who obtained lawful permanent resident status in the United States, otherwise known as green card holders.
    • Refugee Arrivals - Number of refugees who arrived in the United States. Excludes Amerasian immigrants except for the fiscal years of 1989 and 1991. Figures are based on refugee's arrival date.
    • Noncitizen Apprehensions - Number of noncitizens apprehended in the United States. Data from 2020 to 2021 includes U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) encounters that resulted in expulsion on public health grounds (due to the pandemic).
    • Noncitizen Removals - Number of noncitizens removed from the United States. Removals are the compulsory and confirmed movement of an inadmissible or deportable noncitizen out of the United States based on an order of removal.
    • Noncitizen Returns - Number of noncitizen returns from the United States. Returns are the confirmed movement of an inadmissible or deportable noncitizen out of the United States not based on an order of removal.

    Dataset History

    2023-01-07 - Dataset is created (465 days after the end of the 2021 fiscal year).

    GitHub Repository - The same data but on GitHub.

    Code Starter

    Link to Notebook

  14. G

    Immigrants to Canada, by province or territory of destination

    • open.canada.ca
    • www150.statcan.gc.ca
    csv, html, xml
    Updated Jan 17, 2023
    + more versions
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    Statistics Canada (2023). Immigrants to Canada, by province or territory of destination [Dataset]. https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/a39730d9-fc00-444d-b604-070b14a2f865
    Explore at:
    html, csv, xmlAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jan 17, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Statistics Canada
    License

    Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
    License information was derived automatically

    Area covered
    Canada
    Description

    This table contains 15 series, with data for years 1946 - 2004 (not all combinations necessarily have data for all years). This table contains data described by the following dimensions (Not all combinations are available): Geography (15 items: Canada; Prince Edward Island; Nova Scotia; Newfoundland and Labrador ...).

  15. Permanent Residents – Monthly IRCC Updates

    • open.canada.ca
    • data.wu.ac.at
    csv, xlsx
    Updated Nov 18, 2025
    + more versions
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    Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada (2025). Permanent Residents – Monthly IRCC Updates [Dataset]. https://open.canada.ca/data/en/dataset/f7e5498e-0ad8-4417-85c9-9b8aff9b9eda
    Explore at:
    xlsx, csvAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Nov 18, 2025
    Dataset provided by
    Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canadahttp://www.cic.gc.ca/
    License

    Open Government Licence - Canada 2.0https://open.canada.ca/en/open-government-licence-canada
    License information was derived automatically

    Time period covered
    Jan 1, 2015 - Sep 30, 2025
    Description

    People who have been granted permanent resident status in Canada. Please note that in these datasets, the figures have been suppressed or rounded to prevent the identification of individuals when the datasets are compiled and compared with other publicly available statistics. Values between 0 and 5 are shown as “--“ and all other values are rounded to the nearest multiple of 5. This may result to the sum of the figures not equating to the totals indicated.

  16. Immigration Statistics: admissions - Dataset - data.gov.uk

    • ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk
    Updated Sep 4, 2012
    + more versions
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    ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk (2012). Immigration Statistics: admissions - Dataset - data.gov.uk [Dataset]. https://ckan.publishing.service.gov.uk/dataset/immigration-statistics-admissions
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    Dataset updated
    Sep 4, 2012
    Dataset provided by
    CKANhttps://ckan.org/
    License

    Open Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    This release replaces the previous annual and quarterly publications Control of Immigration Statistics and the annual British Citizenship, following a public consultation. Each topic now has its own entry, links to these related reports can be found under the "additional links" section. The figures show the number of journeys made by persons entering the United Kingdom. Where an individual enters the country more than once, each arrival is counted. For passengers subject to immigration control arriving who have previously obtained leave to enter, the journey is recorded as ‘returning after a temporary absence abroad’. Due to the volume of passengers arriving at Heathrow and Gatwick some data are estimated from monthly samples.

  17. Multi-aspect Integrated Migration Indicators (MIMI) dataset

    • data.europa.eu
    unknown
    Updated Mar 14, 2022
    + more versions
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    Zenodo (2022). Multi-aspect Integrated Migration Indicators (MIMI) dataset [Dataset]. https://data.europa.eu/data/datasets/oai-zenodo-org-6360651?locale=fr
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    unknown(63334098)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Mar 14, 2022
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Zenodohttp://zenodo.org/
    License

    Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
    License information was derived automatically

    Description

    The Multi-aspect Integrated Migration Indicators (MIMI) dataset is the result of the process of gathering, embedding and combining traditional migration datasets, mostly from sources like Eurostat and UNSD Demographic Statistics Database, and alternative types of data, which consists in multidisciplinary features and measures not typically employed in migration studies, such as the Facebook Social Connectedness Index (SCI). Its purpose is to exploit these novel types of data for: nowcasting migration flows and stocks, studying integration of multiple sources and knowledge, and investigating migration drivers. The MIMI dataset is designed to have a unique pair of countries for each row. Each record contains country-to-country information about: migrations flows and stock their share, their strength of Facebook connectedness and other features, such as corresponding populations, GDP, coordinates, NET migration, and many others. Methodology. After having collected bilateral flows records about international human mobility by citizenship, residence and country of birth (available for both sexes and, in some cases, for different age groups), they have been merged together in order to obtain a unique dataset in which each ordered couple (country-of-origin, country-of-destination) appears once. To avoid duplicate couples, flow records have been selected by following this priority: first migration by citizenship, then migration by residence and lastly by country of birth. The integration process started by choosing, collecting and meaningfully including many other indicators that could be helpful for the dataset final purpose mentioned above. International migration stocks (having a five-year range of measurement) for each couple of countries. Geographical features for each country: ISO3166 name and official name, ISO3166-1 alpha-2 and alpha-3 codes, continent code and name of belonging, latitude and longitude of the centroid, list of bordering countries, country area in square kilometres. Also, the following features have been included for each pair of countries: geodesic distance (in kilometres) computed between their respective centroids. Non-bidirectional migration measures for each country: total number of immigrants and emigrants for each year, NET migration and NET migration rate in a five-year range. Other multidisciplinary indicators (cultural, social, anthropological, demographical, historical features) related to each country: religion (single one or list), yearly GDP at PPP, spoken language (or list of languages), yearly population stocks (and population densities if available), number of Facebook users, percentage of Facebook users, cultural indicators (PDI, IDV, MAS, UAI, LTO). Also the following feature have been included for each pair of countries: Facebook Social Connectedness Index. Once traditional and non-traditional knowledge is gathered and integrated, we move to the pre-processing phase where we manage the data cleaning, preparation and transformation. Here our dataset was subjected to various computational standard processes and additionally reshaped in the final structure established by our design choices. The data quality assessment phase was one of the longest and most delicate, since many values were missing and this could have had a negative impact on the quality of the desired resulting knowledge. They have been integrated from additional sources such as The World Bank, World Population Review, Statista, DataHub, Wikipedia and in some cases extracted from Python libraries such as PyPopulation, CountryInfo and PyCountry. The final dataset has the structure of a huge matrix having countries couples as index (uniquely identified by coupling their ISO 3166-1 alpha-2 codes): it comprises 28725 entries and 485 columns.

  18. d

    Replication Data for: Economic and Cultural Drivers of Immigrant Support...

    • search.dataone.org
    • dataverse.harvard.edu
    Updated Nov 22, 2023
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    Valentino, Nicholas; Soroka, Stuart; Iyengar, Shanto; Aalberg, Toril; Duch, Raymond; Fraile, Marta; Hahn, Kyu S.; Hansen, Kasper M.; Harell, Allison; Helbling, Marc; Jackman, Simon D.; Kobayashi, Tetsuro (2023). Replication Data for: Economic and Cultural Drivers of Immigrant Support Worldwide [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/R5MEKK
    Explore at:
    Dataset updated
    Nov 22, 2023
    Dataset provided by
    Harvard Dataverse
    Authors
    Valentino, Nicholas; Soroka, Stuart; Iyengar, Shanto; Aalberg, Toril; Duch, Raymond; Fraile, Marta; Hahn, Kyu S.; Hansen, Kasper M.; Harell, Allison; Helbling, Marc; Jackman, Simon D.; Kobayashi, Tetsuro
    Description

    Employing a comparative experimental design drawing on over 18,000 interviews across 11 countries on 4 continents, we revisit the discussion about economic and cultural drivers of attitudes towards immigrants in advanced democracies. We manipulate the occupational status, skin tone and national origin of immigrants in short vignettes. Results are most consistent with a sociotropic economic threat thesis: higher-skilled immigrants are preferred to lower-skilled in all countries, and at all levels of native SES. We find, in contrast, little support for the labor market competition hypothesis, since respondents are not more opposed to immigrants in their own SES stratum. While skin tone itself has little effect in any country, immigrants from Muslim majority countries do elicit significantly lower levels of support, and racial animus remains a powerful force.

  19. e

    SWIP - Swedish Income Panel - SWIP - Population changes, immigration and...

    • data.europa.eu
    • researchdata.se
    unknown
    Updated Feb 28, 2002
    + more versions
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    Göteborgs universitet (2002). SWIP - Swedish Income Panel - SWIP - Population changes, immigration and emigration 1997 [Dataset]. http://data.europa.eu/88u/dataset/https-doi-org-10-5878-dfz3-5323~~1
    Explore at:
    unknownAvailable download formats
    Dataset updated
    Feb 28, 2002
    Dataset authored and provided by
    Göteborgs universitet
    Description

    The Swedish income panel was originally set up in the beginning of the 90s to make studies of how immigrants assimilate in the Swedish labour market possible. It consists of large samples of foreign-born and Swedish-born persons. Income information from registers is added for nearly 40 years. In addition income information relating to spouses is also available as well as for a subset of mothers and fathers. This makes it possible to construct measures of household income based on a relatively narrow definition. However, starting in 1998 there is also more information making it possible to include children over 18 and their incomes in the family. By matching with some different additional registers information has been added for people who have been unemployed or involved in labour market programmes during the 90s, on causes of deaths for people who have deceased since 1978 and on recent arrived immigrants from various origins. It has turned out that the data-base is quite useful for analysing research-questions other than originally motivating construction of the panel. The panel has been used for cross country comparisons of immigrants in the labour market and to analyse income mobility for different breakdowns of the population, and analyses the development in cohort income. There have been analyses of social assistance receipt among immigrants as well as studies of intergeneration mobility of income, the labour market situation of young immigrants and the second generation of immigrants. On-going work includes evaluation of labour market training programmes and studies of early retirement among immigrants. Planned work includes studies of the economic transition from child to adulthood during the 80s and 90s as well as studies of how frequent immigrant children are subject to measures under the Social Service Act and the Care of Youth Persons Act. The potentials of the Swedish Income Panel can be understood if one compares it with better known income-panels in other countries. For example SWIP covers more years and has a larger sample than the German Socio-Economic Panel (GSOEP). On the other hand, the fact that information is obtained from registers only makes this Swedish panel less rich in variables. There are striking parallels between the Gothenburg Income Panel and the labour market panel at the Centre for Labour Market and Social Research in Aarhus for the Danish population.

  20. g

    Pathways to Power: The Political Representation of Citizens of Immigrant...

    • search.gesis.org
    • da-ra.de
    Updated Jun 7, 2017
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    Van Hauwaert, Steven M.; Janssen, Chloé; Pilet, Jean-Benoit; Celis, Karen; Baudewyns, Pierre (2017). Pathways to Power: The Political Representation of Citizens of Immigrant Origin in Belgium (BE-PATHWAYS) [Dataset]. http://doi.org/10.4232/1.12793
    Explore at:
    application/x-stata-dta(9593654), application/x-spss-sav(1809130), application/x-stata-dta(2272983), application/x-spss-sav(8102497)Available download formats
    Dataset updated
    Jun 7, 2017
    Dataset provided by
    GESIS Data Archive
    GESIS search
    Authors
    Van Hauwaert, Steven M.; Janssen, Chloé; Pilet, Jean-Benoit; Celis, Karen; Baudewyns, Pierre
    License

    https://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-termshttps://www.gesis.org/en/institute/data-usage-terms

    Time period covered
    1991 - 2010
    Area covered
    Belgium
    Description

    The project aims at providing the data required to study the descriptive representation of citizens of immigrant origin (CIOs). The main aim is to provide an overview of the social and political profile of Member of Parliament (MPs), with a particular focus on identifying MPs of immigrant origin. In addition to the national level dataset described below, a corresponding regional level dataset is available.

    Identification variables: Political level (regional, national); country-ID (NUTS); name of region; region-id (NUTS); date of relevant election; full name of district in which elected; level of electoral tier (first / Lower (or single tier); identifier for tier 1 to 3 districts at national level; number of legislatures in the country, as recorded by the parliament itself; date in which the legislature begins and ends; first name, first (second) surname of MP; MP-ID; national MP is also simultaneously a regional MP; which regional MP.

    Demography: sex of MP; year of birth of MP; highest level of education (ISCED 1997); last occupation /profession of the MP before first ever becoming an MP (ISCO 2008); occupation sector when first elected; current occupation/ profession of the MP (ISCO 2008); current occupation sector.

    Electoral and parliamentary tenure variables: number of times the MP has been previously elected to parliament in this district; type of electoral district; number of times the MP has been previously elected to parliament in this tier; Rookie: MP elected for the first time in this term; number of times the MP has been elected to parliament; number of times the MP has taken up the seat in parliament once elected; year when the MP was first elected to national/regional parliament; total number of years spent in national/regional parliament as MP, prior to this legislature (seniority); when was the MP elected for the last time prior to this legislature (continuity); MP was elected to chamber from inauguration; MP stayed continuously with no interruptions from the moment of taking up the seat until the end of the legislative term; number of months the MP did serve (if he did not serve a full legislative term); MP came back to reclaim the seat if MP left seat at some point; position in party list; rank position in which the MP was elected in district; double candidacy in another tier; MP won seat as incumbent, or as contender; parliamentary group the MP joined at the beginning and at the end of his/her term; full name and acronym of party or list in which elected; party code according to the CMP (Comparative Manifesto Project) dataset; party-ID.

    Immigrant origin variables (corresponding coding for MPs mother and father): MP was born in the country of parliament; country (ISO 3166-1), world region (UN Classification for ‘Composition of macro geographical regions’), and country region (NUTS) in which the MP was born; data sources for country of birth (e.g. official parliamentary source, personal blogs, etc.); specific sources for country of birth; reliability of the data regarding the country of birth of the MP (as judged by the coder); year of immigration; born as a national citizen of the country of parliament; country of nationality at birth; data sources country of nationality at birth; specific sources for country of citizenship at birth; reliability of the data regarding citizenship at birth; year in which naturalized as a citizen; data sources year of naturalization; specific sources for date of naturalization; reliability of the data regarding naturalization.

    Variables relating to aspects potentially related to discrimination: the MP is a native speaker of an official country language and data sources; specific sources for native language of MP; MP can be perceived by voters as a member of an ‘identifiable’ minority; source where picture found; specific sources for picture of MP; does the MP self-identify as a member of an ethnic minority; ethnicity; sources and specific sources for information on ethnic self-identification of MP; self-identification as a member of a certain religion; religion the MP identifies with.

    Party career and committee membership variables: year in which the MP joined the party for which she/he was elected in this legislative term; highest position within the party; MP changed party affiliation during the legislative term; date of change; full name and party acronym of the new party joined, CMP code of the new party and Pathways identifier for party; (corresponding co...

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Home Office (2025). Immigration system statistics data tables [Dataset]. https://www.gov.uk/government/statistical-data-sets/immigration-system-statistics-data-tables
Organization logo

Immigration system statistics data tables

Explore at:
33 scholarly articles cite this dataset (View in Google Scholar)
Dataset updated
Nov 27, 2025
Dataset provided by
GOV.UKhttp://gov.uk/
Authors
Home Office
Description

List of the data tables as part of the Immigration system statistics Home Office release. Summary and detailed data tables covering the immigration system, including out-of-country and in-country visas, asylum, detention, and returns.

If you have any feedback, please email MigrationStatsEnquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk.

Accessible file formats

The Microsoft Excel .xlsx files may not be suitable for users of assistive technology.
If you use assistive technology (such as a screen reader) and need a version of these documents in a more accessible format, please email MigrationStatsEnquiries@homeoffice.gov.uk
Please tell us what format you need. It will help us if you say what assistive technology you use.

Related content

Immigration system statistics, year ending September 2025
Immigration system statistics quarterly release
Immigration system statistics user guide
Publishing detailed data tables in migration statistics
Policy and legislative changes affecting migration to the UK: timeline
Immigration statistics data archives

Passenger arrivals

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691afc82e39a085bda43edd8/passenger-arrivals-summary-sep-2025-tables.ods">Passenger arrivals summary tables, year ending September 2025 (ODS, 31.5 KB)

‘Passengers refused entry at the border summary tables’ and ‘Passengers refused entry at the border detailed datasets’ have been discontinued. The latest published versions of these tables are from February 2025 and are available in the ‘Passenger refusals – release discontinued’ section. A similar data series, ‘Refused entry at port and subsequently departed’, is available within the Returns detailed and summary tables.

Electronic travel authorisation

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691b03595a253e2c40d705b9/electronic-travel-authorisation-datasets-sep-2025.xlsx">Electronic travel authorisation detailed datasets, year ending September 2025 (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 58.6 KB)
ETA_D01: Applications for electronic travel authorisations, by nationality ETA_D02: Outcomes of applications for electronic travel authorisations, by nationality

Entry clearance visas granted outside the UK

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6924812a367485ea116a56bd/visas-summary-sep-2025-tables.ods">Entry clearance visas summary tables, year ending September 2025 (ODS, 53.3 KB)

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/691aebbf5a253e2c40d70598/entry-clearance-visa-outcomes-datasets-sep-2025.xlsx">Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes detailed datasets, year ending September 2025 (MS Excel Spreadsheet, 30.2 MB)
Vis_D01: Entry clearance visa applications, by nationality and visa type
Vis_D02: Outcomes of entry clearance visa applications, by nationality, visa type, and outcome

Additional data relating to in country and overse

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