Technology

Asylum seekers banned from taking taxis for medical trips

2025-11-29 08:25
480 views
Asylum seekers banned from taking taxis for medical trips

Ms Mahmood said the Government is working with providers to introduce alternatives

  1. News
  2. UK
  3. UK Politics
Asylum seekers banned from taking taxis for medical trips

Ms Mahmood said the Government is working with providers to introduce alternatives

Jessica CoatesSaturday 29 November 2025 08:25 GMTCommentsVideo Player PlaceholderCloseShabana Mahmood tells Nigel Farage to ‘sod off’ as she defends asylum reformsView from Westminster

Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inbox

Get our free View from Westminster email

Get our free View from Westminster email

View from WestminsterEmail*SIGN UP

I would like to be emailed about offers, events and updates from The Independent. Read our Privacy notice

Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has announced a ban on asylum seekers using taxis for most medical journeys.

Under the new rules, taxi use for medical travel will be restricted to exceptional, evidence-based cases, including physical disability, pregnancy, or serious illness.

Such journeys will now require direct Home Office approval.

This policy change follows a recent BBC investigation that revealed "widespread" taxi use by asylum seekers, prompting a Home Office review of transport arrangements.

All service providers are required to stop using taxis for these medical journeys from February.

Ms Mahmood said the Government is working with providers to introduce alternatives — such as public transport — in a bid to save taxpayer money.

Shabana Mahmood said the Government is working with providers to introduce alternatives — such as public transport — in a bid to save taxpayer moneyopen image in galleryShabana Mahmood said the Government is working with providers to introduce alternatives — such as public transport — in a bid to save taxpayer money (PA)

“This Government inherited Conservative contracts that are wasting billions of taxpayers’ hard-earned cash,” she said.

“I am ending the unrestricted use of taxis by asylum seekers for hospital appointments, authorising them only in the most exceptional circumstances.

“I will continue to root out waste as we close every single asylum hotel.”

Earlier this month, Ms Mahmood set out a raft of measures to overhaul the asylum system, aimed at deterring illegal migration to the UK and making it easier to deport people.

The proposed changes include making refugee status temporary, subject to reviews every 30 months, and sending refugees home if their country is deemed safe.

The wide-ranging reforms drew criticism from Labour backbenchers.

The Government said the new rules will restrict taxi use for medical travel to exceptional, evidence-based cases such as physical disability, pregnancy or serious illnessopen image in galleryThe Government said the new rules will restrict taxi use for medical travel to exceptional, evidence-based cases such as physical disability, pregnancy or serious illness (PA Archive)

Ms Mahmood told MPs it was the “uncomfortable truth” that the UK’s generous asylum offer, compared with other European countries, is drawing people to UK shores, and for British taxpayers the system “feels out of control and unfair”.

The Home Secretary told the BBC’s Political Thinking podcast that she had already directed officials to “pilot a small programme” of increased payments “just to see how it changes behaviour”.

The UK currently offers payments of up to £3,000 for some people with no right to remain in the country who agree to return home.

More about

Shabana Mahmoodasylum seekersTaxis

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Most popular

    Popular videos

      Bulletin

        Read next