Farage
vows to scrap indefinite leave to remain, placing thousands at risk of
deportation
Reform UK
plans to force non-citizens to apply for visas, with high salary thresholds and
no access to NHS services
Eleni
Courea and Jessica Elgot
Mon 22
Sep 2025 13.24 BST
Nigel
Farage has pledged to abolish what the main route for immigrants to gain
British citizenship, threatening tens of thousands of people legally living in
the UK with deportation unless they meet strict rules.
The
Reform UK leader said his plans would target the “Boriswave” – the wave of
legal immigrants who arrived in the UK under post-Brexit rules established by
Boris Johnson – which he described as the “greatest betrayal of democratic
wishes certainly in anyone’s living memory”.
Unveiling
his plans, Farage said 800,000 people who “tend to be young, tend to be
low-skilled” were due to qualify for indefinite leave to remain in the UK over
the next three to four years.
He said
this group were “going to be a huge burden on the state”, that Britain was “not
the world’s food bank” and that it was “not for us to provide welfare for
people coming in from all over the world”.
Farage
said he would entirely abolish indefinite leave to remain (ILR), which is open
to people who have worked and lived in the UK legally for five continuous
years, and their dependants. After a minimum of a year on that status, people
can apply for British citizenship, though each stage comes with considerable
fees.
Much of
the increase in legal migration under Conservative governments starting with
Johnson’s was because of schemes to settle refugees from Ukraine, Hong Kong and
Afghanistan.
At a
tetchy press conference alongside his policy chief, Zia Yusuf, on Monday
morning, Farage was forced to qualify the announcement while refusing to answer
questions on how much it would cost and who it would affect.
The
proposals came under fire from Downing Street, which accused Farage of wanting
to “foster division”, and from Sadiq Khan, the mayor of London.
Farage
claimed the policy would save £234bn, a figure sourced from a Centre for Policy
Studies report that has been withdrawn because of a dispute over the numbers.
The thinktank said its figures “should not be used”.
Asked
whether he would withdraw the £230bn figure in light of this, Farage said it
was “without a doubt too low” and “underestimates things”.
Yusuf
argued the true number of people who would be applying for ILR in the coming
years was likely to be more than 800,000 because many of the people who have
arrived after Brexit came from non-EU countries.
“Do you
think French people and Swedish people and Finns are more or less likely to
apply for ILR and ultimately citizenship in this country than people from
India, Afghanistan or Pakistan? I think we all know the answer to that
question,” Yusuf said.
Farage
said that under a Reform government anyone who had indefinite leave to remain
would have it rescinded and would need to reapply for a visa, throwing the
lives and status of many families into uncertainty.
In
response to questions from journalists, Yusuf clarified that the policy would
not apply to EU citizens who have been granted settled status in the UK. But he
said there were “a lot of EU nationals in this country who are drawing on
universal credit, so you can expect Nigel’s government to open negotiations
with the European Union specifically about the welfare aspect”.
Farage
refused to specify whether the policy would apply to the Ukrainians and
Hongkongers who moved to Britain under dedicated visa routes for refugees
fleeing Russia’s invasion and China’s crackdown on civil liberties in Hong
Kong.
Asked to
substantiate his claim in Monday’s Daily Mail that most migrants rely on
benefits, Farage said he was “firmly of the belief with research backing it up”
that more than 50% of the people due to become eligible for ILR in the next few
years “are not working, have not worked and in all probability will never, ever
work”.
Instead
of granting them ILR, Reform would make non-UK citizens continue to apply for
visas with new high salary thresholds, though the party has not specified what
those thresholds would be.
The Times
reported they would be set at about £60,000, which would be a considerable
increase on the current skilled worker visa, which requires people to earn
£41,700 a year.
Those
visas would not allow the people who have them to access NHS services or
benefits and would require advanced English, with strict new limits on whether
spouses or family members could join.
The
changes would also mean that those applying for citizenship must wait at least
seven years and prove a fluent level of English, as well as giving up
citizenship of any other country.
Keir
Starmer’s political spokesperson said the country was at a crossroads between
“national renewal” and “the path of division and decline, which Reform wants to
put the country on”.
She said:
“Every week Nigel Farage sets out unrealistic, unworkable and unfunded plans.
You’ve heard the prime minister talk about the politics of grievance that
Reform thrives on. They don’t want to tackle the issues facing the country,
they want to foster division.”
Labour
has already announced plans to introduce tough restrictions on indefinite leave
to remain, meaning most applicants must have been in the UK for 10 years before
they can apply.
However,
a Labour source disputed claims in the Telegraph that significant numbers of
migrants with indefinite leave to remain were receiving benefits, saying it was
only about 16% of all foreign claims. The majority – 60%, equating to about
770,000, according to government figures – are EU citizens who have settled
status and whose access to benefits is guaranteed by the Brexit deal.
A Labour
source said: “Farage’s not even half-baked announcement has already fallen
apart. Yet again, Reform have no credible plan and their only answer is ‘don’t
know’.”
Sadiq
Khan, the mayor of London, said: “Thousands of Londoners have indefinite leave
to remain. They have legal rights and are our friends, neighbours and
colleagues, contributing hugely to our city. Threatening to deport people
living and working here legally is unacceptable.”

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