Public Misunderstands UK Net Migration as Figures Show Sharp Decline
Quick Look
- A British Future report reveals a significant gap between public perception and reality regarding UK net migration.
- Despite figures dropping to their lowest in years, many believe it's rising, influenced by "stop the boats" rhetoric and visible signs of immigration.
AI-generated summary
Why It Matters
New research from British Future indicates a significant disconnect between the public's belief that net migration is rising in Britain and the actual figures, which show a sharp decline. This perception gap is influencing the broader political debate, particularly in the context of post-Brexit discussions and concerns over unauthorized Channel crossings.
People mistakenly believe net migration is rising in Britain despite figures dropping to their lowest level in years, a leading thinktank has found.
New research from British Future, published ahead of latest government figures on migration, has revealed a chasm between reality and public perception of net migration, with a substantial portion of the public believing it has increased, despite figures showing a sharp fall.
Net migration dropped from a peak of 944,000 in the year to March 2023 to 204,000 in the year to June 2025, according to government figures.
The latest figures will be published on Thursday morning, and are expected to show a further decrease in net migration.
According to British Future’s research, 67% of people with sceptical views on immigration believe net migration increased in 2025, compared with 37% of those with more liberal views. It also found six in 10 people who would like to see immigration reduced also believe numbers are still rising. Only 15% of people expect net migration to be lower in the next year.
The researchers found that people believe individuals seeking asylum account for 33% of immigration, when in reality it is about 9%. They also believe people travelling to the UK for study account for 24% of immigration, when it is in fact just over half.
The perception gap is not just shaping the immigration debate but also politics more broadly, British Future’s director, Sunder Katwala, said.
“It’s little wonder voters think net migration is going up when the only debate we have is about how to bring it down,” he said. “We should be having a conversation about how to manage the pressures and gains of migration to Britain.”
Conversation surrounding immigration has become increasingly polarised, particularly since the Brexit referendum. A decade on, “stop the boats” rhetoric and numerous pledges across the political spectrum to thwart an increase in unauthorised crossings of the Channel have shaped attitudes on immigration.
While net immigration figures have dropped, Labour and Conservative MPs have spoken in the past five years with increasing hostility about immigration more than at almost any other time in the last century, Guardian analysis has shown. Mistrust on immigration is shared across all parties, British Future found.
In November, the home secretary, Shabana Mahmood, whose Labour party has proposed changes to settlement and citizenship, acknowledged a 69% drop in net migration in the 12 months to June 2025, to the lowest annual figure since 2021, but said: “We are going further because the pace and scale of migration has placed immense pressure on local communities.”
The shadow home secretary, Chris Philp, said in response to the fall: “We need to go much further.” Reform UK, meanwhile, has pledged to reach “net zero” immigration. The party’s leader, Nigel Farage, has falsely claimed the drop in net migration was largely the result of British emigration – not the fall in overseas arrivals.
Immigration ranks as the third most important issue in public opinion, just the behind cost of living and the NHS. Sophie Stowers, a research manager at More in Common, believes the misconception is partly because pictures and videos of people arriving on small boats, and asylum hotels opening in towns, draw a more visceral response than official figures.
“We know there’s not always a really clear tie between net migration levels and how the public feels about immigration,” Stowers said. “Net migration or legal migration is only part of the story, and ultimately it’s not the story most voters are concerned with.”
British Future used Number Cruncher Politics for the research, which surveyed a national sample of 3,003 adults across Great Britain at the end of March.
If current trends continue, all parties “may be looking at a very different immigration context” over the next three years as they prepare for the 2029 general election campaign, the report said.
Stowers said concerns about immigration and small boats were rooted in wider issues, including security and stability in an increasingly uncertain world.
“It’s not even just about immigration any more; it’s a whole proxy for whether the system we have is working or not,” she said. “I think that’s why it’s so difficult to have these conversations and why just talking about net migration going down doesn’t shift the dial.”
What to Watch
AI outlook — possibilities, not facts
The perception gap regarding net migration will continue to influence political discourse and electoral strategies leading up to the 2029 general election.
Very likely · Within months
Future government figures on migration are expected to show a further decrease, potentially widening the gap with public perception if not addressed.
Likely · Within days
Open Questions
- What specific communication strategies can bridge the gap between migration reality and public perception?
- How will the differing views on immigration impact the upcoming 2029 general election?
- What are the long-term consequences of the polarized immigration debate on social cohesion in Britain?
- To what extent do media portrayals of immigration contribute to the public's skewed perception?





