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Whether you are a settled resident, visa holder, asylum seeker, or undocumented migrant, you have fundamental legal rights in the UK. These include the right to legal representation, protection from unlawful detention, and access to essential services. Immigration law is complex and frequently changing.
Last updated: 2026-03-01
Your Rights
Right to Legal Representation
You have the right to legal advice and representation in immigration matters. Legal aid is available for asylum claims, detention, and some deportation cases. You should seek advice from a solicitor or adviser registered with the OISC (Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner).
Right to Claim Asylum
If you are in the UK and fear persecution in your home country, you have the right to claim asylum under the Refugee Convention. The Home Office must consider your claim, and you cannot be returned to a country where you face persecution while your claim is being decided.
Right to Challenge Detention
Immigration detention must be lawful. You can challenge your detention through bail applications to the First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber) or judicial review. Detention must be for a reasonable period and with a realistic prospect of removal.
Right to Appeal
You have the right to appeal most immigration decisions (refusal of asylum, deportation orders, revocation of protection status) to the First-tier Tribunal. Some decisions carry only administrative review rights.
Right to Essential Services
Regardless of immigration status, you have the right to NHS emergency treatment, primary education for children, and emergency local authority support for destitute families with children.
Common Myths
Undocumented migrants have no rights
Everyone in the UK has fundamental human rights including protection from torture and inhuman treatment, right to a fair trial, and access to emergency healthcare.
Asylum seekers are free to work
Asylum seekers cannot normally work. They can apply for permission to work only if their claim has been outstanding for 12+ months through no fault of their own, and only in shortage occupation jobs.
What To Do
Seek Legal Advice
Contact an OISC-registered adviser or immigration solicitor. Many offer free initial consultations.
Check Your Status
Use the GOV.UK online service to check your immigration status and what you are entitled to.
Apply for Bail
If you are in immigration detention, apply for bail through the First-tier Tribunal. Bail for Immigration Detainees (BID) can help.
Key Legislation
- Immigration Act 1971
- Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002
- Human Rights Act 1998
- Refugee Convention 1951