Home Office confirms each asylum claim costs the taxpayer £18,700
Every asylum claim lodged in Britain hits the taxpayer with an £18,700 bill, astonishing new figures disclose.
The average sum includes the cost of providing accommodation and living costs, as well as the sums spent on processing claims and any legal appeals.
It will include Channel small boat arrivals who are housed in migrant hotels as well as less costly types of claimant, such as those who arrive legally on work or student visas and then claim asylum in a bid to remain in Britain.
The Home Office published the figure in background papers to the new Immigration and Asylum Bill, published on Tuesday.
The costings were based on ‘asylum claims from July 2024 to June 2025’, the papers showed.
It would mean the 93,525 asylum claims lodged in the year to March will cost the taxpayer a staggering £1.7billion to resolve.
There were 2,742 small boat arrivals in June which, using the same average figure, will cost more than £51million to support and process.
However, the true cost of dealing with different types of asylum applicants will vary.
Each asylum claim lodged in Britain costs the taxpayer £18,700. Pictured: Channel small boat migrants attempt to board an overloaded dinghy bound for the UK at Wissant beach, France, on Tuesday
Migrants hold onto a raft after getting into difficulties trying to board a dinghy to cross into the English Channel on Tuesday in Wissant, France
Migrants wait on a beach to board a dinghy to cross into the English Channel on Tuesday
For example, the Home Office disclosed earlier this year that it costs an average of £158,000 a year to support a family of asylum seekers.
The official ‘impact assessment’ published alongside the Bill also revealed that more than three-quarters of those who made ‘right to family and private life’ under human rights laws are unemployed.
A breakdown of claims made here under Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights said 76 per cent were jobless.
The papers said the applicants were ‘unemployed at the time of application’ and it included ‘both those with and without the right to employment’.
In a further development, the papers add that Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood’s proposals to crack down on abuse of Article 8 may even lead to a spike in asylum claims.
The document said: ‘An increase in refused Article 8 ECHR claims is likely to lead to an increase in the number of migrants that require Immigration Enforcement involvement to exit the UK, with includes both voluntary and enforced removals.
‘The capacity for enforced removals is fixed, so it is difficult to say whether there will be an overall increase in enforced removals.
‘However, in 2022, only five per cent of family and private life refusals that had Immigration Enforcement involvement were enforced returns.
‘To note, increasing the number of refusals may also increase the number of people claiming asylum.’
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood published her new Immigration and Asylum Bill earlier this week
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp has dismissed Labour’s plan as ‘minor tweaks which will make no difference whatsoever in practice’.
He said previous attempts to ‘fine-tune’ Article 8 claims ‘did not work’.
‘The only way to end illegal immigration is to pull out of the ECHR and modern slavery treaty entirely, which will enable all illegal immigrants to be deported within a week of arrival.
‘Only the Conservatives have a properly thought out plan to do that.
‘These gimmicks from Labour will not move the needle and are simply performative - just like their previous absurd claim to smash the gangs,’ he said.
Inside Tiffany & Co.’s Reimagined Flagship Boutique in California
By Rachel CormackRachel Cormack
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Tiffany & Co.
Tiffany & Co. has brought even more sparkle to California.
The American jeweler has reimagined its boutique at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa, incorporating the elevated design aesthetic it introduced with the iconic Landmark in New York in 2023.
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Tiffany has maintained a continuous presence at the mall for nearly four decades, opening a boutique of approximately 7,000 square feet in 1988, before expanding to a new location double the size of the original in late 2020. The West Coast flagship is now bigger and better than ever before.
Located on the main level of the Plaza, the new boutique covers more than 15,000 square feet. Tiffany once again tapped Peter Marino to spearhead the design. The legendary architect, who founded his eponymous New York-based firm in 1978, also worked with the house on the Landmark, the European flagship that opened in Milan in 2025, and the giant Tokyo boutique that opened last year.
The store combines high jewelry, contemporary art, and Tiffany & Co.’s heritage with a touch of SoCal’s coastal cool. The beach may be the first thing that you’ll see, in fact, with digital screens showing classic California scenery by artist Oyoram. There is also a custom light installation by architect Hugh Dutton on the main floor that illuminates the house’s creations. On show are pieces from iconic collections, such as HardWear, Bird on a Rock, Knot, Sixteen Stone, T, and Lock.
WATCHIn another homage to Cali, a series of objects from the Tiffany archives that have ties to the region will be on display. A piece of morganite from Mesa Grande, California, on loan from a private collection, will be showcased alongside archival designs featuring kunzite. That gemstone was discovered in San Diego County in 1902 and named after George Frederick Kunz, the chief gemologist at Tiffany at that time, who helped identify it.
The opening follows a period of substantial growth in Tiffany’s high jewelry business. LVMH, which acquired Tiffany in 2021, saw revenue increase 7 percent in the watches and jewelry category in the first quarter of 2026. Tiffany “achieved an excellent performance,” the comglomorate said in a statement, with HardWear in particular posting very strong growth.
Click here to see all the photos of the boutique.
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Rachel Cormack
Digital Editor
Rachel Cormack is a digital editor at Robb Report. She cut her teeth writing for HuffPost, Concrete Playground, and several other online publications in Australia, before moving to New York at the…
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‘Discriminatory’: Colorado expands anti-Christian warfare to target Catholic preschools * WorldNetDaily * by WND Staff
‘Discriminatory’: Colorado expands anti-Christian warfare to target Catholic preschools
By WND Staff

Colorado, now in the final months of the administration of homosexual Gov. Jared Polis, has attacked a Christian baker for refusing to adopt the state’s LGBT faith and compromise his own beliefs.
The state lost at the Supreme Court.
Then it attacked a web designer for the same issue: Refusing to compromise her Christian beliefs and accept the state’s LGBT beliefs.
It lost again at the Supreme Court.
And the Democrat-run state – a Democrat executive, Democrat majorities in the legislature and even a Democrat-run state Supreme Court which is so wildly partisan it tried to keep President Donald Trump off the 2024 ballot, then attacked Christian counselors.
And again it lost at the Supreme Court.
Now it is attacking Catholic preschools – depriving them of participation in an otherwise generally available public benefit of subsidized tuition for preschool students – because they won’t compromise their faith.
The case, now pending before the high court, involves St. Mary Catholic Parish v. Roy, with the school represented by Becket.
It’s over Colorado’s “universal” preschool program that is discriminating against Catholic parents and preschools.
The program was supposed to offer “all Colorado families 15 hours of free preschool per week at the public or private preschool of their choice, a benefit worth about $6,000 per child.”
But the state created a hook in the program, in that it demands faith-based schools to live within the boundaries of the state’s LGBTQ beliefs.
Secular schools are allowed to impose their own registration requirements, but not the Catholic schools.
Now Liberty Counsel, a legal team that often has fought similar battles, has filed a friend-of-the-court brief explaining the state can use “neutral” language but still discriminate.
“States are increasingly enacting nondiscrimination provisions that reflect the modern approach to sexual orientation and gender identity, a stance many religious adherents do not share,” reads the brief. “Each time such a requirement is dressed in neutral language and imposed as a condition to participate in a government program, Smith seriously hampers Free Exercise review of its exclusionary or marginalizing effect on religious objectors.”
In fact, Colorado officials knew in advance of the injurious effect of their plan and adopted it anyway, Liberty Counsel explains.
“Colorado officials knew in advance the rule would exclude certain religious schools. Before the UPK took final form, state officials convened a working group in which St. Mary Catholic Parish took part and informed the state that the sexual orientation and gender identity provisions could not be reconciled with its faith-based admissions practices. While knowing whom the rule would exclude, state officials imposed the requirement anyway,” the briefing explains.
That means, Liberty Counsel said, “A state that knowingly closes a public benefit program to an identifiable religious community ‘has done more than incidentally burden religion,’ it has imposed a ‘religious gerrymander’ on religious objectors.”
Liberty Counsel chief Mat Staver said, “When a state promises a ‘universal’ program but rejects a religious organization because it won’t compromise its religious doctrine, then it has become discriminatory. Since the Smith decision blocks a strict analysis in this case, the courts can then rely on the Equal Protection Clause to give this so-called ‘neutral’ law the strict scrutiny it deserves. States cannot exclude religious families or organizations from a public benefit because of their religious practice.”
Anti-Christ, Catholic school, Colorado