Over the weekend, small boat migrant arrivals in the United Kingdom reached a new daily peak for the year, with nearly 600 migrants recorded crossing the English Channel from France and landing on British shores. According to data released by the Home Office—the British equivalent of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security—on Monday, 592 migrants arrived in Britain, aboard 11 vessels. This marks the highest single-day influx so far in 2025 bringing the cumulative number of arrivals so far this year to 2,716.
Previously, the largest daily count was 260 arrivals, observed on January 13. The current year-to-date figures reflect a 20 percent rise compared to the same period last year, which saw 2,255 crossings.
With improving weather and sea conditions, officials anticipate a further rise in crossings. Over the past week, 823 individuals have sailed from France to England. On March 1, one boat carrying 68 migrants landed, and on February 25, 163 people arrived on three separate boats.
French authorities issued a statement regarding rescue efforts conducted overnight between March 1 and March 2. Assistance was requested by migrants on several vessels, including two individuals from one boat suspected of suffering from hypothermia.
In efforts to deter illegal crossings, the Home Office has announced new legislation. Investigators will have the authority to confiscate mobile phones from suspected traffickers, endangering lives at sea will become a criminal offense, and those involved in the distribution or handling of vessel parts potentially used in Channel crossings could face up to 14 years of imprisonment. However, one of the current Labour government’s first acts was to scrap plans to deport boat migrants to a third safe country, namely Rwanda, removing a potentially potent deterrent.
Since Prime Minister Keir Starmer took office, a total of 25,958 crossings have been logged.
Image by Acabashi; Creative Commons CC-BY-SA 4.0; Source: Wikimedia Commons.