Rachel Reeves has pledged that the government will no longer house migrants in asylum hotels by 2029.
Outlining her spending review plans to MPs on Wednesday, Ms Reeves said that ministers would end âthe costly use of hotels to house asylum seekers in this parliamentâ.
She said she was working with Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to end the costly scheme, which sees âbillions of pounds of taxpayersâ money spent on housing asylum seekers in hotels, leaving people in limbo and shunting the cost of failure onto local communitiesâ.
Ms Reeves told MPs that plans to cut the asylum backlog, hear more asylum appeal cases, and return people to their home countries would save ÂŁ1bn per year.
In Labourâs manifesto, the party pledged to end the use of asylum hotels and it has been looking at medium-sized sites, such as student accommodation blocks and former care homes, as alternative sources of accommodation.
The public spending watchdog recently predicted that the cost of asylum accommodation would triple to ÂŁ15.3bn over 10 years. Original estimates on the cost totalled ÂŁ4.5bn for 2019-2029, but the National Audit Office (NAO) revised this up to ÂŁ15.3bn.
They said that around 110,000 people seeking asylum were housed by the Home Office in December 2024 – with some 38,000 of these living in hotels.
The most senior civil servant in the Home Office said earlier this year that the department was aiming to get asylum hotel use down âto zeroâ by the end of this parliament. However, Sir Matthew Rycroft, who has now left the top job, predicted that âups and downsâ might affect that promise.

He said: âI do not think you should expect a gradual decline of that number down to zero neatly by the end of this parliamentâ.
Home Office minister Dame Angela Eagle has said that the department is currently exploring different ways of housing people. She told MPs on Tuesday that she had âclocked the break clausesâ in the governmentâs big migrant hotel contracts, and that she was looking at other options via pilot schemes.
She added: âThe idea with medium sites is things like old voided tower blocks, or old teaching training colleges or old student accommodation that isnât being used, where you could have numbers of rooms that are more than you get with dispersed accommodationâ.
Labour has moved away from Conservative plans to use large sites, such as former military sites and the controversial Bibby Stockholm barge.
The Home Office is also prioritising the processing of asylum claims and issuing more decisions, meaning more people who are refused asylum are evicted from hotels.
Shadow chancellor Mel Stride responded to Ms Reevesâ review, saying: âThe Home Office budget gets squandered on asylum costs because this government simply doesnât have a plan on illegal migration.â
Former chief secretary to the treasury, Simon Clarke, said that the pledge to end hotel use could see asylum seekers moved into dispersal accommodation instead. He claimed this would âinevitably mean a major net transfer of them to the North and Midlandsâ.