‘EU Settlement Scheme Scandal’

Every day reveals another immigration outrage.
We are indebted as ever to our principal affiliate, Brexit Facts4EU.Org for their forensic work in exposing yet another element of the UK’s discredited immigration policy.
Part 1 of their latest report revealed that 2/3rds of the 8.6 million UK population rise from 2003-2023 were from the EU27 as a direct result of the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS).
That is bad enough.
What is even more shocking is the remaining third – nearly 800,000 – are nationals from 176 non-EU countries around the world. These applications are being processed by the Home Office under the EUSS on the basis that they have a connection with an EU citizen, usually a family member. Unsurprisingly, the effect has been to drive a coach and horses through any kind of restrictions on eligibility.
According to Home Office data, the highest numbers of non-EU applicants under the scheme came from India, Pakistan and Brazil.
Is it any wonder that international agreements and human rights treaties are regarded as a sick joke by voters all over the free world? What follows are summary highlights of the existing arrangements with a link to the full report at the end.
0.8m applications from non-EU nationals to the ‘EU Settlement Scheme’, to live in UK
Nationals of 176 non-EU countries have submitted applications to the Home Office
Apart from EU citizens residing in UK, applications came from other nationals all over the world
In this second part of our ‘UK immigration from the EU’ series, we reveal the astonishing number of applications from non-EU nationals for settlement in the UK, dealt with by the Home Office under the ‘EU Settlement Scheme’ (EUSS).
The total number of applications from non-EU nationals applying to reside permanently in the UK was an astonishing 790,993, as at the end of September 2024.
CLICKABLE SERIES MENU – ‘UK Mass Immigration from the EU’
A Brexit Facts4EU Special Report into the ‘EU Settlement Scheme’
(A) EUSS – APPLICATIONS
Part I: 8.4m applications have been received under the EUSS to reside in the UK
Part II (this report): 0.8m of these have come from non-EU nationals
Part III: 2.3m applications received after June 2021 deadline – new applications and approvals continue
(B) EUSS – APPLICANTS
Part IV: The millions of actual migrants approved (subtracting duplicate applications)
Part V: Revealed – Huge numbers of those approved by Home Office are non-EU nationals
Part VI: The 1m+ late applications approved, despite being past the deadline
Extra: Mass EU immigration and the housing shortage, written in collaboration with a former Cabinet Minister
[Note: Reports now include new figures up to end-2024, except Parts I and II which cover up to Q3 2024.]
A special report funded and produced by the Facts4EU think-tank, and being covered by CIBUK.Org and GB News
The British public may have assumed that an ‘EU Settlement Scheme’ would involve only EU nationals, and furthermore that these would be EU nationals who had already moved to the UK while the United Kingdom was still a member of the European Union. Given that such people moved to the UK perfectly legally and set up home, it would be accepted that these people have the right to remain.
In this report we look at applications under the EUSS from non-EU nationals.
Brexit Facts4EU.Org Summary
Non-EU nationals and the ‘EU’ Settlement Scheme
Note: All numbers are correct up to Q3 2024. Since publication of this report we obtained the latest results, up to Q4 2024.
1. Total applications received to the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) by non-EU nationals
- Non-EU27 & non-EEA/EFTA & Swiss : 714,080
- EEA, EFTA, and Swiss : 76,913
- TOTAL NON-EU : 793,931
Nearly 0.8 million non-EU nationals have taken advantage of the EUSS scheme.
2. Timeline : Applications under the EUSS from non-EU nationals, Apr 2019 – Sept 2024
© Brexit Facts4EU.Org 2025 – click to enlarge
{Source : UK Home Office, data up to end-Sept 2024.]
.
.
3. Top 30 countries for applications – non-EU nationals
© Brexit Facts4EU.Org 2025 – click to enlarge
{Source : UK Home Office, data up to end-Sept 2024.]
How can non-EU nationals apply under the ‘EU’ Settlement Scheme?
The main rules of this scheme (EUSS) apply to EU nationals living in the UK by 31 December 2020. Those who can prove they have lived in the UK for five years by that date get ‘Settled Status’. Those who have been in the UK for less time get an interim ‘Pre-Settled Status’, which can be upgraded once they hit the five year mark.
However, more people are eligible provided they have a connection to an EU citizen. For the most part this relates to family members. Bizarrely, although EU citizens are supposed to have been resident in the UK by 31 December 2020, the eligibility criteria for family members seems to be looser.
Family members do not have to be citizens of either the EU, EEA or Switzerland – they can hail from any country in the world. They can also apply after the supposed ‘deadline’ which was set and agreed by the EU as being 30 June 2021. It seems all they have to do is to prove that their relationship with an EU or EEA citizen still exists at the date they apply.
The ‘close family members’ – to use the term in the scheme – include spouses, civil partners, unmarried partners, dependant children and grandchildren, dependant parents and grandparents, and children born or adopted after 31 December 2020. (The date the UK finally left the EU.)
Countries from which these applicants are coming
As part of this investigation Facts4EU was able to identify the full range of countries from which applicants outside the EU originated. An astonishing 176 countries and small states are represented.
It seems surprising that citizens from 27 EU countries have ‘close family’ members who come from 176 countries around the world, but this is what the Home Office has recorded.
Below is the full list, ordered by the number of applications from each country’s nationals
There was only one way to bring home the fact that nationals from 176 countries have applied under the ‘EU’ Settlement Scheme and that was to list them all. The countries are listed by order of the number of applications from people from that country.
© Brexit Facts4EU.Org 2025 – click to enlarge
{Source : UK Home Office, data up to end-Sept 2024.]
Coming up…
In part III of this ‘UK immigration from the EU’ series, we will switch from the demand side (the volume of applications) to the supply side (analysis of those who have actually been approved by the Home Office to reside in the UK.) Once again, the reality of what has happened is quite extraordinary.
Observations
As far as we are aware, the information summarised in this report has never before been made public. Having spent weeks uncovering and analysing the Home Office’s records in detail, this does not particularly surprise us. In today’s media world, journalists are not given the time to spend on such comprehensive work. Most are now given targets of how many articles they must produce each day.
This is a shame because it means that information the authorities are not keen to be made known to the public remains buried. Until now, with a report such as this.
This is a summary CIBUK-Brexit Facts4EU article. The report can be read in full here.
Main image: Montage © Facts4EU.Org 2025