You’re asking a question a lot of people argue about loudly, usually without bothering to untangle the legal reality. The short version is: it’s not one single cause, and it’s definitely not just “the EU forcing it” anymore. It’s a messy combination of international law, practical limits, and political choices.Now let’s do this properly, with actual substance instead of pub-level analysis.The Reality at the Border (What “Illegal Immigration” Actually Looks Like)Most people entering the UK “illegally” are doing one of three things:Crossing the Channel in small boatsEntering legally (visa, tourist) and overstayingClaiming asylum on arrivalBetween 2018 and 2025, over 190,000 people crossed the Channel in small boats alone. That already tells you something uncomfortable:this isn’t a legal loophole problem, it’s a control and enforcement problem.Is It EU Law? (Short answer: no)The UK is no longer bound by EU migration lawSince Brexit, the UK does not follow EU asylum rules or free movement laws anymore. That ended in 2020.The UK sets its own immigration policyIt left the EU’s shared asylum systemIt is no longer bound by EU relocation or quota schemesSo blaming “EU law” in 2026 is… outdated at best.What still applies (and confuses people)The UK is still bound by international agreements, not EU rules:The 1951 Refugee Convention (global law, not EU)The European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR)These require the UK to:Allow people to claim asylumNot send people back to danger (“non-refoulement”) That’s where the confusion comes from. People see legal protections and assume “EU rules,” when it’s actually global refugee law.So Why Can’t the UK Just Stop It?Because Reality Isn’t a Border Control Fantasy1. You cannot legally reject everyone at the borderIf someone reaches UK territory and claims asylum:The UK must process their claimYou cannot just “turn them around” without assessmentThis is international law, not political preference.2. Removal is much harder than people thinkThe government itself admits:Removals haven’t kept pace with arrivalsReasons include:No agreement with the migrant’s home countryLegal appeals and human rights challengesLack of detention capacityIdentity issues (people arriving without documents)Translation:Even if the government wants to remove people, it often physically or legally can’t.3. Smuggling networks are organised and adaptiveCriminal gangs operate across EuropeThey change routes faster than governments change policyUK enforcement now includes powers to target these gangs This is closer to organised crime than simple immigration.4. The UK is an attractive destinationNot because of some secret “open door policy,” but because:English languageExisting communitiesWork opportunities (including informal/gig economy) Smugglers actively market the UK as a good destination.Government Choice: What Has Actually Changed?The UK Has Been Tightening, Not LooseningRecent policies (2025–2026) show the opposite of “allowing” migration:1. Tougher asylum rulesRefugee status now temporary (30 months)Reassessed regularlyPeople expected to return if their country becomes safe2. Much longer route to settlementUp to 20 years before permanent residency for illegal arrivals 3. Reduced supportFinancial support and housing can be removed for rule-breaking4. Stronger enforcement powersNew laws to target smuggling gangs and illegal working5. System overhaulThe Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Act 2025 introduces:New border enforcement structuresData-sharing powersExpanded penaltiesSo… Is It “Allowed”?No. That’s the part people find irritating.It’s more accurate to say:The government is trying to restrict itBut is limited by law, logistics, and realityIllegal immigration continues because:You cannot legally refuse all asylum claimsYou cannot remove everyone quicklySmuggling networks keep feeding the systemPolitical decisions balance enforcement vs human rightsExpert Perspective (The Part People Skip)Migration researchers at the Migration Observatory point out that policy changes often:Take years to show impactAre constrained by legal frameworksCan shift behaviour rather than stop it entirelyIn other words:there is no simple switch to turn it off.Final Take (The Non-Slogan Version)If you strip away the shouting:It’s not EU law anymoreIt’s partly international lawIt’s partly government policyAnd largely a problem of enforcement limits and global migration pressuresPeople want a clean answer like “they allow it” or “they can’t stop it.”Reality, annoyingly, is both and neither.Governments can tighten systems, and they are doing that. But they cannot eliminate illegal immigration completely without breaking international law or massively changing enforcement capacity.Which, inconveniently, tends to have consequences people don’t enjoy once it’s actually tried.Sources and Further ReadingUK Parliament – https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-10337/UK Government – https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/asylum-and-returns-policy-statementMigration Observatory – https://migrationobservatory.ox.ac.ukUNHCR – https://www.unhcr.org/ukInstitute for Government – https://www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk Post navigationWhy Ministers Rarely Give Straight Answers in the House of Commons Britain’s Privatised Railways: Better Than British Rail, or a Costly, Fragmented Experiment?