East of England

Southend-on-Sea

Official local-authority snapshot as at 2025-12-31. This page keeps live route data and local hotel evidence on one place-level surface so pressure can be read in context.

England Population 185,256 Supported asylum 248

Recent supported asylum path in Southend-on-Sea

Quarter-end place series to Dec 2025. All visible points are official quarter-end values.

248
248 165 83 0 Mar 2014 Dec 2025 Peak Dec 2025
Trend readout Dec 2025

Recent path and evidence quality

Latest move

+1 since Sept 2025

+0.4% by the latest quarter-on-quarter step.

Series span

+ 239 across the visible series

+2655.6% from the first visible point to Dec 2025.

Series quality

48 official quarter points

The visible trend line is built entirely from official quarter-end supported asylum values in the local area series.

Interactive place drill-down

Switch metric and comparison frame to read Southend-on-Sea as a pressure leader, rate outlier, contingency site, or three-pathway case without leaving the page.

Shareable place lens
Southend-on-Sea ranks 11 of 45 in East of England; Luton currently leads this regional measure.

Pathway breakdown

The local picture only becomes legible when supported asylum, contingency use, Ukraine arrivals, and Afghan programme population are kept distinct.

Supported asylum
248
Homes for Ukraine
306
Afghan programme
98
Resettlement cumulative
34

What stands out here

Pressure profile

Southend-on-Sea is carrying a real asylum-support load

248 people are on asylum support here, with a rate of 13.39 per 10,000 residents. No contingency accommodation is recorded for this area.

Three-pathway load

652 people across the main local pathways

This combines supported asylum, Homes for Ukraine arrivals, and Afghan programme population, representing 0.35% of the local population.

Hotel visibility

Public hotel evidence is still thin here

No named current hotel site is attached to this area in the starter ledger yet.

National benchmarks

These strips show where Southend-on-Sea sits in the national distribution for the most important place-level pressure measures.

Supported asylum count

National distribution across all local-authority rows.

248
low median top 10% high
Supported asylum rate

Rate per 10,000 residents.

13.39
low median top 10% high
Contingency accommodation

Hotel and other contingency placements.

0
low median top 10% high

Regional pressure context

East of England is highlighted so this place can be read inside the wider regional supported asylum map.

supported asylum total
North West 20,864 London 16,378 West Mids 13,499 Yorkshire 9,748 East Mids 7,829 South East 7,472 North East 7,350 East 6,715 Scotland 6,688 South West 4,499 Wales 3,353 N. Ireland 2,608
Highlighted tiles mark the focus regions. Darker tiles indicate higher values in the latest local-authority snapshot.

Editorial readout

These cards translate the data into the most defensible local claims the site can make right now.

2025-12-31 evidence frame
Volume

Southend-on-Sea is outside the top ten by volume, but still carries a material local load

Southend-on-Sea ranks 125 nationally and 11 in East of England for supported asylum count, placing it around the 66th percentile of local authorities by volume.

Intensity

The rate picture is important, even where the headline count is lower

The supported asylum rate here is 13.39 per 10,000 residents, around the 64th percentile nationally. This matters because smaller places can carry a sharper load than bigger city totals imply.

Accommodation model

The local picture leans more toward dispersal than contingency pressure

No contingency accommodation is recorded for this area in the latest local-authority snapshot, which makes it structurally different from hotel-heavy pressure points.

Visibility

The hotel layer is still mostly invisible in public records here

No named current site or unnamed acknowledged count is attached to this area yet, which is itself a reminder that absence of public evidence is not evidence of absence.

Local route metrics

The area profile should show route composition, not force users to infer it from a single asylum count.

Asylum support

Accommodation split

Dispersal accommodation 240
Initial accommodation 0
Subsistence only 8
Contingency accommodation 0
Ukraine and Afghan pathways

Other current routes in this place

Homes for Ukraine arrivals 306
Afghan programme population 98
Afghan local authority housing 82
Afghan private rented housing 16
Historical routes

Resettlement history

Resettlement cumulative total 34
UK resettlement and family reunion cumulative 34
Community sponsorship cumulative 0
Latest resettlement quarter 2021 Q4 (5)

Regional peer frame

The regional ranking matters because high-pressure areas compete for attention with their nearest peers, not just with the national top ten.

Luton
710 supported asylum
Braintree
691 supported asylum
Peterborough
508 supported asylum
Dacorum
464 supported asylum
Chelmsford
368 supported asylum
Southend-on-Sea
Current page | 248 supported asylum
Local reading East of England

How this place reads in context

Southend-on-Sea sits 125 nationally by supported asylum count and 11 within East of England. The raw volume is 248, but the rate of 13.39 per 10,000 residents gives a cleaner sense of local intensity than the headline count on its own.

Homes for Ukraine is the largest non-asylum pathway in this area at 306. That matters because the local story is not just about one route family; it is about how asylum support, humanitarian schemes, and historic resettlement stack together in one place.

East of England as a whole currently carries 6,715 people on supported asylum, with a weighted regional rate of 10.21 per 10,000 residents. This page puts Southend-on-Sea inside that wider regional pressure field instead of treating it as an isolated case.

Hotel evidence for this place

Place pages should merge live route data with the named and unnamed hotel evidence already on the public record.

Evidence gap

No public hotel evidence logged yet

That does not mean the area has no hotel use. It means the ledger has no publishable public evidence row attached yet.