Friday, May 23, 2025 - According to new data released by the UK Office for National Statistics (ONS), about 52,000 Nigerians immigrated to the United Kingdom in the year ending December 2024, even as overall net migration to the country dropped by nearly 50%.
Nigerians were among the top non-EU+ nationals entering the
UK last year, with most arrivals linked to work and study.
27,000 Nigerians arrived in the UK on work-related visas,
22,000 to study, and 3,000 under other immigration categories.
The figures place Nigeria among the highest contributors to
non-EU+ migration, alongside India, Pakistan, and China.
“For YE December 2024, Indian was the most common non-EU+
nationality to immigrate to the UK. It also shows that for Indian, Pakistani
and Nigerian nationals, work- and study-related immigration estimates were
fairly similar,” the ONS report noted.
“For Chinese nationals, study-related immigration was far
more common (53,000 for study-related and 5,000 for work-related). Indian,
Pakistani, Chinese, and Nigerian are regularly among the top five most frequent
non-EU+ nationalities for long-term immigration.”
The demographic breakdown for non-EU+ immigrants in 2024
shows that around 52% were male and 48% female.
“The majority (83%) of non-EU+ nationals who came to live in the UK long term
in YE December 2024 were of working age (between 16 and 64 years). Around 16%
were children (under 16 years) and around 1% were aged 65 years or over.”
Meanwhile, overall net migration to the UK nearly halved
year-on-year. ONS estimates that long-term net migration is down by almost
50%.
The number of people immigrating minus the number of people
emigrating is provisionally estimated to be 431,000 in the year ending (YE)
December 2024, compared with 860,000 a year earlier, it added.
According to ONS, this change is driven by a decrease
in immigration from non-EU+ nationals, where we are seeing reductions in people
arriving on work- and study-related visas, and an increase in emigration over
the 12 months to December 2024, especially people leaving who originally came
on study visas once pandemic travel restrictions to the UK were eased.

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