The grim milestone looked to have been hit today as around 70 migrants were brought into Dover aboard a UK Border Force vessel.
By DAVID BARRETT, HOME AFFAIRS EDITOR
Published: 12:30 BST, 8 May 2026 | Updated: 12:35 BST, 8 May 2026
More than 200,000 small boat migrants are thought to have reached the UK since the start of the Channel crisis after further arrivals today.
The grim milestone looked to have been hit today as around 70 migrants were brought into Dover aboard a UK Border Force vessel.
The running total stood at 199,943 meaning today's figures are expected to push past 200,000.
Official Home Office figures are expected to confirm the milestone when they are published on Saturday.
The 200,000 migrants - equivalent to the population of a city the size of Norwich – have arrived since the first small boat was recorded on January 31, 2018.
It was declared a ‘national emergency’ by then home secretary Sajid Javid at the end of that year - even though at that stage just a few hundred had made the journey from the Continent.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: '200,000 illegal small boat immigrants shows the immigration system is totally broken, with small boat illegal immigrants up 45 per cent since the election.
'They never seem to get removed - so no wonder they keep flooding in, knowing they will almost certainly get to stay.
Border Force catamaran, Ranger, berths at the Port of Dover earlier today after picking up about 70 migrants in the middle of the Channel
Migrants disembarking from the Border Force vessel at Dover earlier today
'Many go on to commit serious crimes, including murder, rape and the sexual assault of young girls.
'This situation is a disgrace.'
He added: 'Only the Conservatives have a credible plan to fix this - ban asylum claims by illegal immigrants, come out of the European Convention on Human Rights and stop the courts intervening to allow illegal immigrants to stay.
'This will enable small boat illegal immigrants to all be deported within a week of arrival - back to their country of origin if possible or a safe third country if not.
'Then the crossings will soon stop. But Labour is too weak to do this, and Reform sadly doesn’t have a credible plan.'
One of Labour's first acts in office was to scrap the previous government's Rwanda asylum deal which was designed to deter crossings and save lives.
Migrants were seen walking off the Border Force catamaran, Ranger, at Dover today after being brought into shore
Two migrants - a 16-year-old girl and a woman in her 20s - tragically died on Sunday while trying to cross the Channel aboard an overcrowded dinghy.
Its engine caught fire and they are feared to have been trampled to death amid the ensuing panic.
The International Organisation for Migration puts the total number of deaths associated with Channel crossings since 2018 at 288, including 148 drownings.
Last month Labour confirmed British taxpayers are to hand the French up to £660million for small boat patrols, pushing the total paid since the start of the crisis past £1.3billion.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood agreed to give Emmanuel Macron's government a 'core package' of £500million – spread over the next three years - to continue funding anti-migrant operations by French police.
A further £160million will also be handed over to fund new tactics by the French including stopping dinghies once they are already in the water.
A previous three-year, £500million deal was agreed in 2023 by then Conservative PM Rishi Sunak and during the lifetime of the agreement more than 84,000 migrants reached Britain.
Last year saw 41,472 migrants reach Britain, the second-highest annual total since the start of the crisis.
More migrants have arrived under Sir Keir Starmer's tenure as Prime Minister than under any other PM, with 71,932.
Sir Keir surpassed the previous high of 65,800 under Boris Johnson in February this year.
A Home Office spokesman said: 'This Government is bearing down on small boat crossings.
'The Home Secretary has signed a landmark new deal with France to boost enforcement action on beaches and put people smugglers behind bars.
'This builds on joint work that has stopped over 42,000 illegal migrants attempting to cross the Channel since the election.
'We have removed or deported almost 60,000 people who were here illegally and are going further to remove the incentives that draw illegal migrants to this country.'