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The Home Office ( HO), also known (especially in official papers and when referred to in Parliament) as the Home Department, is the 's interior ministry. It is responsible for public safety and policing, border security, immigration, passports, and civil registration.

Agencies under its purview include police in England and Wales, , the Visas and Immigration authority, and the Security Service (MI5). It also manages policy on , , and . It was formerly responsible for His Majesty's Prison Service and the National Probation Service, but these have been transferred to the Ministry of Justice.

The Cabinet minister responsible for the department is the , a post considered one of the Great Offices of State; it has been held by since September 2025. The Home Office is managed from day to day by a , the permanent under-secretary of state of the home office.

The expenditure, administration, and policy of the Home Office are scrutinised by the Home Affairs Select Committee.


History
On , the Home Office was formed by renaming the existing Southern Department, with all existing staff transferring. On the same day, the Northern Department was renamed the Foreign Office.

To match the new names, there was a transferring of responsibilities between the two Departments of State. All domestic responsibilities (including colonies, previously administered under the Board of Trade) were moved to the Home Office, and all foreign matters (including the administration of British protectorates) became the concern of the Foreign Office.

Most subsequently created domestic departments (excluding, for instance, those dealing with education) have been formed by splitting responsibilities away from the Home Office.

The initial responsibilities were:

  • Answering and addresses sent to the King
  • Advising the King on
    • Royal grants
    • Warrants and
    • The exercise of Royal Prerogative
  • Issuing instructions on behalf of the King to officers of , and , mainly concerning law and order
  • Operation of the secret service within the UK
  • Protecting the public
  • Safeguarding the rights and liberties of individuals
  • Colonial matters

Responsibilities were subsequently changed over the years that followed:

  • 1793 added: regulation of aliens
  • 1794 removed: control of military forces (to Secretary of State for War)
  • 1801 removed: business (to Secretary of State for War and the Colonies)
  • 1804 removed: consuls (to Secretary of State for War and the Colonies)
  • 1823 added:
  • 1829 added: Metropolitan Police and other police services
  • 1836 added: registration of births, deaths and marriages in England and Wales
  • 1844 added:
  • 1845 added: registration of
  • 1855 removed: and (to ) See Sir George Grey: 'The business of the militia was transferred from the Home Office to the War Office...'.
  • 1858 added: local boards of health
  • 1871 removed: local boards of health (to Local Government Board)
  • 1871 removed: registration of births, deaths and marriages (to Local Government Board)
  • 1872 removed: and (to Local Government Board)
  • 1875 added: control of explosives
  • 1875 removed: registration of Friendly Societies (to )
  • 1885 removed: Scotland (to Secretary for Scotland and the )
  • 1886 removed: fishing (to Board of Trade)
  • 1889 removed: Land Commissioners (to Board of Agriculture)
  • 1900 removed: matters relating to (to Local Government Board)
  • 1905 removed: (to Local Government Board)
  • 1914 added: dangerous drugs
  • 1919 removed: aircraft and air traffic (to )
  • 1919 removed: use of human bodies in medical training (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1919 removed: infant and child care (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1919 removed: lunacy and (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1919 removed: health and safety (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1920 added:
  • 1920 removed: Representation of Britain abroad in labour matters (to Ministry of Labour)
  • 1920 removed: mining (to Mines Department)
  • 1920 added: Northern Ireland
  • 1921 added: (from the Ministry of Health)
  • 1922 removed: relations with Irish Free State (to )
  • 1923 removed: Order of the British Empire (to Treasury)
  • 1925 removed: registration of (to Ministry of Labour)
  • 1931 removed: (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1933 added:
  • 1934 removed: metropolitan boroughs (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1935 added: Civil Defence Service
  • 1937 removed: road accident returns (to Ministry of Transport)
  • 1938 added:
  • 1938 removed: Imperial Service Order and medal (to Treasury)
  • 1940 removed: factory inspections (to Ministry of Labour)
  • 1945 removed: workmen's compensation scheme (to Ministry of National Insurance)
  • 1947 added: infant and child care (from Ministry of Health)
  • 1947 removed: regulation of advertisements (to Ministry of Town and Country Planning)
  • 1947 removed: burial fees (to Ministry of Health)
  • 1947 removed: registration of (to Treasury)
  • 1948 removed: Broadmoor hospital (to Lunacy Board of Control)
  • 1949 added: Civil Defence Corps
  • 1950 removed: structural precautions for civil defence (to Ministry of Works)
  • 1950 removed: minor judicial appointments (to )
  • 1953 removed: (to Ministry of Housing and Local Government)
  • 1954 removed: markets (to Ministry of Housing and Local Government)
  • 1956 removed: railway accidents (to Ministry of Transport and Civil Aviation)
  • 1969 removed: (to Ministry of Housing and Local Government)
  • 1971 removed: in England (to Department of Health and Social Security)
  • 1971 removed: child care in Wales (to )
  • 1972 removed: Northern Ireland Department of the Home Office (to Northern Ireland Office)
  • 1973 removed: (to Department of Health and Social Security)
  • 1992 removed: and (to the new Department of National Heritage – later the Department for Culture, Media and Sport)
  • 2000 removed: Metropolitan Police (to Metropolitan Police Authority - later Mayor's Office for Policing and Crime)
  • 2001 removed: , fire and rescue services in England, Bylaws (to the Department for Transport, Local Government and the Regions)
  • 2001 removed: Crown Dependencies, Freedom of Information and (to Lord Chancellor's Department – now Ministry of Justice)
  • 2001 removed: Gambling, Alcohol licensing and Horse racing (to the Department for Culture, Media and Sport)
  • 2001 removed: British Summer Time, Sunday Trading and Easter (to the Department of Trade and Industry – now the Department for Business and Trade)
  • 2005 removed: (to the Department for Constitutional Affairs – now Ministry of Justice)
  • 2007 removed: Home Office Drugs Inspectorate branch, formed in 1934
  • 2007 removed: , & and legal affairs (to new Ministry of Justice)
  • 2007 added: counter-terrorism strategy (from the )
  • 2016 added: fire and rescue services in England (from the Department for Communities and Local Government)
  • 2025 removed: fire and rescue services in England (to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government)


Organisation
The Home Office is headed by the , a Cabinet minister, supported by the department's senior civil servant, the permanent secretary.


Organisational structure
The Home Office comprises eleven directorates that help fulfil the department's responsibilities.


Immigration
  • – controls migration at ports and airports across the UK and overseas.
  • Border Security Command – combats that facilitate illegal migrant crossings over the English Channel.
  • HM Passport Office – provides passport and civil registration services in England and Wales.
  • Immigration Enforcement – responsible for enforcing immigration law in the UK.
  • UK Visas and Immigration – processes visa, asylum, and citizenship applications.
  • Migration and Borders Group – responsible for immigration policymaking.


Public services and policing
  • Public Safety Group – responsible for policy areas including fire, policing, and crime reduction. Also responsible for implementing the Emergency Services Network.
  • Homeland Security Group – develops policy and works with law enforcement and intelligence services to reduce risk from terrorism, state threats, and to the UK.


Other
  • Corporate and Delivery – fulfils corporate duties such as , project management, finance, and IT.
  • Communications Directorate – delivers communications to the wider public to achieve the Home Office's objectives.
  • STARS (Science, Technology, Analysis, Research, and Strategy) – performs data and evidence to maximise organisational effectiveness.


Other related public bodies
As of April 2024, the Home Office works with the following agencies and public bodies:


Executive non-departmental public bodies
  • Disclosure and Barring Service (DBS)
  • Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority
  • Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC)
  • Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner
  • Security Industry Authority (SIA)


Advisory non-departmental public bodies
  • Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs
  • Animals in Science Committee
  • Biometrics and Forensic Ethics Group
  • Migration Advisory Committee
  • Police Advisory Board for England and Wales
  • Police Remuneration Review Body
  • Technical Advisory Board


Tribunals
  • Investigatory Powers Tribunal
  • Police Discipline Appeals Tribunal


Independent monitoring bodies
  • Biometrics and Surveillance Camera Commissioner
  • Independent Anti-Slavery Commissioner
  • Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration


Others
  • Adjudicator's Office
  • College of Policing
  • Commission for Countering Extremism
  • Forensic Science Regulator
  • His Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services
  • Independent Family Returns Panel
  • Independent Reviewer of Terrorism Legislation
  • Investigatory Powers Commissioner's Office
  • National Counter Terrorism Security Office
  • National Crime Agency Renumeration Review Body
  • Security Service (MI5)


Budget and spending
In the financial year 2022–2023, the Home Office had a total budget of £20.3 billion.

+ Spending by financial year
3.0
43.0
157.8
225.4
172.2
87.4
6.9
135.4
37.9
40.0
-
-
16.4


Ministers
The Home Office ministers are as follows, with cabinet ministers in bold.

MP Overall responsibility for all Home Office business, including: overarching responsibility for the departmental portfolio and oversight of the ministerial team; cabinet; National Security Council (NSC); public appointments; oversight of the Security Service
MP Minister of State for SecurityCounter terrorism and extremism; state threats; cyber security and crime; serious and organised crime; oversight of the National Crime Agency; anti-corruption; economic crime (excluding fraud)
David Hanson, Baron Hanson of Flint
Life peer
Minister of State for the Home DepartmentFraud; departmental finance; Home Office business in the Lords; Overseas Territories; public appointments and sponsorship; inquiries; union and devolution
Sarah Jones MP Minister of State for Policing and CrimePolicing standards and governance, neighbourhood policing, public order, major events, and civil contingencies, criminal justice system, Young Futures, Safer Streets
Alex Norris MP Minister of State for Border Security and AsylumBorder Security Command; asylum policy; asylum accommodation; returns and removals; irregular migration policy; organised immigration crime; foreign national offenders; Immigration Enforcement; small boat arrivals; National Referral Mechanism
MP Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Safeguarding and Violence Against Women and GirlsViolence against women and girls; safeguarding; rape and serious sexual offences; violent crime and domestic abuse; child sexual abuse and exploitation; modern slavery; spiking
MP Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Migration and CitizenshipLegal migration policy; Immigration Rules and visa policy; Windrush Compensation Scheme; Future Borders and Immigration System; HM Passport Office; General Register Office; Border Force operation; safe and legal routes and resettlement


Priorities
The department outlined its aims for this Parliament in its Business Plan, which was published in May 2011, and superseded its Structural Reform Plan. The plan said the department will:

  1. Empower the public to hold the police to account for their role in cutting crimeIntroduce directly elected Police and Crime Commissioners and make police actions to tackle crime and anti-social behaviour more transparent.
  2. Free up the police to fight crime more effectively and efficientlyCut police bureaucracy, end unnecessary central interference and overhaul police powers in order to cut crime, reduce costs and improve police value for money. Simplify national institutional structures and establish a National Crime Agency to strengthen the fight against organised crime (and replace the Serious Organised Crime Agency).
  3. Create a more integrated criminal justice systemHelp the police and other public services work together across the criminal justice system.
  4. Secure our borders and reduce immigrationDeliver an improved migration system that commands public confidence and serves our economic interests. Limit non-EU economic migrants, and introduce new measures to reduce inflow and minimise abuse of all migration routes, for example the student route. Process asylum applications more quickly, and end the detention of children for immigration purposes.
  5. Protect people's freedoms and civil libertiesReverse state interference to ensure there is not disproportionate intrusion into people's lives.
  6. Protect our citizens from terrorismKeep people safe through the Government's approach to Counter Terrorism Policing.
  7. Build a fairer and more equal society (through the Government Equalities Office)Help create a fair and flexible labour market. Change culture and attitudes. Empower individuals and communities. Improve equality structures, frontline services and support; and help Government departments and others to consider equality as a matter of course.

The Home Office publishes progress against the plan on the 10 Downing Street website.

Programs include:

  • the Metropolitan Police Service
    • Counter Terrorism Command
    • Protection Command, one of the commands within the Specialist Operations directorate of the Met.
    • Territorial Support Group
  • , a strategy written as early as 2003 by which to deradicalize individuals who are at risk. CONTEST is composed of the "four Ps" – Prevent, Pursue, Protect, and Prepare – which aim to reduce terrorism at all levels through: Preventing more people from being radicalised; Pursuing suspects operationally and legally; Protecting the public through security measures, and Preparing to manage the response to mitigate the impact of an inevitable attack.
  • Fixated Threat Assessment Centre: a UK police/mental health unit, whose function is to manage the risk to public figures from stalkers and individuals who are fixated on high profile public figures or prominent protected sites.


Location
Until 1978, the Home Office had its offices in what is now the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Main Building on King Charles Street, off . From 1978 to 2004, the Home Office was then located at 50 Queen Anne's Gate, a Brutalist office block in designed by Sir , close to St James's Park tube station. Many functions, however, were devolved to offices in other parts of London, and the country, notably the headquarters of the Immigration and Nationality Directorate in Croydon.

In 2005, the Home Office moved to a new main office designed by Sir Terry Farrell at 2 Marsham Street, Westminster, on the site of the demolished building of the Department of the Environment.

For external shots of its fictional Home Office, the TV series Spooks uses an aerial shot of the Government Offices Great George Street instead, serving as stand-in to match the distinctly less modern appearance of the fictitious accommodation interiors the series uses.


Research
To meet the UK's five-year science and technology strategy, the Home Office sponsors research in , including:
  • – including face and voice recognition
  • analysis – to determine the origin of cells (e.g. hair, skin)
  • – new techniques to recover latent
  • – identifying offender characteristics from DNA
  • Improved profiling – of illicit drugs to help identify their source
  • Raman Spectroscopy – to provide more sensitive drugs and explosives detectors (e.g. roadside drug detection)
  • Terahertz imaging methods and technologies – e.g. image analysis and new cameras, to detect crime, enhance images and support anti-terrorism


Devolution
Most front-line law and order policy areas, such as policing and criminal justice, are devolved in and (and only very partially in ), but the following reserved and excepted matters are handled by Westminster.


Northern Ireland
Excepted matters:

The following matters were not transferred at the devolution of policing and justice on 12 April 2010, and remain reserved:

The Home Office's main counterparts in are:

  • Department of Justice (policing, public order and community safety)
  • Northern Ireland Office (national security in Northern Ireland)

The Department of Justice is accountable to the Northern Ireland Executive, whereas the Northern Ireland Office is a UK government department.


Scotland
Reserved matters:
  • The Misuse of Drugs Act 1971
  • legislation, but the Scottish Ministers (working with the Crown Office and Procurator Fiscal Service) have executive responsibility for extradition operations and policy responsibility for mutual legal assistance
  • Most aspects of legislation, but Scottish Ministers have some executive responsibilities for the licensing of firearms; further powers are transferred under the Scotland Act 2012
  • and
  • Scientific procedures on live animals.

The Scottish Government Justice and Safer Communities Directorates are responsible for devolved justice and home affairs policy.


Wales
Reserved matters:

  • Policing
  • Drug Abuse
  • Data Protection and access to information
  • Elections
  • Firearms
  • Film Classification
  • Immigration and Nationality
  • Scientific Procedures on live animals
  • National Security and Counter-Terrorism
  • Betting, Gaming and Lotteries


Criticism

Windrush scandal
The resulted in some British citizens being wrongly deported, along with a further compensation scheme for those affected, and a wider debate on the Home Office hostile environment policy.

The first allegations about the targeting of pre-1973 migrants started in 2013. In 2018, the allegations were put to the home secretary in the House of Commons, and resulted in the resignation of the then home secretary. In 2019, the Home Office admitted to multiple breaches of data protection regulations in the handling of its Windrush compensation scheme. The department sent emails to Windrush migrants which revealed the email address of other Windrush migrants to whom the email was sent. The data breach concerned five different emails, each of which was sent to 100 recipients. In April 2019, the Home Office admitted to revealing 240 personal email addresses of EU citizens applying for settled status in the UK. The email addresses of applicants were incorrectly sent to other applicants to the scheme. In response to these incidents, the Home Office pledged to launch an independent review of its data protection compliance.

In 2019, the Court of Appeal issued a judgement which criticised the Home Office's handling of immigration cases. The judges stated that the "general approach by in all earnings discrepancy cases has legally flawed". The judgement relates to the Home Office's interpretation of Section 322(5) of the Immigration Rules.

In November 2020, the Equality and Human Rights Commission, a statutory body that investigates breaches of the Equality Act 2010 published a report concluding that the Home Office had a "lack of organisation-wide commitment, including by senior leadership, to the importance of equality and the Home Office's obligations under the equality duty placed on government departments". The report noted that the Home Office's pursuit of the "hostile environment" policy from 2012 onwards "accelerated the impact of decades of complex policy and practice based on a history of white and black immigrants being treated differently". Caroline Waters, the interim chair of the EHRC, described the treatment of Windrush immigrants by the Home Office as a "shameful stain on British history".


Aderonke Apata
, a LGBT activist, made two asylum claims that were both rejected by the Home Office in 2014 and on 1 April 2015 respectively, due to her previously having been in a relationship with a man and having children with that man. In 2014, Apata said that she would send an of herself to the Home Office to prove her sexuality. This resulted in her asylum bid gaining widespread support, with multiple petitions created in response, which gained hundreds of thousands of signatures combined. On 8 August 2017, after a thirteen-year legal battle and after a new appeal from Apata was scheduled for late July, she was granted refugee status in the United Kingdom by the Home Office.


Use of the Bible for rejecting asylum claims
In March 2019, it was reported that in two unrelated cases, the Home Office denied asylum to converted Christians by misrepresenting certain quotes. In one case, it quoted selected excerpts from the Bible to imply that is not more peaceful than , the asylum-seeker's original religion. In another incident, an Christian application for asylum was rejected because her faith was judged as "half-hearted", for she did not believe that Jesus could protect her from the Iranian regime. As criticism grew on social media, the Home Office distanced itself from the decision, though it confirmed the letter was authentic. Home Secretary said that it was "totally unacceptable" for his department to quote the Bible to question an Iranian Christian convert's asylum application, and ordered an urgent investigation into what had happened.

The treatment of Christian asylum-seekers chimes with other incidents in the past, such as the refusal to grant to the of to attend the consecration of the UK's first Cathedral. In a 2017 study, the Christian found that only 0.2% of all Syrian refugees accepted by the UK were Christians, although Christians accounted for approximately 10% of Syria's pre-war population.


See also
  • Home Office Large Major Enquiry System 2 (HOLMES 2)
  • Law enforcement in the United Kingdom
    • List of home secretaries
  • Ministry of Home Security
  • Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department
  • Permanent Under-Secretary of State of the Home Office
  • UK Immigration Service


Further reading
  • Bailey, Victor. "The Metropolitan Police, the Home Office and the threat of outcast London." in Policing and Punishment in Nineteenth Century Britain (Routledge, 2015) pp.94–125.

  • Bartrip, Peter W.J. The Home Office and the dangerous trades: regulating occupational disease in Victorian and Edwardian Britain (Rodopi, 2002).
  • Chadwick, George Roger. "Bureaucratic mercy: the home office and the treatment of capital cases in Victorian England" (PhD dissertation, Rice University; ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  1989. 9110955.).

  • Emsley, Clive. "The home office and its sources of information and investigation 1791-1801." English Historical Review 94.372 (1979): 532-561.

  • Gibson, Bryan. The New Home Office: An Introduction (2nd ed. Waterside Press, 2008) online
  • Newsam, Frank. The Home Office (Routledge, 2024).
  • Pellew, Jill. "The home office and the aliens act, 1905." The Historical Journal 32.2 (1989): 369-385.
  • Pellew, Jill. The Home Office, 1848-1914, from Clerks to Bureaucrats (Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press, 1982) online.
  • Petrow, Stefan. Policing morals: The metropolitan police and the Home Office 1870–1914 (Oxford University Press, 1994) online.
  • Roberts, David. "Lord Palmerston at the Home Office," The Historian (1958) 21#1 pp. 63-81

  • Smith, David. "Sir George Grey at the Mid-Victorian Home Office." Canadian Journal of History 19.3 (1984): 361-386.
  • Smith, Melissa. "Architects of armageddon: the home office scientific advisers' branch and civil defence in Britain, 1945–68." The British Journal for the History of Science 43.2 (2010): 149-180.
  • York, Sheona. "The ‘hostile environment’: How Home Office immigration policies and practices create and perpetuate illegality." Journal of Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Law 32.4 (2018).


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