{"slug": "ai-will-be-used-to-estimate-age-of-asylum-seekers-from-next-year", "title": "AI will be used to estimate age of asylum seekers from next year", "summary": "The UK Home Office will deploy an AI age estimation tool at the country's borders from next year to detect adult migrants posing as children, awarding a £322,000 contract to Akhter Computers Ltd for development and testing. The technology, which analyzes photographs taken at the border, aims to identify migrants \"attempting to game the system\" after initial testing showed \"promising performance and accuracy,\" according to the Home Office. Human Rights Watch has urged the government to scrap the scheme, calling it \"unproven technology\" that risks undermining protections for vulnerable children.", "body_md": "# AI will be used to estimate age of asylum seekers from next year\n\n- Published\n\n**An Artificial Intelligence (AI) age estimation tool that aims to detect adult migrants posing as children will be deployed at the UK's borders next year.**\n\nA software company has been awarded a contract to develop and test the technology, which will estimate a person's age by analysing photographs of them taken at the border.\n\nThe Home Office says the technology will make it easier to identify adult migrants \"attempting to game the system\", after initial testing indicated \"promising performance and accuracy\".\n\nBut Human Rights Watch urged the government to scrap the scheme, describing it as \"unproven technology\" that will undermine the protections vulnerable children are entitled to.\n\nUnaccompanied child migrants receive support from local councils and are housed in the care system rather than more traditional asylum accommodation such as hotels.\n\nThey are entitled to legal protections which can simplify the asylum application system and make it easier to stay in the country for longer.\n\nThe decision to use the software comes after years of heightened levels of people crossing the English Channel in small boats and claiming asylum at the border.\n\nA total of 111,084 people claimed asylum in the UK in the year ending June 2025, 14% more than in the previous year.\n\nIn the year ending March 2026, more than 6,400 migrants claiming to be children were age assessed at the border, with 43% found to be adults, according to Home Office data.\n\n[A report, external](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/an-inspection-of-the-home-offices-use-of-age-assessments-july-2024-february-2025) carried out by the UK government's independent immigration inspector last year found cases where adult migrants had been classified as children - and cases where child migrants had been wrongly classified as adults.\n\nThe report said in the absence of a \"foolproof\" test, it was \"inevitable that some age assessments will be wrong, which is clearly a cause for concern, especially where a child is denied the rights and protections to which they are entitled\".\n\nThe government announced plans to use AI facial estimation technology to combat this problem last year.\n\nSince then, the Home Office has been exploring the use of the technology and this week, a new contract was awarded to Harlow-based IT supplier Akhter Computers Ltd to deliver the scheme.\n\nThe contract will see the technology further tested and developed before being rolled out in mid-2027.\n\nThe contract will cost £322,000 over three years.\n\nMinister for Border Security and Asylum, Alex Norris, said adult migrants \"making false age claims have exploited the system and diverted vital support away from children at risk\".\n\n\"That is why we are rolling out AI technology to put a stop to this, ensuring those who game the system are identified, detained and removed without delay, and those who deserve support and protection are given it,\" Norris said.\n\nThe Home Office has already carried out testing on images of people across different ethnicities and genders, including those that make up the asylum-seeking population, already in its operational system.\n\nBut test results have not been used for live decisions yet.\n\nThe technology is expected to be trialled for the first time on live cases of asylum seekers at Western Jet Foil, a processing centre in Dover, next year.\n\nAge assessments of asylum seekers are already carried out by border force officials who use methods such as examining documents, appearance and demeanour to make an initial decision on age.\n\nThe new facial estimation technology will act as an additional tool to support officers at the border when a person's age is in doubt.\n\nSocial workers undertake assessments on asylum seekers claiming to be children, when their age is disputed by border officials.\n\nThe British Association of Social Workers (BASW) is warning that the government's plan to use AI in the assessment process will lead to major safeguarding mistakes.\n\n\"Assessing the ages of migrants is a complex process which social workers are best placed to do,\" said Professor Sam Baron, interim CEO of BASW.\n\n\"This important task should not be open to shortcuts through artificial intelligence, especially as the pitfalls of getting it wrong can lead to major safeguarding risks.\"\n\nLast year, the UK government said it had concluded that the technology was the most \"cost-effective option\" to assess the age of asylum seekers.\n\nBut human rights groups have criticised the Home Office's plans to use the technology on children.\n\nAnna Bacciarelli, a senior AI researcher at campaign group Human Rights Watch, said: \"The government needs to scrap this deeply flawed approach to assessing child refugees.\n\n\"Experimenting with unproven technology to determine whether or not a child should be granted protections they desperately need and are legally entitled to is cruel and unconscionable.\n\n\"In addition to subjecting vulnerable children and young people to a dehumanising process that undermines their human rights, we don't actually know if facial age estimation works.\"\n\nShe said the technology had been used so far in shops and bars but not refugee processing centres, adding there was \"no ethical way to move forward with these plans\".\n\n*Correction: An earlier version of this story said age verification is carried out by trained immigration enforcement officers using X‑rays and MRI scans. The Home Office says it has the power to use these methods but does not currently do so. *\n\n- Published1 day ago\n\n- Published25 August 2025", "url": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-will-be-used-to-estimate-age-of-asylum-seekers-from-next-year", "canonical_source": "https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/ce3pe36qe7ro", "published_at": "2026-05-29 18:23:03+00:00", "updated_at": "2026-05-29 20:16:08.869704+00:00", "lang": "en", "topics": ["artificial-intelligence", "computer-vision", "ai-policy", "ai-ethics"], "entities": ["Home Office", "Human Rights Watch"], "alternates": {"html": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-will-be-used-to-estimate-age-of-asylum-seekers-from-next-year", "markdown": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-will-be-used-to-estimate-age-of-asylum-seekers-from-next-year.md", "text": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-will-be-used-to-estimate-age-of-asylum-seekers-from-next-year.txt", "jsonld": "https://wpnews.pro/news/ai-will-be-used-to-estimate-age-of-asylum-seekers-from-next-year.jsonld"}}