UK Illegal migrant crackdown risks pushing up takeaway prices, warns Uber - Undocumented workers drawn to food delivery industry to earn a living in the UK

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Uber warns ‘new legislative requirements could have an adverse impact on our business’ Credit: Ben Montgomery

Matt Field
05 September 2025 5:54pm BST

A Home Office crackdown on illegal “gig economy” workers could push up the cost of delivering takeaways, Uber has said.

The ride-hailing giant, which operates the Uber Eats take-out app, warned its delivery expenses could rise in response to new rules intended to “clamp down on illegal working”.

In accounts filed at Companies House, Uber’s UK division said it “welcomed” a Home Office effort to dissuade migrants and people smugglers from risking trips on small boats across the Channel to Britain.

However, it warned that “new legislative requirements could have an adverse impact on our business, including expenses necessary to comply with such laws and regulations”.

Takeaway apps have become a route for undocumented workers to earn a living in the UK, with illegal workers drawn to the industry by historically limited right to work checks. Delivery riders are also known to sell their accounts or rent them out on social media to “substitutes”, who may be working illegally, with little vetting.

The opportunity to secure work for newly arrived migrants with no documents has been judged as a pull factor for small boat crossings, with the Home Office demanding delivery companies tackle the problem.

Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat have all voluntarily introduced “right to work” checks on their apps over the past year, including enhanced facial recognition and document checks.

They have kicked thousands of workers who failed checks off of their apps.

However, in July, the Home Office warned there “continues to be abuse in the system” and secured commitment from the companies that they would go further to spot misuse and suspend accounts.

As home secretary, Yvette Cooper had also planned to change the law to force all gig economy companies to check the legal status of their workers to dissuade migrants arriving on small boats from risking the trip to Britain. Ms Cooper, now the Foreign Secretary, was replaced by Shabana Mahmood as home secretary in a Cabinet reshuffle on Friday.

Officials have also started sharing data on known asylum hotels with delivery companies so they can monitor for attempts by undocumented workers to use their apps.

In its accounts for its UK business, which includes its ride-hailing and Uber Eats division, Uber said its revenues had climbed from £5.3bn in 2023 to £6.5bn last year.

However, its profits dropped from £29.4m to £21.6m. Uber blamed the fall on an “increase in administrative expenses” in its food delivery division.

In February, Uber told The Telegraph it had blocked thousands of accounts since April 2024 after introducing tougher right-to-work checks to block illegal substitutions.

In August, the Home Office’s immigration enforcement teams claimed to have spoken to 1,780 individuals over the course of a single week in July, leading to 280 arrests for suspected illegal working. It said 53 individuals were now having their asylum status reviewed.

Source (Archive)
 
"We must import 30 million third world randos to work illegally in order to deliver your fast food slop from 3 miles away."

Jesus Christ, just go get your own slop.
 
The illegals aren’t just delivering the food, they’re using the kitchens of the hotels to cook it.
These food delivery apps should be shut down
 
Deliveroo, Uber Eats and Just Eat have all voluntarily introduced “right to work” checks on their apps over the past year, including enhanced facial recognition and document checks.
Wait, there's somehow no document checking that goes on when Person A applies to work for Business C? Are you fucking kidding me? They just go "sure, sign literally any name on the dotted line and come pick up your paycheck in a paper envelope once a week on Fridays"?

Companies making billions of dollars in revenue shouldn't be fly-by-night operations on par with a shady chinese laundry in some movie from the 1980's
 
More walking down the street with a sandwich board that reads "SAVE OUR SWEATSHOPS!" and being totally unashamed.
 
Wait, there's somehow no document checking that goes on when Person A applies to work for Business C? Are you fucking kidding me? They just go "sure, sign literally any name on the dotted line and come pick up your paycheck in a paper envelope once a week on Fridays"?
The big trick with these seems to be one legal person registers to work for them then sells that registration to half a dozen other people. The business then pretends it is completely normal that their workers can somehow be delivering 24 hours, 365 days a year, how could they have known it was not just one person?
 
20250908_145447_craig (craigus12) dril spend less on candles nitter.tiekoetter.com.webp

Instead of having take out delivered, get it yourself. If you have a partner / spouse, decided who gets it. Better yet, just go get it together. Or just eat in person. Best idea of all, stop getting take out and cook all your meals at home.
 
Good, i used to work fast food, and online orders made it go from tolerable to awful. Constant orders endlessly coming in by rich faggots too lazy to go buy a burger, even when the restaurant was empty we'd be slammed by orders constantly. Fuck anyone who uses this shit
Used to be I'd order Panda online in my small town, walk in to snag it, and be the only person there doing so. After the coof I have to sit and wait behind a dozen or so of these uber retards (who, by the way, are some of the rudest and most entitled people I've met).
 
They're really clutching at straws for mass immigration acceptance now aren't they?
 
We could have clankers deliver the slop if we make streets safe and clean again by deporting all brown people.
 
If you can afford to have food delivered without disgust at the prices then you're privileged-- in the traditional sense-- enough for me not to care that you're getting screwed more.
 
While it's fun to call people fat and lazy, etc., I think we should doubt that any immigration-facilitating business behavior is driven by consumer demand.

The government knowingly lies when it says that immigrants are brought here to work and pay taxes. Everyone knows they're a net loss—but it's a cost the state is willing to pay to "replace" you.

Why would corporations (finance) not do the same?

Banks do. They preferentially loan to minorities who are less likely to repay because fuck you. (Yeah it's the law, but they decide what the law is.)

Why does Uber exist? What was it made to do? What does it do? Is it really a business, or just a means to destroy other businesses? Maybe to destroy you?
 
No one should be using delivery apps, and anyone who does is supporting third-worlders who are destroying their country.

The world was a better place when the only places that offered delivery were pizza chains and family-run Chinese restaurants.
This is a remote third concern but centralized delivery apps are also extorting and destroying the businesses. It's one thing if you order delivery from the restaurant to be done by the restaurant's employee or contractor, and quite another if you're doing it on The App [tm] from which the restaurant can be banned any time.
 
I make six figures a year and even I can’t justify dropping 20 dollars for two double cheeseburgers and a small order of fries.

How the fuck are food delivery services staying in business? Are wagies really dropping premium amounts of money for a stale order of Burger King?
 
So in essence "your slob will get more expensive because we can't be bothered to hire local workers" Or perhaps more accurately "Your slob was only so cheap because we didn't give the jobs to people like you who demand so many benefits" Good for those who still know how to cook
"We're taking advantage of pre-established rhetoric used elsewhere to raise your prices even more than we already have"
 
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