Detention and Bail Services - Winvolved Immigration Lawyers UK


Detention and Bail

Winvolved Immigration Advice Services

Bail / Detention 


If you have been detained in a removal centre or prison for a period of at least 7 days by the UK Border Agency or under the Immigration Rules and require bail or are facing removal, we will be there to assist you to be released on bail. We understand that you and your family will be frightened and distressed. You can count on us to work with the Home Office on your behalf, ensuring your case is heard and any issues properly addressed. Our solicitors have an excellent reputation for obtaining release from detention, organising bail and successfully halting Home Office deportations. We are well-known for fighting hard for our clients and ensuring that their legal and human rights are protected at all times.


There are four ways to get out of detention.


Home Office bail

If your main immigration case is successful

Release by the High Court

Bail from an Immigration Judge, which is also called Tribunal Bail.

You can apply for bail to the Home Office as many times as you want and even when you are applying for Tribunal Bail. You should receive a decision from the Home Office within 10 days of making the bail application.


The Home Office bail is considered on paper only. Under Tribunal Bail you will be able to have a hearing in front of an Immigration Judge. All immigration detainees have a right to make a Tribunal Bail application if they have been in the UK for at least eight days. The advantage of applying for Tribunal Bail is that the Judge, who is an independent person, will look at your detention to see if the Home Office arguments are strong enough to keep you in detention. You cannot apply for Tribunal Bail if you have already had a bail application within the last 28 days and your circumstances have not changed significantly.


In order to make a bail application to court you need to have financial sureties. A financial surety is someone who promises the court that he or she can make sure that you keep in contact with the authorities if you are released from detention and who will pay money if you run away.


To have a chance of succeeding in the bail application you will need at least two people who are prepared to stand as sureties, and you will also need an address where the Immigration Service can be sure you live. Your sureties must be of good character, have secure immigration statuses and be in a position to ensure that you will not abscond. They must also be able to afford to pay large amounts of money to the authorities, should this be necessary.


We will need to have full details of the financial surety on the bail application form and explain their relationship with you. The financial sureties should be legally in the UK and should show financial standing. There is no fixed amount for the financial support, but it has to be an amount that will be proportionate to his or her income and savings. The money should belong to the surety and usually need to provide bank statements for at least three months. The money will only be taken from the financial sureties should you not comply with the bail conditions.


In immigration cases, it is also important for us to show, in principle, why it is not necessary for you to be detained and why the reasons for your detention are inadequate.


Please note that if you are granted bail, it will usually be subject to certain conditions which may require you to report to a Home Office reporting centre at regular intervals, or to remain living at the same address.


From the beginning to the to end we are able to assist with the bail application and we help clients navigate the complex process. Accordingly, please do not hesitate to get in touch for expert advice if you require assistance in understanding these requirements and if you would like to know more about how to apply for bail.

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