startnewlife Mendee CIC · London

Electronic monitoring (GPS tag)

Updated: 9 May 2026
In short

Electronic monitoring (EM) is a bail condition that applies to a small minority. If your Bail 201 letter does not mention "electronic monitoring", "GPS tag" or "non-fitted device" — this page is not about you. Read digital reporting instead.

4,392
people
on EM in March 2026 (whole UK)
Serco
provider
GPS ankle tags from May 2024
Buddi
NFD provider
non-fitted devices
Most readers can skip this page

Electronic monitoring applies to 4,392 people across the whole UK as of March 2026. That is a very small share of all people on immigration bail. Most readers never wear a tag. If your Bail 201 letter contains no mention of "electronic monitoring", "GPS tag" or "non-fitted device" — read /en/reporting/digital-service/ instead.

Two types of devices

1. Fitted GPS ankle tag
A small unit strapped to the ankle. It transmits your location continuously to the EM provider. Current provider: Serco (from May 2024).
2. Non-Fitted Device (NFD)
A mobile fingerprint scanner you carry with you. The device vibrates up to 10 times a day at random, including evenings. You have about one minute to scan your fingerprint. NFDs also collect location data continuously between scans. Provider: Buddi Limited.
Not Mitie. Not AUEM. Not G4S. If someone tells you the provider is Capita or G4S, their information is out of date.

Your obligations

Rule What it means in practice
Wear the tag at all times The strap stays on your ankle. You cannot remove the device yourself.
Charge daily The Home Office expects the battery never to die. Charge for about 1 hour every day — often best done overnight.
Do not tamper Cutting, damaging or shielding the device counts as tampering. Even accidental damage must be reported the same day.
Stay reachable Keep the device on you and your phone reachable in case the EM provider needs to contact you.
For NFDs: scan within ~1 minute Each vibration starts a short window. Failure to scan = breach.

What courts have said

In R (Nelson) v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2024] UKUT 141 (IAC) — decided 11 March 2024 — the Upper Tribunal held that a GPS tag condition is not rendered unlawful merely by the device temporarily malfunctioning or by signal drop-outs. However, a long, unaddressed device failure plus absence of mandatory periodic reviews can become an Article 8 ECHR (right to private life) breach. If your tag has been broken and the Home Office has not reviewed your case — contact BID or an IAA-registered solicitor. Do not stop wearing the tag.

Religious considerations

This section is for practising Muslim, Jewish, or other observant readers whose worship schedule, ablution rules, or fasting patterns interact with reporting. If none of this applies to you, skip to the next section.
  • Wudu (ablution) before salah. The GPS tag is designed to be water-resistant and is intended to stay on during washing. Wudu is generally fine. If your Serco fitting includes specific water-exposure limits, the provider must tell you at induction. If unsure, ask the provider directly and write down the answer.
  • Mosque attendance. Your GPS tag records that you attended Friday Jum'ah and regular prayer times. Location data is held for a defined period. The Information Commissioner's Office and Privacy International have both raised concerns about this. You are not breaking any bail condition by attending the mosque inside your inclusion zone.
  • Ramadan and charging. The iftar–suhoor schedule disrupts sleep during Ramadan. Charge the tag during suhoor preparation and after taraweeh prayer. Failing to charge is treated as evading monitoring.
  • MRI for medical reasons. The tag must be temporarily removed before an MRI. Contact the EM provider — number on your induction paperwork — at least 48 hours in advance. The medical staff cannot cut the tag off. The provider sends a technician.
  • NFD vibrations during prayer. You must scan as soon as you can — the window is about a minute. Unfortunate timing is not an accepted excuse. If this is causing serious ongoing problems, document each instance for a possible variation request.

What to do if X

The battery dies
Get to a charger fast. Then call the EM provider (number on your induction paperwork) and explain. Do not wait. Battery failure is treated like missing a check-in.
The strap breaks
Do not try to refit it. Do not put it in your pocket and pretend nothing happened. Call the EM provider immediately. Take a photo of the broken strap with the timestamp visible. The provider sends someone, usually within 24 hours.
You need an MRI / surgery / dialysis
Tell the medical team about the tag at the booking stage. The hospital cannot remove it without authorisation. Email the EM provider 48 hours in advance with the appointment letter attached. Keep all paperwork.
NFD vibrates while in the toilet / washing / praying
Scan as soon as you can. The window is about a minute. Unfortunate timing is not an accepted excuse. If this is a recurring serious problem, document each instance for a possible variation request.
Red flags
  1. Cutting the strap. Treated as criminal tampering — leads to immediate re-detention.
  2. Letting the battery die "just for one night".
  3. Wrapping the tag in foil or a metal case. Counts as tampering.
  4. Believing the tag will be removed because you got Limited Leave. Under BSAIA 2025 Section 46, EM can continue with Limited Leave in security or specified-crime cases.
  5. Trying to physically force the tag off if the strap loosens. Call the provider. Always.

When to call who

EM provider 24-hour line — number on your tag induction paperwork. First call for any technical problem.
Migrant Help — 0808 801 0503 — for general questions about your rights.
BID — legal@biduk.org — for tag variation, Article 8 ECHR challenges, evidence-gathering for the First-tier Tribunal.
Medical Justice — for medical or psychiatric harm caused by tagging.

Sources: R (Nelson) v SSHD [2024] UKUT 141 (IAC); Medical Justice — "Constantly on edge"; gov.uk EM Statistics, March 2026; BID briefing on GPS electronic monitoring; legislation.gov.uk/uksi/2025/1318/made.

Frequently asked questions

How many people are on electronic monitoring?

As of March 2026, 4,392 individuals are subject to electronic monitoring as a condition of immigration bail. That is 15% of the total EM caseload (criminal-justice + immigration). Most people on immigration bail never wear a tag.

Who is the current GPS tag provider?

Serco has held the GPS ankle tag contract since May 2024 (not Capita, not G4S). Non-Fitted Devices (NFDs) are supplied by Buddi Limited under a contract that began November 2022.

What do I do if the tag strap breaks?

Do not try to refit it yourself. Call the EM provider immediately (number on your induction paperwork). Take a photo of the broken strap with the timestamp visible. The provider sends a technician, usually within 24 hours.

Will the tag be removed if I get Limited Leave?

Not automatically. Under BSAIA 2025 Section 46, EM can continue with Limited Leave in security-threat or specified-crime cases. Do not stop wearing the tag without written confirmation.

Missed a check-in? Act now
For legal questions about EM: BID — legal@biduk.org

Informational content. SNL is not registered with the Immigration Advice Authority (IAA). Nothing here is immigration advice. For case-specific help: Migrant Help on 0808 801 0503 or an IAA-registered solicitor via /database/lawyers/.

⚠️ StartNewLife is an information project — not regulated by the IAA (Immigration Advice Authority). We do not provide immigration advice within the meaning of Section 84 of the Immigration & Asylum Act 1999. All content is general information only and does not replace advice from a regulated lawyer (IAA / SRA / BSB) about your specific case.