Screening Interview Questions
The screening is the first interview after claiming asylum. Conducted by Home Office, free interpreter provided. Takes 30 min — 2 hours. Not audio-recorded. 52 questions across 7 parts. Standard guidance from Home Office and charity legal teams — answer honestly and briefly; details come at the substantive interview.
All 52 Questions
Initial Contact and Asylum Registration Questionnaire
💡 Common practice: answers are usually brief but include ALL reasons. Details — at the substantive interview.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the screening interview?
The first interview after submitting your asylum claim. Conducted by a Home Office official (Border Force or caseworker). The purpose is to collect basic information about you, your journey, and your reasons for asylum. This is NOT the main interview — you will give details later at the substantive interview.
Where does the screening take place?
If you claimed asylum at the port of entry — right there. If you claim after entering the UK — at the Screening Unit, Lunar House, 40 Wellesley Road, Croydon CR9 2BY. Waiting time for a screening appointment: from a few weeks to over a year.
Can I bring someone with me?
A free interpreter is provided. You can request the interpreter's gender. If the interpreter is poor — you MUST tell the interviewer and ask them to record it. In exceptional cases, you can bring a support person (friend, organisation representative — NOT a family member), but you must request this in advance.
Is the screening audio-recorded?
No. Unlike the substantive interview, the screening is NOT audio-recorded. The interviewer fills in a form. You have the right to a copy of the screening record — if not given automatically, request it by email.
How should I prepare?
Common practice from charity legal teams (Right to Remain, Refugee Council): answer honestly and briefly; "I don't know" is usually safer than guessing; mention ALL reasons for asylum even briefly (omitted reasons complicate the case later); bring documents — passport, ID, tickets, medical certificates. Advice for your specific case — from a regulated solicitor.
What happens after the screening?
You receive an ARC card (proof of your claim). You may be offered accommodation (Section 95/98). Waiting time for the substantive interview: weeks to months. Average time to a decision: ~413 days (2024). Appeals backlog: 80,000+ cases (Dec 2025).