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All Rights Guides
Modern Slavery

Your Rights as a Victim of Modern Slavery

If you have been held in slavery, servitude, forced labour, or trafficked, you have important rights under UK law. The Modern Slavery Act 2015 provides protections including a defence against prosecution, access to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM), and support services. You are a victim regardless of your immigration status.

Last updated: 2026-03-09

Your Rights

Right to be identified and supported

You have the right to be referred to the National Referral Mechanism (NRM) for formal identification as a victim. If recognised, you receive Government-funded support including safe accommodation, financial support, and counselling.

Modern Slavery Act 2015; Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking

Defence against prosecution

If you committed criminal offences as a direct result of being a victim of slavery or trafficking, you have a statutory defence under s.45 of the Modern Slavery Act 2015. This applies to most offences (with limited exceptions).

Modern Slavery Act 2015, s.45

Right to legal aid

Victims of trafficking are entitled to legal aid for immigration advice and representation, regardless of their financial circumstances.

LASPO Act 2012, Sch.1, Part 1, para.32

Right to compensation

You may be entitled to compensation through: the Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme, a compensation order made by the court against your trafficker, or a civil claim for damages.

Modern Slavery Act 2015, s.8; Criminal Injuries Compensation Scheme

Right to recovery and reflection

Once referred to the NRM with a positive 'reasonable grounds' decision, you receive a minimum 30-day recovery and reflection period during which you cannot be removed from the UK.

Council of Europe Convention; NRM Guidance

Common Myths

Myth

Modern slavery only happens in other countries

Reality

Modern slavery exists throughout the UK — in car washes, nail bars, farms, construction sites, domestic settings, and online.

Myth

If you entered the UK illegally, you cannot get help

Reality

Your immigration status does not matter. Victims of trafficking are entitled to support regardless of how they entered the UK.

Myth

You will be deported if you report your traffickers

Reality

Identified victims receive a recovery period and cannot be removed during NRM consideration. Many victims receive discretionary leave to remain.

What To Do

1

Get to safety

If you are in immediate danger, call 999. If safe to do so, contact the Modern Slavery Helpline on 08000 121 700.

2

Seek a referral to the NRM

Contact the police, a local authority, or a first responder organisation to be referred to the NRM.

3

Get legal advice

Request a specialist immigration solicitor through legal aid. The Salvation Army's support service can help arrange this.

4

Access support services

The Salvation Army (as Government contractor) provides accommodation, financial support, counselling, and practical assistance to NRM-referred victims.

Key Legislation

  • Modern Slavery Act 2015
  • Human Rights Act 1998 (Article 4)
  • Council of Europe Convention on Action against Trafficking
  • EU Anti-Trafficking Directive

Useful Contacts

Modern Slavery Helpline

24/7 confidential helpline for victims and professionals.

Tel: 08000 121 700

Website

Salvation Army — Modern Slavery

Government-contracted support for adult victims.

Website

Unseen

Charity supporting victims and running the helpline.

Website