Types of accommodation

Hungary

Country Report: Types of accommodation Last updated: 19/05/26

Author

Hungarian Helsinki Committee Visit Website

On 31 December 2025, there were 2 open reception centres and 1 home for UaSC in Hungary.

The reception centers are:

Reception Centre Location Maximum capacity Occupancy at end of 2025
Balassagyarmat Near Slovakian border 140   22 (amongst them 7 with subsidiary protection and 14 asylum seekers)
Vámosszabadi Near Slovakian border 210 0
Fót Near Budapest 130 29 (5 with int. protection status in the aftercare, 15 with international protection status and 14 with temporary protection status)
Total   480 51

Source: NDGAP and Directorate-General for Social Affairs and Child Protection.

 

Balassagyarmat is a community shelter with a maximum capacity of 140 places for asylum seekers, beneficiaries of international protection, persons tolerated to stay, persons under immigration procedure and foreigners having been held for 12 months in immigration detention. NDGAP provided only an aggregated number of people placed there regarding 2022 (163 persons)[1] and 2023, (48 persons)[2] but such number was not provided for 2024 nor for 2025.

Vámosszabadi Reception Centre is located outside of Vámosszabadi, close to the Slovakian border. It is a three-storey-high pre-manufactured building, which used to serve as one of the barracks of the Soviet troops stationed in Hungary.[3] The centre hosts primary asylum seekers. No asylum seeker was placed in Vámosszabadi in 2022 or in 2023 and one asylum seeker in a subsequent asylum procedure was placed there in 2024. No one was placed there in 2025.[4]

The centres are managed by the asylum authority.[5] Since 2019, the reception facilities and detention centres fall under the exclusive management and supervision of the central Refugee Affairs Directorate of the NDGAP.[6]

Unaccompanied and separated children are accommodated in Fót. The Károlyi Istvány Children’s Home in Fót is a home for UaSC located in the North of Budapest and belongs to the Ministry of Human Resources. Its maximum capacity is 130 children.[7] Prior to 21 May 2020 children above the age of fourteen were detained in the transit zones (as detailed in Detention of vulnerable applicants).

Fót hosts UaSCs whose asylum procedure is still ongoing, recipients of refugee status, subsidiary protection and tolerated status, as well as those who are under the effect of an alien policing procedure. The Children’s Home’s closure was announced in 2016, however it remains open. The children and staff are constantly kept in the dark about the future of the Children’s Home and any possible plans for the future.

On 31 December 2023, there were 3 unaccompanied asylum seekers present, 3 with international protection status, 3 with temporary protection status and 15 with international protection and 2 with temporary protection status in the aftercare.[8] On 31 December 2024, there were 2 unaccompanied asylum seekers present, 5 with temporary protection status and 5 with international protection status in the aftercare.[9] On 31 December 2025, there were no unaccompanied asylum seekers present, 14 temporary protection status holders 15 international protection status holders and 5 with international protection status in the aftercare.[10]

 

 

[1] Information provided by the NDGAP on 13 February 2023.

[2] Information provided by the NDGAP on 19 February 2024.

[3]  Cited from the report published by HHC, Safety Net Torn Apart – Gender-based vulnerabilities in the Hungarian asylum system, 26 June 2018, available here.

[4] Information provided by the NDGAP on 9 March 2026.

[5] Section 12(3) Asylum Decree.

[6] Order of the Minister of Interior no. 26/2018. (XII. 28.) amended the order of the Minister of Interior no. 39/2016. (XII. 29.) on the determination of the structural and operational order of the Immigration and Asylum Office.

[7] Information provided by the Directorate-General for Social Affairs and Child Protection on 28 January 2026.

[8] Information provided by the Directorate-General for Social Affairs and Child Protection on 20 February 2024.

[9] Information provided by the Directorate-General for Social Affairs and Child Protection on 12 February 2025.

[10] Information provided by the Directorate-General for Social Affairs and Child Protection on 28 January 2026.

Table of contents

  • Statistics
  • Overview of the legal framework
  • Overview of the main changes since the previous report update
  • Asylum Procedure
  • Reception Conditions
  • Detention of Asylum Seekers
  • Content of International Protection
  • ANNEX I – Transposition of the CEAS in national legislation