Asylum claims across European Union pass the one million mark and the final tally for this year is set to top 2015's record figure 

  • At least 1,003,635 applications were registered in the 28 member states
  • It is the second consecutive year that number has reached seven figures
  • Actual total will be higher, as only handful of countries submitted data

The number of asylum claims lodged in the EU this year has passed a million, official figures indicate.

Provisional data updated on Friday shows that at least 1,003,635 asylum applications were registered in the 28 member states as of October this year.

The actual total is thought to be even higher, as only a handful of countries have submitted data for last month.

Asylum seekers pictured leaving the torn down Jungle camp in Calais last month. Asylum claims lodged in the EU this year has passed a million, official figures indicate

Asylum seekers pictured leaving the torn down Jungle camp in Calais last month. Asylum claims lodged in the EU this year has passed a million, official figures indicate

It is the second consecutive year that the number has reached seven figures - after a dramatic surge in 2015 amid the international migration crisis.

The findings emerged in Press Association analysis of figures on asylum which are compiled and regularly updated by the EU's statistical body.

Main applicants and any dependants such as children are counted in the headline tally - which could include repeat applications, so should not be read as one million separate individuals.

Separate figures show that 965,850 claims have been made by first-time applicants this year - equivalent to 96% of the total.

Germany continues to receive the lion's share of asylum applications, recording nearly two thirds of the total number, while just under 3% have been made in the UK this year.

The figures indicate that there was a rise in claims received during the summer - peaking in August, when 133,375 have so far been recorded.

Germany, run by chancellor Angela Merkel (pictured), continues to receive the lion's share of asylum applications, recording nearly two thirds of the total number

Germany, run by chancellor Angela Merkel (pictured), continues to receive the lion's share of asylum applications, recording nearly two thirds of the total number

Comparisons with counts for previous years give an indication of the extraordinary influx of people into Europe in 2015 and 2016, in what has been described as the largest mass movement of people since the Second World War.

For example, the total number of applications recorded for the whole of 2013 stood at less than half a million, while it was below a quarter of a million in 2008.

Some 1.3 million asylum claims were made last year, the highest figures since comparable records started eight years ago.

On current trends, the final total for 2016 could be even higher.