The United Kingdom Home Office has warned young travellers against accepting offers of free holidays and luxury trips from criminal gangs seeking to recruit them as drug couriers, following a sharp increase in cannabis smuggling through the country’s airports.
In a statement issued by Border Force ahead of the peak summer holiday season, the Home Office said organised crime groups were increasingly targeting school leavers, university graduates, first-time travellers and young holidaymakers through social media.
The warning, published on July 17, revealed that the number of cannabis smugglers intercepted on arrival in the UK by air rose dramatically from 142 in 2023 to 976 in 2025.
According to the agency, 600 air passenger couriers were arrested at UK airports during the first six months of 2026 alone, with men aged between 18 and 37 travelling from Thailand accounting for the largest group.
Border Force said criminal gangs lure victims with promises of free luxury holidays, business-class flights and spending money before coercing them into carrying cannabis into the UK.
As part of a nationwide awareness campaign across UK airports, travellers have been advised to reject offers of free holidays or accommodation, particularly to destinations where cannabis is legal, including Thailand, Canada and parts of the United States.
The agency also urged travellers to ensure they know the contents of their luggage, avoid carrying bags for other people, ignore suspicious approaches on social media, retain control of their passports and personal documents, and remember that bringing cannabis into the UK remains a serious criminal offence regardless of its legal status in another country.
Border Force Lead Officer for Safeguarding, Kate Goldstone, said organised criminal gangs were exploiting young people for financial gain while leaving them to face severe legal consequences.
“Organised criminal gangs are exploiting young people for profit – living it up while leaving their courier victims facing lifetime consequences,” Goldstone said.
“Our message to young travellers is simple. If an offer feels too good to be true, it probably is.
“A single decision made before a holiday could lead to a criminal record, a prison sentence and years of lost opportunities.”
Border Force warned that anyone caught smuggling cannabis into the UK could face arrest, prosecution, a criminal record, up to 14 years’ imprisonment and restrictions on future international travel, with lasting consequences for employment and education.
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The Home Office said cannabis seizures at UK airports had reached record levels, increasing by 50 per cent over the past year. Seizures from air passengers rose from 2.1 tonnes in 2022 to more than 28 tonnes in 2025.
While Thailand has emerged as a major source country, the agency noted that criminal networks also operate in other jurisdictions where cannabis is legal or more readily available, including Canada, the United States and parts of Europe.
The warning coincides with the implementation of a joint UK-Thailand crackdown on cannabis smuggling.
Under the initiative, British nationals caught attempting to smuggle cannabis from Thailand face average fines of about £17,700 or prison sentences of up to two years.
Border Force urged anyone approached to transport cannabis or other illegal drugs to report the matter to local authorities, consular services or Crimestoppers.



