“Which Schengen country is least likely to reject me?” is one of the most common questions UK applicants ask. It is a sensible instinct, but the honest answer is more nuanced than the listicles suggest. This article uses the European Commission’s official 2024 visa statistics to show what the numbers actually say about applications made in the UK, why the destination country matters less than most people think, and how to use the data without sabotaging your own application.
The headline: applications made in the UK are refused far less often than the global average
In 2024, consulates worldwide received about 11.7 million Schengen visa applications and refused 14.8% of them. That is the global figure. Applications lodged specifically in the United Kingdom tell a much more encouraging story: roughly 470,000 applications were made from the UK, of which around 32,000 were refused — a refusal rate of approximately 6.9%, less than half the worldwide average.
Why so much lower? Because the pool of people applying from the UK is, on average, a strong one: lawfully resident, with UK bank statements, employment or study, and clear ties that point to a return. The lesson is encouraging — applying from the UK is a relatively favourable starting position — but it does not mean approval is automatic, and it does not mean every destination behaves the same way.
An important honesty note on the data
The European Commission publishes refusal rates two ways: by the consulate where the application was lodged, and by the Schengen state that decided it. A clean, official breakdown of UK-lodged applications split by each destination country is not published in an easily citable form. So we will not invent a “UK-only, by-destination” table that does not exist. Instead, the figures below are the global by-Member-State refusal rates for 2024 — the rate at which each Schengen country refused applications worldwide. Use them as a directional signal about which consulates tend to be stricter, not as a precise prediction of your odds from London.
Global refusal rates by Schengen state (2024)
Based on European Commission (DG HOME) figures for 2024:
| Schengen state | Refusal rate (2024) | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Malta | 38.5% | Highest of all; limited consular capacity |
| Estonia | 27.2% | Small-volume state |
| Belgium | 24.6% | High among large states |
| Slovenia | 24.5% | Small-volume state |
| Sweden | 24.0% | Stricter outcomes |
| France | 15.8% | Largest volume; near the average |
| Spain | 15.7% | Second-largest volume |
| Germany | ~13.7% | Stable around 86–90% approval |
| Schengen average | 14.8% | All states, worldwide |
The pattern is consistent year to year: smaller states with limited consular resources (Malta, Estonia, Slovenia) tend to post higher refusal rates, while the high-volume destinations (France, Spain, Germany, Italy) sit closer to the average because they process such large, varied caseloads.
Why nationality matters more than destination
Here is the part the “easiest country” articles tend to gloss over: who you are weighs more heavily than which consulate you choose. The 2024 data shows enormous variation by nationality. Applicants from some countries faced refusal rates above 45% — for example, Bangladesh around 54.9%, Pakistan around 47.5%, Senegal around 46.8% and Nigeria around 45.9%. Indian nationals, by contrast, saw a refusal rate in the mid-teens, with the large majority of applications approved.
That spread reflects the assessment consulates actually make: the strength of your ties to your country of residence, the credibility of your travel purpose, your financial evidence and your travel history. A well-documented application from a UK resident with stable employment and a clean record is judged very differently from a thin application, regardless of which country’s flag is on the consulate door.
What this means when you choose where to apply
It is tempting to read the table above and conclude you should apply to whichever country refuses least. Do not do this. As we explain in our pillar guide on applying for a Schengen visa from the UK, you are required to apply through your main destination — the country where you will spend the most time, or your point of first entry if time is split evenly. Applying to Germany because it looks lenient when your trip is built around a week in Belgium is not a clever workaround; it is an inconsistency that gives the consulate a clean reason to refuse you.
So the practical takeaway is the opposite of “game the country.” Apply to the correct country for your actual trip, and put your energy into the thing that genuinely moves the odds: a complete, consistent, well-evidenced application.
How to read refusal statistics sensibly
- Treat by-state rates as background, not destiny. They describe huge mixed caseloads, not your specific file.
- Your nationality and documentation are the dominant factors. Focus there.
- A higher-refusal destination is not a reason to switch countries — it is a reason to make your application airtight.
- One refusal is visible to every Schengen consulate, so reapplying “somewhere easier” rarely works if the underlying reason is unaddressed.
The most common reasons applications are refused
Whatever the destination, refusals cluster around a small number of recurring problems. Understanding them is far more useful than chasing a “lenient” country, because every one of these is within your control:
- Purpose of travel not credibly justified. Vague plans, no itinerary, or a trip that does not hang together. Consulates want to see a coherent reason and a concrete plan.
- Doubt about your intention to leave before the visa expires. This is the big one. Weak ties to the UK or your home country — unstable employment, no return commitments — make a consulate worry you will overstay.
- Insufficient or unclear funds. Bank statements that do not show enough money, or sudden large deposits that look arranged, undermine the application.
- Missing or non-compliant travel insurance. Cover must be at least €30,000, valid across the whole Schengen Area for the entire trip. A policy that falls short is an easy refusal.
- Inconsistent or unreliable documentation. Dates that do not match across flights, hotels and insurance, or documents the consulate cannot verify, read as risk.
- A poor immigration history. Previous overstays, prior refusals left unaddressed, or irregularities anywhere in your record weigh heavily.
Notice that none of these is about which country you picked. They are about the quality and honesty of the file you submit. That is why our consistent advice is to invest your effort in the application itself rather than in country-shopping.
The trend: refusals are slowly falling
There is some good news in the longer view. The worldwide refusal rate has been easing: it stood at 17.9% in 2022, 16.0% in 2023 and 14.8% in 2024, as application volumes recovered towards pre-pandemic levels. At the same time, the rollout of the Entry/Exit System means border compliance is now tracked biometrically, so a clean travel history and strict adherence to the 90/180 rule carry more weight than ever. The direction of travel rewards well-prepared, compliant applicants — which, for UK residents, is an achievable bar.
Frequently asked questions
Which Schengen country is easiest to get a visa from in the UK?
There is no reliable “easiest” shortcut, because you must apply to your main destination. The bigger lever is the quality of your application, not the country.
Is applying from the UK better than from my home country?
Statistically, UK-lodged applications are refused far less often than the global average, largely because UK residents tend to present stronger ties and finances. But you must qualify as a UK resident to apply here.
If France refuses me, can I just apply to Italy?
Only if Italy is genuinely your main destination, and you must first address why France refused you. The refusal is on record across the area. Our guide on what to do after a refusal explains the options. Want a second pair of eyes on your application before you book an appointment? Message the Tourloom team on WhatsApp or visit tourloom.co.uk.
Useful official links
- European Commission — 2024 visa statistics announcement: home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/news/visa-applications-reach-117-million-eu-and-schengen-associated-countries-2025-05-20_en
European Commission — EU visa policy: home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schengen-borders-and-visa/visa-policy_en