The UK government has imposed stricter rules targeting universities that fail to curb abuse of the student visa system, warning that institutions could lose their ability to recruit international students.
Under the revised sponsorship framework, universities will be subject to tougher performance benchmarks, including lower visa refusal rates as well as higher enrolment and course completion thresholds.
The Home Office said the reforms respond to concerns that some international students are misusing study visas to seek asylum or access illegal employment. It added that asylum claims from individuals arriving on work, study and tourist visas had more than tripled under the previous government, with students making up the largest share, though such claims have dropped by 30% over the past year following recent policy changes.
From summer 2027, institutions will be assessed under a new “traffic light” rating system. Universities placed in the “red” category could face recruitment limits and be required to implement a 12-month improvement plan, with continued failure potentially leading to the loss of sponsorship rights.
The updated standards include cutting the visa refusal rate threshold from 10% to 5%, raising the minimum enrolment rate from 90% to 95%, and increasing course completion requirements from 85% to 90%.
Migration and Citizenship Minister Mike Tapp said the UK would continue to welcome genuine international students, but stressed the system must not be used as a “backdoor to asylum and illegal working”.
The government also noted that net migration to the UK has fallen by 74% as part of wider immigration reforms.
Under the revised sponsorship framework, universities will be subject to tougher performance benchmarks, including lower visa refusal rates as well as higher enrolment and course completion thresholds.
The Home Office said the reforms respond to concerns that some international students are misusing study visas to seek asylum or access illegal employment. It added that asylum claims from individuals arriving on work, study and tourist visas had more than tripled under the previous government, with students making up the largest share, though such claims have dropped by 30% over the past year following recent policy changes.
From summer 2027, institutions will be assessed under a new “traffic light” rating system. Universities placed in the “red” category could face recruitment limits and be required to implement a 12-month improvement plan, with continued failure potentially leading to the loss of sponsorship rights.
The updated standards include cutting the visa refusal rate threshold from 10% to 5%, raising the minimum enrolment rate from 90% to 95%, and increasing course completion requirements from 85% to 90%.
Migration and Citizenship Minister Mike Tapp said the UK would continue to welcome genuine international students, but stressed the system must not be used as a “backdoor to asylum and illegal working”.
The government also noted that net migration to the UK has fallen by 74% as part of wider immigration reforms.
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