Visa Abuse: UK to restrict universities’ sponsorship of international students

By our Reporter

The United Kingdom is set to introduce stricter rules that could prevent universities from sponsoring international students, as part of efforts to curb alleged visa abuse and reduce asylum claims linked to study routes.

The UK Home Office announced the reforms on Thursday, saying the measures form part of a wider crackdown on immigration loopholes involving student visas.

A statement on its X handle said UK “universities will face a ban on recruiting international students if they fail to enforce new rules.”

Under the updated Basic Compliance Assessment framework, the Home Office said, “higher education institutions sponsoring student visas must now achieve a visa refusal rate below 5%, an enrolment rate of at least
95%, and course completion rate of at least 90%.”

The new policy will take effect immediately in phases, while a “traffic light” compliance rating system for universities is scheduled to be introduced from summer of 2027.

According to the government, the changes are intended to prevent individuals from using student visas as a route into the UK under false pretences and to reduce the number of international students who later claim asylum.

Home Office data published last month showed that 10,835 people who entered the UK on study visas went on to claim asylum in the year ending March 2026.

The data also indicated that the UK issued 409,954 sponsored study visas in the same period, lower than the peak of 498,626 recorded in the year ending June 2023. Officials said the decline reflects earlier restrictions on international students bringing dependants.

Minister for Migration and Citizenship, Mike Tapp, said the government remains committed to legitimate international students but insisted stronger safeguards were necessary.

“The UK will always welcome genuine international students, and our universities are rightly admired around the world, but our visa system must not be used as a backdoor to asylum and illegal working,” he said.

He added, “Student asylum claims are down 30% in the last year. I thank the sector for their co-operation in achieving this, but we must go further.

“Those seeking to game the system should know we are watching — and won’t hesitate to act.”

Compliance for the new framework will be assessed under the new traffic light rating system expected to take effect in 2027.

Universities rated “red” will face restrictions on international student recruitment and will be required to implement a 12-month improvement plan. Institutions that fail to improve risk losing their sponsorship rights entirely, which would prevent them from admitting international students requiring study visas.

The policy comes amid growing scrutiny of asylum applications from people who initially entered the UK through legal visa routes.

According to the Home Office, Pakistani nationals accounted for the largest share of asylum claims in the year ending March 2026, with many arriving through legal visa channels. Eritrean nationals followed, mostly via irregular routes, while Iran and Afghanistan also featured prominently.

Although Nigeria was not among the top nationalities in the latest figures, Nigerians have also recorded significant asylum claims in recent years.

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