
The UK government has announced a cut in the Graduate Route visa from 24 months to 18 months.
The new policy forms part of a sweeping crackdown on what it describes as “systemic abuse and mission drift” in international education, asylum, and family immigration.

The announcement, part of a broader Immigration White Paper released Monday, is paired with tougher compliance rules for universities, a legal reset on asylum and deportation decisions, and stricter enforcement powers to curb visa fraud.
“Migration must be controlled and compliant. Our reforms will close the backdoors and shut down abuse across the system,” the Home Office stated on its website.
Graduate Route Shortened, Sponsors Face Scrutiny:
The Graduate Route — previously offering two years of post-study work rights — will now offer only 18 months, with a tighter pathway to work visas and fewer rights to bring dependants.
“The Graduate Route has not met its original objectives.
“It has become a loophole for unsponsored work and a magnet for abuse,” the document said.
Only institutions meeting “enhanced compliance standards” will be allowed to retain international recruitment licenses. Universities found to have low progression-to-work rates or engaged in misleading recruitment practices will face sanctions.
We will take action against sponsors who undermine the integrity of the system,” it added.
Asylum Claims’ New Rejection Rules:
The asylum system will also be restructured.
Applicants whose home country conditions have not materially changed — or who fail to claim upon arrival — may now be automatically refused under new admissibility rules.
“We will prevent late, opportunistic asylum claims and re-establish control over our border.
“The threshold for protection will be restored to its intended level,” the Home Office declared.
Tougher Deportation For Foreign Criminals:
The government also promises legislation to expand deportation powers, allowing the removal of all foreign offenders, not just those jailed for more than 12 months.
“Deportation will apply to all foreign nationals convicted of offences, with increased focus on crimes involving violence against women and girls,” the paper stated.
The government also plans to restrict the use of Article 8 (right to family life) in appeals.
“Parliament, not the courts, should decide who stays. We will legislate to reset the balance,” the document read.
Visa Sponsorship To Face Penalties For Abuse:
In a warning to universities, employers, and other sponsors, the Home Office said it will impose financial penalties, licence revocations, and recruitment bans for those found to have facilitated visa abuse.
“Sponsorship is a privilege, not a right.
“Sponsors will be held accountable for their international recruitment practices,” it read.
Bold Plan Necessary:
These changes, the Home Office says, are part of a long-term plan to “restore credibility, reduce numbers, and deliver an immigration system the public can trust.”
“This is about rebuilding integrity.
“We’re making it clear that the UK welcomes global talent — but not at the cost of public confidence or border control,” said Home Secretary Yvette Cooper.