The 2025 Immigration White Paper: Proposed Changes Explained
What the May 2025 Immigration White Paper proposed, and where each measure now stands between proposal and law: settlement, work visas, social care, English, the Graduate route, students, family and deportation, all clearly labelled proposed or in force.

Five things to know about the 2025 White Paper
What is the 2025 Immigration White Paper?
The Immigration White Paper, titled "Restoring control over the immigration system", was published by the Home Office on 12 May 2025 as Command Paper CP 1326. It set out the Government's intended direction for the immigration system, aimed at reducing net migration and linking migration more closely to skills, contribution and compliance.
A White Paper is a statement of policy, not law. Almost nothing in it takes effect by itself: each measure has to be brought in through a Statement of Changes to the Immigration Rules, or in some cases through primary legislation. That is why, more than a year on, some of its proposals are already in force, some are written into the Rules with a future start date, and others remain proposals subject to consultation. This guide goes through the main measures and, for each one, says clearly where it now stands.
The White Paper at a glance: proposed vs in force
Use this table as a quick reference. "In force" means it is already part of the Rules; "enacted" means it is written into the Rules with a future commencement date; "proposed" means it is not yet law.
| Measure | What was proposed | Status (June 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Earned settlement | Qualifying period from 5 to 10 years | Proposed; consultation closed 12 Feb 2026; not yet in the Rules |
| Skilled Worker skill level | Threshold back to degree level (RQF 6) | In force (22 July 2025) |
| Immigration Salary List | Abolished; Temporary Shortage List introduced | Being implemented |
| Social care visa | End overseas recruitment | In force (22 July 2025); switching to 2028 |
| English language | Higher levels; new dependant requirement | Partly in force; B2 for settlement from 26 March 2027 |
| Graduate visa | 2 years reduced to 18 months | Enacted; from 1 January 2027 (PhD keeps 3 years) |
| Immigration Skills Charge | Increase of 32% | In force |
| Student route | Tighter compliance; possible student levy | Compliance being implemented; levy proposed (no rate) |
| Article 8 and deportation | Stronger public-interest test; wider deportation | Partly in force (March 2026 Rules); primary law pending |
| Citizenship | Longer contribution period | Proposed |
Settlement and citizenship: the "earned settlement" plan
Status: proposed, not yet in force. The White Paper proposed doubling the standard qualifying period for settlement from 5 years to a 10-year baseline, with the ability to "earn" settlement sooner through contribution, integration and compliance.
The detail was developed in a separate consultation, "A Fairer Pathway to Settlement", which closed on 12 February 2026 and drew a very large response. The Government has indicated it intends to proceed with an earned-settlement model, but as of June 2026 the consultation outcome has not been formally published and the 10-year period is not in the Immigration Rules. Citizenship would be aligned with the same model, with a longer contribution period before naturalisation; that too remains a proposal. Treat the 10-year figure as the Government's stated direction, not as current law, and do not plan an application around it until the Rules actually change.
Work visas: skill level, salary and the salary list
Status: in force. From 22 July 2025 the Skilled Worker skill threshold returned to degree level (RQF 6), the general salary floor rose, and the number of eligible occupations was reduced significantly.
Roles below degree level can now only be sponsored where they appear on a time-limited Temporary Shortage List, advised by the Migration Advisory Committee, often with restrictions on dependants. The old Immigration Salary List is being phased out in favour of a wider review of salary discounts. Existing Skilled Worker holders kept transitional rights to renew and change employer in below-degree roles. Exact salary figures continue to be reviewed, so confirm the current threshold for the specific role before relying on a number.
Social care visa: the end of overseas recruitment
Status: in force. The care worker and senior care worker route closed to new applications from overseas on 22 July 2025.
Care providers can no longer recruit care workers directly from abroad on this route. Workers already in the UK on the route can still switch employers, extend, and apply for settlement during a transition period that runs until 22 July 2028. The change was aimed at reducing reliance on overseas recruitment in the sector while protecting those already here.
English language: higher levels for workers and dependants
Status: partly in force. The White Paper proposed raising English requirements across routes and introducing, for the first time, a requirement for adult dependants.
Higher English levels for main applicants on the main work routes, and a new progressive requirement for adult dependants, are being introduced in stages rather than all at once. The most significant single change, a B2 English language requirement for settlement across a wide range of routes, is written into the Rules but does not take effect until 26 March 2027. Because B2 is a noticeably higher standard than the levels many applicants reached before, anyone planning a settlement application around 2027 should start working towards B2 early. Our guides to the English requirement for work visas and for partner and spouse visas explain the current levels.
Graduate visa: a shorter post-study stay
Status: enacted, takes effect 1 January 2027. The White Paper proposed reducing the Graduate visa from 2 years to 18 months.
The reduction has been written into the Rules and applies to applications made on or after 1 January 2027; applications made before that date keep the 2-year period. Graduates who completed a PhD or other doctoral qualification keep a 3-year Graduate visa. If you are studying now and intend to use the Graduate route, the date you apply will decide which length you get.
Students and sponsors: tighter compliance, a possible levy
Status: compliance changes being implemented; the student levy remains a proposal. The White Paper proposed tougher compliance duties on education sponsors and floated a levy on income from international students.
Education sponsors face tighter Basic Compliance Assessment thresholds, a Red-Amber-Green rating system, and a mandatory Agent Quality Framework, which are being brought in through Rules and policy changes. A proposed levy on higher-education income from international students was trailed in the White Paper but no rate has been confirmed, and it has not been implemented; treat it as a proposal only.
Family, Article 8 and deportation
Status: partly in force; primary legislation pending. The White Paper proposed a new family-migration framework, a stronger public-interest test, and simpler deportation of foreign national offenders.
Some of this is already in the Rules: from March 2026, Article 8 (right to private and family life) claims are assessed within a tighter framework, and a suspended sentence of 12 months or more can now trigger liability to deportation. The broader statutory framework the White Paper said it would put to Parliament, clarifying when Article 8 should outweigh removal, is still in progress.
Costs: the Immigration Skills Charge
Status: in force. The White Paper proposed increasing the Immigration Skills Charge, paid by employers who sponsor workers, by 32%, its first rise since 2017.
The increase has been implemented. The charge is now £480 per year for small or charitable sponsors and £1,320 per year for medium or large sponsors, paid upfront for the length of the sponsored worker's visa. This sits alongside the other employer-side costs of sponsorship, which our UK visa fees guide covers in full.
Frequently asked questions about the 2025 White Paper
It is the Government policy paper "Restoring control over the immigration system", published on 12 May 2025 as Command Paper CP 1326. It set out the intended direction for the immigration system. A White Paper is not law; each measure has to be brought in through a Statement of Changes to the Immigration Rules or through legislation.
Not yet. The move to a 10-year "earned settlement" period is a proposal. The consultation closed on 12 February 2026, but the outcome has not been published and it is not in the Immigration Rules. It is the Government's stated direction, not current law, so do not plan around it until the Rules change.
Several. From 22 July 2025 the Skilled Worker skill threshold returned to degree level with higher salaries, and overseas recruitment for the care worker route closed (with switching allowed until 2028). The Immigration Skills Charge rose 32%. Some Article 8 and deportation changes took effect in March 2026.
The reduction from 2 years to 18 months is enacted and applies to applications made on or after 1 January 2027. Applications made before that date keep 2 years, and PhD graduates keep a 3-year Graduate visa.
Yes, a B2 English requirement for settlement across many routes is written into the Rules, but it does not take effect until 26 March 2027. B2 is a higher standard than many applicants reached before, so it is worth preparing early.
Following the White Paper's proposed 32% rise, the Immigration Skills Charge is £480 per year for small or charitable sponsors and £1,320 per year for medium or large sponsors, paid by the employer for the length of the sponsored worker's visa.
Talk to a regulated immigration adviser
The Whytecroft Ford Immigration Team helps applicants and sponsors plan around proposed and confirmed changes, so decisions are based on what is actually in force. Every matter runs on a written engagement letter, with a named handler and a named supervisor.