Plain-English summaries of every UKVI policy change, salary update and immigration rule amendment. Bookmark this page and check back regularly.
One of the most operationally significant changes in recent years came into effect on 8 April 2026: sponsors can no longer use annual salary averages to meet the Skilled Worker salary threshold.
Previously, if a worker received an irregular salary (e.g. overtime-heavy months alongside lower months), an employer could argue the annual average met the £41,700 threshold even if individual pay periods fell short. That flexibility is now gone.
Failure to comply with salary requirements can result in suspension or revocation of your sponsor licence. Employers should review all sponsored workers' contracts now.
Two major eligibility changes came into force on 8 January 2026 for all new Skilled Worker, Scale-up and High Potential Individual visa applications:
These changes do not apply to existing visa holders simply extending their visa for the same employer and role, provided the role itself still meets the threshold.
Source: GOV.UK Skilled Worker Visa
Regulations increasing the Immigration Skills Charge (ISC) came into force in December 2025. The charge for medium and large employers increased from £1,000 to £1,320 per year for each sponsored worker. Small and charitable employers pay £660 per year (up from £500).
The ISC is charged per year, per worker, and must be paid upfront by the employer when assigning a Certificate of Sponsorship. A worker sponsored for 5 years will therefore cost a large employer £6,600 in ISC alone, before visa fees and the Immigration Health Surcharge.
Two significant rule changes took effect simultaneously on 22 July 2025:
Source: House of Commons Library — Changes to UK visa and settlement rules
The absolute minimum salary floor for Skilled Workers (including those on the Health & Care visa) was raised from £23,200 to £25,000 on 9 April 2025. This is the absolute bottom — no sponsored worker, even when eligible for all applicable discounts, can be paid less than this amount.
This change affected the care sector particularly hard, with many roles historically at the lower end of the salary scale now requiring a higher guaranteed minimum pay.
The Temporary Shortage List (TSL) was introduced in 2025, replacing the old Shortage Occupation List (SOL). The TSL applies only to a limited number of sub-degree (RQF 3–5) roles under strict, time-limited and conditional arrangements. Key differences from the old SOL:
Employers and applicants relying on shortage designation should not assume a role will remain on the TSL. Check the current list regularly.
Source: Immigration Salary List (GOV.UK)
Immigration rules change frequently. We update this page whenever a significant policy change occurs. Bookmark it and check back regularly — or contact us if you'd like to be notified of major updates.