The UK government has announced a major overhaul of its immigration system, introducing tougher rules that will affect work, study and family visas, while also expanding its powers to deport foreign offenders.
The changes, contained in Statement of Changes HC 259, were laid before Parliament on July 9, 2026.
The 38-page document amends 42 sections of the Immigration Rules and introduces new requirements for migrants, employers, universities and visa sponsors.
One of the biggest changes targets foreign nationals convicted of crimes.
Under the new rules, anyone convicted on or after March 22, 2026, and handed a suspended prison sentence of 12 months or more will now face the same deportation process as offenders who receive immediate custodial sentences.
Immigration rules to be reviewed every five years
The government has also introduced a legal requirement for the Home Secretary to review immigration regulations every five years.
Future reviews must show that any burden placed on businesses, educational institutions or community organisations cannot reasonably be achieved through less restrictive measures.
When the new rules take effect
The changes will be introduced in phases:
– July 30, 2026: Amendments affecting Appendix EU and Appendix EU (Family Permit) come into force.
– August 3, 2026: All remaining changes become effective.
Applications submitted before August 3 will continue to be assessed under the previous immigration rules.
Stricter rules for overstayers and immigration bail
The Home Office has standardised restrictions across around 30 immigration routes, introducing a single rule for applicants seeking permission to remain in the UK.
Applicants must not be in breach of immigration laws or be on immigration bail, except in limited circumstances covered by existing overstayer exemptions.
The rule applies to most visa categories, including:
– Skilled Worker
– Global Talent
– Innovator Founder
– Scale-Up
– Student
– Child Student
– Graduate
– Visitor
– Youth Mobility Scheme
– Long Residence
– Family and Private Life routes
Some visa categories have limited exceptions, including Hong Kong BN(O) applicants and those applying under the European Community Association Agreement.
Suspended sentences now affect visa applications
The government has also extended criminality checks to include suspended prison sentences.
Applicants seeking Electronic Travel Authorisations (ETAs), Child Student visas and several other immigration routes may now be refused if they have received qualifying suspended sentences.
The Home Office has been given new powers to decide some asylum applications without conducting personal interviews.
This will apply where:
– the applicant is an EEA or Swiss national; or
– officials believe the application is clearly unfounded based on the documents submitted.
The changes make clear that skipping an interview will not prevent the Home Office from approving or refusing an application.
Other key changes
The immigration reforms also introduce several technical amendments, including:
– Skilled Worker visas: Salary transition rules for 2027 and 2028 will now depend on when an employer issued a Certificate of Sponsorship rather than when the visa application was submitted.
– Scale-Up route: Neonatal leave will now count alongside parental leave when assessing employment continuity.
– Family visas: Childcare arrangements must comply with UK child protection laws before applications can be approved.
– Visitor visas: Indian nationals travelling on valid diplomatic passports will receive a specific administrative exemption.
The reforms form part of the UK’s broader effort to tighten immigration controls while simplifying and standardising rules across different visa categories.




