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UK Threatens Universities with Foreign Student Ban, Tightens Visa Rules

The UK Home Office has announced stricter immigration rules for universities that recruit international students. Universities that do not meet the new standards could lose their licence to sponsor student visas.
The new rules include stricter monitoring and give the government more power to enforce them. The goal is to stop what officials call abuse of the student visa system.
With the updated Basic Compliance Assessment, universities must now keep their visa refusal rate below five per cent, have at least 95 per cent of students enrol in courses, and ensure at least 90 per cent complete their courses. Before, the limits were 10 per cent, 90 per cent, and 85 per cent.
Universities that do not meet any of these three targets will face penalties. These can include limits on recruiting new students and, in the worst case, the loss of the right to recruit international students altogether.
The Home Office sys these changes are meant to make sure universities recruit students responsibly. They warn that high drop-out rates could mean students are working illegally, and high visa refusals or low enrollment might show that universities are not checking applicants carefully enough.
The announcement was published on the UK government website on Thursday, during a visit to Manchester Metropolitan University. It comes after a reported 30 percent drop in student asylum claims over the past year
The Home Office reports that asylum claims from people on work, study, and tourist visas have more than tripled under the previous government. These claims now make up 37 percent of all cases, with international students being the largest group.
In 2025, there were 100,000 asylum applications. About 39 percent of these came from people who had entered the UK through legal migration routes, such as student visas.
The Home Office has also introduced a new ‘visa brake’ on study visas for people from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar, and Sudan. This follows a rise in asylum claims from these countries.
Further enforcement measures include contact with 306,000 students whose visas are due to expire, with warnings that meritless asylum claims will be refused and individuals without legal status expected to leave or face removal.
Starting in summer 2027, universities will be graded with a traffic light system based on how well they follow the rules. Those given a red rating will have limits placed on student recruitment and must follow a 12-month improvement plan. If they do not improve, they could lose the right to recruit international students.
The Home Office said these changes aim to make the process clearer and give more oversight to institutions that might be at risk of abuse.
Universities UK, which represents higher education institutions, agreed that visa abuse needs to be addressed but stressed that stable policies are important.
Its president, Professor Malcolm Press, said international students contribute £37bn in export earnings and play a vital role in the UK’s global standing.
“What universities need from government is policy stability, transparent visa decision-making, and real-time data to act on emerging concerns,” he said.
He also warned that recent declines in international recruitment had led to cost-cutting and job losses across the sector.
Some critics are worried that these measures could hurt genuine students from countries affected by conflict.
The University of Chester has stopped recruiting students from Pakistan until autumn 2026 because more visas are being refused. The University of Wolverhampton and the University of East London have also stopped accepting undergraduate applications from both Pakistan and Bangladesh.
Other universities, including Sunderland, Coventry, Hertfordshire, Oxford Brookes, Glasgow Caledonian, and BPP University, have put similar restrictions in place.
The University of Cambridge told affected applicants that it cannot issue Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies to support visa applications. The university also admitted that these restrictions would cause “considerable disappointment”.
The government said these reforms are part of a wider plan to regain control of the immigration system. They also said that net migration has dropped by 74 percent as a result