Planning to Move to the UK? New Immigration Rules Take Effect in August
The United Kingdom will introduce major changes to its immigration rules from 3 August, with new requirements affecting work, study, family and settlement routes.
Separate changes to European Union settlement cases will take effect on 30 July.
The reforms, presented to Parliament on 9 July, will reshape several of the country's main immigration pathways. They include changes to Skilled Worker, Student, Family, Global Talent and Youth Mobility visas, as well as new deportation rules and updated sponsorship requirements.
For Kenyans planning to move to Britain, the changes are expected to make the application process more demanding. Applicants will need to meet stricter eligibility requirements, comply with revised sponsorship rules and be aware of wider grounds for visa refusal or deportation.
One of the most significant changes concerns deportation. People convicted on or after 22 March 2026 who receive suspended prison sentences of 12 months or more may now face removal from the UK.
Previously, deportation generally applied to people who had served custodial sentences of the same length. The new rules will also apply to relevant convictions recorded outside the UK. In addition, the government's Electronic Travel Authorisation system will take suspended sentences into account when assessing applications for travel permission.
Changes have also been made to work and study routes. Skilled Worker applicants will face revised sponsorship requirements, including new deadlines for Certificates of Sponsorship that vary by sector. Some categories will require certificates to be issued before January 2027 or January 2028.
For students and graduates, the reforms introduce a change affecting families. Children born in the UK to parents on Graduate visas will be allowed to remain under the same immigration status as their parents, providing greater certainty for families during their stay.
Family immigration rules have also been revised. Where a sponsor has refugee status or another form of protection, their partner's immigration permission will now end on the same date as the sponsor's leave. This aligns the duration of both permissions under a single timetable.
The asylum system will also change. Applications from nationals of European Economic Area countries and Switzerland that are considered clearly unfounded may now be refused without a personal interview, allowing decisions to be made more quickly.
The changes are expected to affect thousands of Kenyans intending to move to the UK for work, study or family reasons. Britain is home to between 136,000 and 200,000 Kenyan nationals, with large communities in London, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and the East Midlands.
Many have already obtained British citizenship or Indefinite Leave to Remain, but those applying under the new rules will need to meet the updated requirements. The UK government says the reforms are intended to strengthen border controls and align immigration enforcement more closely with the criminal justice system.
People planning to apply for UK visas in the coming months will need to review the new rules carefully before submitting their applications.