As the UK government tightens immigration policies, new compliance rules are putting pressure on universities to maintain high visa approval rates.
A recent immigration white paper from the UK Home Office proposes raising the visa compliance bar for universities. Under the new plan, institutions would need at least a 95% course enrollment rate and a 90% course completion rate to remain in good standing. Universities that fail to meet these benchmarks risk being flagged under a new traffic light system, with “red” indicating a serious breach of compliance.
While national visa refusal rates stood at around 4% in both 2023 and 2024, experts caution that this average hides wide variations between universities and applicant nationalities. A 5% threshold may appear generous, but some schools, especially those accepting more applicants from high-risk countries, could exceed it.
During Q1 2025, the overall refusal rate spiked to 12%, matching figures from Q1 2024. These early-year applicants often come from countries like Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh, which now face sharply declining visa approval rates.
According to ApplyBoard data:
These figures raise alarms for UK universities that heavily recruit from South Asia, as refusal rates directly impact their compliance status.
Visa refusals tend to be higher in Q1, when applications come from countries with more financial and documentation challenges. In contrast, Q3, aligned with the main academic intake, usually has stronger documentation and lower rejection rates.