Prime Minister Keir Starmer has unveiled a sweeping reform of the UK immigration system, aiming to reduce net migration and address public concerns about its impact on wages and services.
The changes, announced on May 12, 2025, include stricter visa rules and extended settlement periods.
Understanding the New Immigration Reforms
The UK government has introduced significant changes to its immigration policies with the release of an 82-page White Paper titled “Restoring Control over the Immigration System.”
These reforms are designed to make the system more controlled and selective by tightening visa rules and raising skill requirements.
The goal is to significantly reduce net migration while addressing public concerns about its effects on wages, public services, and social cohesion.
Changes in Visa Requirements
- Skilled worker visas now require a bachelor’s degree or higher.
- New English language requirements apply across all visa routes.
- The settlement period for permanent residency extends from five to ten years.
- The overseas care worker visa route will be closed.
- Tougher enforcement measures for deporting foreign nationals who commit crimes.
The Implications
The new immigration strategy comes after years of record-high net migration, which quadrupled between 2019 and 2023.
This surge has led to public frustration over pressure on housing, wages, and public services. The reforms aim to restore trust by linking visa access to investment in UK skills.
However, there are concerns that these changes could lead to labor shortages in sectors like healthcare, engineering, and hospitality.
A Shift Towards Homegrown Talent
With stricter immigration controls in place, businesses may need to invest more in training and upskilling UK workers.
This shift could increase costs but also presents an opportunity for companies to develop a more skilled domestic workforce.
However, experts warn that these reforms might discourage international students and professionals from choosing the UK as their destination.
The Full PM’s Speech (As Delivered)
“Good morning.
Today, we publish a White Paper on immigration, a strategy that is absolutely central to my Plan for Change. This strategy will finally take back control of our borders and close the book on a squalid chapter for our politics, our economy, and our country.
“Take back control.” Everyone knows that slogan and what it meant for immigration, or at least that’s what people thought. Because what followed from the previous Government, starting with the people who used that slogan, was the complete opposite.
Between 2019 and 2023, even as they were going around our country telling people, with a straight face, they would get immigration down, net migration quadrupled.
Until in 2023, it reached nearly 1 million, which is about the population of Birmingham, our second largest city. That’s not control – it’s chaos.
And look, they must answer for themselves, but I don’t think you can do something like that by accident. It was a choice. A choice made even as they told you, told the country, they were doing the opposite.
A one-nation experiment in open borders conducted on a country that voted for control. Well, no more. Today, this [political content redacted] Government is shutting down the lab.
The experiment is over. We will deliver what you have asked for – time and again – and we will take back control of our borders.
And let me tell you why. Because I know, on a day like today, people who like politics will try to make this all about politics, about this or that strategy, targeting these voters, responding to that party. No. I am doing this because it is right, because it is fair, and because it is what I believe in.
Let me put it this way: Nations depend on rules – fair rules. Sometimes they’re written down, often they’re not, but either way, they give shape to our values. They guide us towards our rights, of course, but also our responsibilities, the obligations we owe to one another.
Now, in a diverse nation like ours, and I celebrate that, these rules become even more important. Without them, we risk becoming an island of strangers, not a nation that walks forward together.
So when you have an immigration system that seems almost designed to permit abuse, that encourages some businesses to bring in lower-paid workers rather than invest in our young people, or simply one that is sold by politicians to the British people on an entirely false premise, then you’re not championing growth, you’re not championing justice, or however else people defend the status quo.
You’re actually contributing to the forces that are slowly pulling our country apart.
So yes, I believe in this. I believe we need to reduce immigration significantly. That’s why some of the policies in this White Paper go back nearly three years, [political content redacted]. It’s about fairness.
Migration is part of Britain’s national story. We talked last week about the great rebuilding of this country after the war; migrants were part of that, and they make a massive contribution today.
You will never hear me denigrate that. But when people come to our country, they should also commit to integration, to learning our language, and our system should actively distinguish between those that do and those that don’t. I think that’s fair.
Equally, Britain must compete for the best talent in the world in science, in technology, in healthcare. You cannot simply pull up a drawbridge, let nobody in, and think that is an economy that would work. That would hurt the pay packets of working people – without question.
But at the same time, we do have to ask why parts of our economy seem almost addicted to importing cheap labour rather than investing in the skills of people who are here and want a good job in their community.
Sectors like engineering, where visas have rocketed while apprenticeships have plummeted. Is that fair to Britain? Is it fair to young people weighing up their future to miss out on those apprenticeships, to see colleges in their community almost entirely dedicated to one-year courses for overseas students?
No, I don’t think it is. And truth be told, I don’t think anyone does. And yet that is the Britain this broken system has created.
So, as this White Paper sets out, every area of the immigration system – work, family, and study – will be tightened up so we have more control. Skill requirements raised to degree level.
English language requirements across all routes – including for dependents. The time it takes to acquire settled status extended from five years to ten. And enforcement tougher than ever because fair rules must be followed.
Now, make no mistake – this plan means migration will fall. That’s a promise. But I want to be very clear on this. If we do need to take further steps, if we do need to do more to release pressure on housing and our public services, then mark my words – we will.
But it’s not just about numbers. Because the chaos of the previous government also changed the nature of immigration in this country. Fewer people who make a strong economic contribution, more who work in parts of our economy that put downward pressure on wages.
So perhaps the biggest shift in this White Paper is that we will finally honour what “take back control” meant and begin to choose who comes here so that migration works for our national interest.
You know, this is where the whole debate is skewed, as if some people think controlling immigration is reigning in a sort of natural freedom rather than a basic and reasonable responsibility of government to make choices that work for a nation’s economy.
For years, this seems to have muddled our thinking, but let me be clear – it ends now. We will create a migration system that is controlled, selective, and fair.
A clean break with the past that links access to visas directly to investment in homegrown skills so that if a business wants to bring people in from abroad, they must first invest in Britain.
But also, so settlement becomes a privilege that is earned, not a right, easier if you make a contribution, if you work, pay in, and help rebuild our country.
Now, some people may even be against that, but I think for the vast majority of people in this country, that is what they have long wanted to see.
An immigration system that is fair, that works for our national interest, and that restores common sense and control to our borders.
That is what this White Paper will deliver: lower net migration, higher skills, backing British workers, the start of repairing our social contract, which the chaos and cynicism of the last government did so much to undermine.
Thank you.”
Additional Reading
In Conclusion
The UK’s new immigration reforms mark a decisive shift towards tighter controls aimed at reducing net migration while prioritizing homegrown talent development.
While these changes may address domestic concerns about immigration’s impact on resources, they also pose challenges for sectors reliant on overseas recruitment. Balancing these priorities will be crucial moving forward.
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Sources: UK Government, EIN, The PIE News, Prime Minister’s Office, 10 Downing Street and The Rt Hon Sir Keir Starmer KCB KC MP.
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News™, an independent news organization delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analyzed research with human-edited accuracy and context.