Key Takeaways
• Minimum salary for UK Skilled Worker visa rose to £38,700 as of April 2024, with higher going rates for many jobs.
• Shortage Occupation List replaced by Immigration Salary List; only hard-to-fill jobs qualify for lower salary floors.
• Special salary rules apply for healthcare and teaching roles; transitional protections exist for current visa holders.
Sweeping reforms to the UK Skilled Worker visa system have changed the path for employers, overseas workers, and anyone dealing with UK immigration rules. These changes, first launched in April 2024, will keep growing more important as further updates arrive in April 2025. For any business planning to bring in skilled talent from outside the United Kingdom 🇬🇧, these rule changes mean bigger wage bills, tighter lists of roles that can be sponsored, and stricter rules than in the past.
This article explains what has changed, why the government made these decisions, and what employers and employees must do to comply. We’ll cover new salary thresholds, the new Immigration Salary List, special rules for health and education workers, transitional actions for existing visa holders, and steps businesses need to take now.

Key Changes at a Glance
- As of April 2024, the minimum salary for most people applying for the UK Skilled Worker visa jumped to £38,700. This higher salary threshold will also be the rule in 2025, marking one of the biggest increases in years.
- For many jobs, there are ‘going rates’ that are even higher, and these can be much more than the minimum, depending on the job’s code.
- The Shortage Occupation List, long used to help fill jobs with shortages, was replaced in April 2024 by the new Immigration Salary List (ISL).
- Health and teaching jobs use their own national pay grades—which means the new rules don’t always apply the same way.
- People already working in the UK under an earlier Skilled Worker visa have some short-term protection, but they’ll face higher minimums when renewing or applying for permanent residency.
Comparing the Old and New Rules
For years, the UK had a Shortage Occupation List (SOL). This was a way for employers to hire for jobs where there were not enough local workers, and pay reduced wages. However, some felt this list allowed unfairly low pay for foreign workers and didn’t always line up with real skill shortages.
On April 4, 2024, the Home Office swapped this for the Immigration Salary List (ISL). The ISL keeps the idea of focusing on real gaps in workers but sets higher minimum pay. This means jobs only make the list if they both have a skills gap and offer pay closer to what’s normal in the market.
Analysis from VisaVerge.com suggests this approach is designed to stop employers from hiring migrants on the cheap, while also making sure overseas recruitment serves real needs. Employers must now sponsor workers at salaries that are at least as high as most British workers doing similar jobs.
Salary Thresholds: The Numbers
The jump in pay expected for a UK Skilled Worker visa is huge. Before April 2024, someone could be sponsored with a salary as low as £26,200. Now, almost all must earn at least £38,700. This wasn’t a random number. The government looked at wage data from the UK Office for National Statistics (ONS)—specifically, the latest figures showing full-time earnings for British workers.
But that’s not all. Each job now has its own “going rate” or standard pay, based on official job codes known as SOC codes. If a job’s going rate is higher than £38,700, the employer must offer that higher pay.
For Example:
– Programmers and software developers, whose old threshold was around £34,000 to £36,000, now have a going rate of about £49,000.
– Mechanical engineers went from a £33,000 minimum to a new bar of £45,000.
In short, the government expects salaries for Sponsored Workers to match the real-world wages of those already doing the job in Britain.
How the Immigration Salary List (ISL) Works
With the ISL, being on the list now means:
– The job is still in shortage, but
– The employer must pay at least £30,960 a year (or the going rate if it’s higher).
Only the jobs the government says are truly hard to fill will get this break. The ISL is reviewed from time to time, and roles may be added or removed each year.
Employers must check the current ISL each time they plan to sponsor a new hire, since the list may change. Using the old SOL is no longer allowed after April 2024.
Healthcare, Education, and Sector-Specific Rules
Not every worker is affected in the same way. NHS workers, caregivers, and teachers have special pay rules that don’t always match the general thresholds.
- Health and Care Worker visas use the NHS pay grades or special agreements. But even here, required minimums have gone up. For example, entry-level Band 3 healthcare jobs may no longer be eligible due to the higher pay needed.
- Teaching positions follow national pay scales. If a new teacher is paid below what’s set out in these national agreements, they won’t qualify even if the school wants them.
This means employers in those fields must look up and follow the most current national pay charts.
Discounts, Exceptions, and Special Cases
Some people can still get a UK Skilled Worker visa with a pay packet below the main new minimum.
1. New Entrants
If you’re a recent graduate or under a certain age, you could be classed as a ‘new entrant’. For these, the starting salary can be as low as £30,960. You must meet strict conditions, such as switching directly from a student visa or being under the age limit set by the Home Office.
2. PhD Holders
If you have a PhD in a subject that matches your UK job, you can enjoy a salary reduction. For regular PhDs, the bar lowers to £34,830. For PhDs in science, technology, engineering, or maths (STEM), it stays at £30,960.
3. ISL Roles
If your job is named on the Immigration Salary List, your sponsor can offer a lower salary—but only down to a set floor, usually £30,960, or the going rate for the job, whichever is higher. The Home Office reviews the ISL regularly, so employers must check before each recruitment.
Transitional Rules for Current Visa Holders
People who already have a Skilled Worker visa, and were sponsored before April 2024, have some protections for now.
- When they renew their visa, they don’t have to meet all the new, higher pay levels right away.
- But there’s a catch: for each extension, the threshold will rise to reflect newer ONS wage data, even if not yet reaching the full new minimum. In most jobs (except health/care), the requirement will get stricter with every renewal.
- Those aiming for Indefinite Leave to Remain (permanent residency) after five years need to show they earn at least the new baseline or the higher going rate. If not, their application can be refused.
This transitional period gives both workers and employers a little time to adjust, but the clock is ticking on these short-term protections.
What Employers Must Do
Compliance is now more challenging. Here’s what businesses must do:
1. Check Sponsorship Allocations
Double-check how many Certificates of Sponsorship are available. Make sure every new offer meets the right salary threshold.
2. Match Jobs to New SOC Codes
All skilled jobs now use updated SOC 2020 codes, which have replaced older job classification numbers. If a job was previously eligible under an old code, it might have changed under the new structure, affecting both job eligibility and pay rate.
3. Plan for Extensions and Future Proofing
Employers must look ahead at which current staff may fall short of future salary rules. For those on lower wages due for extension or ILR, employers will need to raise pay or risk losing vital staff.
4. Update Recruitment and Salary Budgets
Businesses relying on international hires—especially in IT and engineering, where going rates can be much higher—must plan for higher wage costs. Less access to discounted shortage occupation routes means companies may look more to home-grown talent.
Ignoring any of these steps can have big consequences.
Risks and Compliance
The Home Office will be watching closely. If employers breach the new Skilled Worker visa rules—accidentally or by cutting corners—the penalties can be severe:
– Sponsor license can be suspended or revoked.
– Employee visas can be refused or withdrawn.
– Compliance audits are expected to increase in late 2024 and 2025, particularly with the political focus on lowering net migration numbers.
Solid documentation, careful record-keeping, and staying up to date with rules are vital.
Other Important Developments
- National Minimum Wage Rises
From April 1, 2025, the National Living Wage increases again, reaching £12.21 per hour. This is roughly £25,000 per year for full-time work. All employers—no matter if staff need visas or not—must pay at least this rate. Family Visas: Stricter Financial Demands
The government raised the income needed for partner/family visas from £18,600 to £29,000 per year as of April 2024. Savings requirements went up too, from around £62,000 to nearly £88,000. Families with one earner close to the lower end of the salary scale may now be unable to reunite in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧.Expanded Job Access for Asylum Seekers
Following advice from the independent Migration Advisory Committee, the Home Office now allows asylum seekers who get permission to work to apply for any job open under the Skilled Worker rules, not just those previously listed on the SOL or ISL. This opens up the labor market a bit more, especially for employers struggling to fill roles.
What Happens Next?
The government is not finished making changes. The Independent Migration Advisory Committee keeps reviewing which jobs appear on the ISL and suggests if further discounts or exceptions should stay in place. Another review is expected around late spring to summer 2025, and changes could come at any time if the economy shifts or migration remains a topic of public debate.
Employers and visa applicants must keep checking official guidance, as changes may arrive with little warning.
Summary and Next Steps
The latest changes in the UK Skilled Worker visa system mean:
- A much higher main salary threshold (£38,700+);
- Most jobs have higher, specific ‘going rates’ that may exceed the new base;
- The old Shortage Occupation List is out—replaced by the leaner, tougher Immigration Salary List;
- Health and education jobs use special salary rules;
- Transitional measures help current visa holders, but only for now.
Anyone sponsoring overseas staff or seeking to work in the United Kingdom 🇬🇧 must review roles, check codes, and make sure to meet all salary and compliance standards. Detailed lists for every job and threshold can be found on the official government website.
Employers unsure about these changes should get advice from a trusted immigration professional, as mistakes can cost both money and staff. The rules are not just stricter—they’re being enforced more actively, so it pays to get things right the first time.
Always remember: these rules can and likely will change again as the government tries to balance the labor market, public opinion, and economic growth.
This article gives you general information, not legal advice. For advice about your own situation, always seek help from a qualified specialist or solicitor.
As reported by VisaVerge.com, staying prepared and acting early are the best tools for anyone dealing with the UK Skilled Worker visa or planning to rely on overseas talent for their team.
Learn Today
Skilled Worker visa → A UK immigration route allowing overseas workers to work in eligible jobs sponsored by licensed UK employers.
Immigration Salary List (ISL) → A government list of jobs in shortage, applying higher minimum salary requirements for visa sponsorship eligibility after April 2024.
SOC codes → Standard Occupational Classification codes used to categorize and determine pay rates for different job roles in the UK.
Certificate of Sponsorship → A document licensed UK employers issue to sponsor foreign workers for a Skilled Worker visa application.
Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) → Permanent residency status allowing a person to live and work in the UK without time restrictions.
This Article in a Nutshell
April 2024 ushered in the largest Skilled Worker visa reforms in years: a £38,700 minimum salary, a new Immigration Salary List, and tighter compliance. These sweeping changes impact both employers and overseas applicants, requiring updated pay rates, codes, and vigilance as government reviews and future updates are fast approaching.
— By VisaVerge.com