(UNITED KINGDOM) A legal gap that let some people regain British nationality mid-litigation has been closed after the Deprivation of Citizenship Orders (Effect during Appeal) Act 2025 secured Royal Assent 2025 on 27 October 2025. Under the Act, there is no automatic reinstatement of British citizenship when someone wins an initial appeal against a deprivation order. Instead, the deprivation remains in force until all further appeals are completed or the time to appeal runs out.
The Home Office says the change is aimed at people assessed as national security risks, who will no longer be able to re-enter the country or be released from detention while legal steps continue.

The measure responds to a Supreme Court ruling from February 2025. That judgment held that a person deprived of citizenship would automatically regain it after a successful first-tier appeal, even if the government lodged a further appeal. Ministers argued the ruling opened a narrow but serious window in which a person judged to be a threat could regain status and return to the UK before the full court process concluded.
Policy changes — what the Act does
The Act sets out tightly drawn procedural changes around deprivation appeals without expanding the grounds for taking away citizenship. Core effects include:
- No automatic reinstatement after a successful initial appeal; the deprivation order stays active until all appeals by either side are exhausted, or appeal deadlines pass.
- Power to continue detention or bar re-entry to the UK during ongoing appeals for those assessed as threats to the public.
- Prevention of strategic renunciation of other nationalities to become solely British in the middle of litigation, a step that could otherwise raise statelessness bars to future action.
- Retroactive application to ongoing cases, including situations where the person has already won an initial appeal but further appeals are still in progress.
Officials stress the Act is narrow in scope. It does not alter who can be deprived of citizenship, does not widen decision-making powers, and does not remove the right to challenge a decision before the courts.
Deprivation decisions remain reserved for the most serious conduct — including terrorism, extremism, and major organized crime — and are made by the Home Secretary on “conducive to the public good” grounds. Between 2018 and 2023, an average of 12 people per year lost citizenship for such reasons.
Security Minister Dan Jarvis said the new law “sends a clear message: we will take no chances when it comes to protecting our country and our people.” The Home Office says the policy now aligns deprivation litigation with asylum and human rights appeals, where status is not granted until every appeal route is closed.
Practical impact — sequence not standard
From a practical standpoint, the law changes when status is restored, not the legal tests applied.
- If a person wins an initial appeal, they do not regain British nationality immediately.
- The deprivation order remains in force until any onward appeal by the government is settled, or the period to challenge expires.
- The same rule applies if the government loses again on onward appeal: reinstatement takes effect only when no further appeal is available or lodged in time.
Consequences can include:
- For people outside the UK: continued exclusion while appeals are live.
- For detained individuals: continued detention if a judge has ordered it and public protection concerns remain.
Consider the typical scenario raised by lawyers before this Act: a person stripped of citizenship wins before the First-tier Tribunal. Under the pre-October 2025 position, they could have regained nationality immediately, making return travel or release possible even as the government prepared an appeal. The Act ends that swing back and forth; the deprivation order remains active from the start of the case through to the very end of the legal chain, closing the short period when status could “bounce back.”
Stopping tactical renunciation
The government also targeted a technical route some individuals used during litigation: renouncing another citizenship to try to become solely British, which can complicate or block later action because of statelessness safeguards.
- Under the Act, a person cannot renounce another nationality to frustrate deprivation or removal while appeals are live.
- Ministers say this prevents last-minute moves aimed at locking in British status during court proceedings and keeps the system from being gamed.
Human and family impacts
Human impact remains central. Family members in the UK can face long waits while appeals run their course, with fewer options for in-person contact if the person is abroad and excluded. Lawyers say clear timelines and communication will be key so families understand when a case is truly final.
Rights of appeal remain intact, and the burden remains on the Home Secretary to justify deprivation on “public good” grounds under the law as it stood before this Act and as it stands now.
The Act took effect immediately. It applies to cases already in progress as of 28 October 2025, including where a person had secured an initial win but further appeals had been filed. That retroactive reach is designed to close the gap at once, not only for new cases but also for the small group already benefiting from the earlier automatic reinstatement rule.
The simple principle now governing these cases: a deprivation order stays live until the very end of the court process.
Analysis and reactions
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the change replaces a short-lived legal outcome with a uniform rule familiar from other areas of immigration law. In asylum and human rights cases, a status grant waits until after the appeal ladder is done; the Act brings deprivation cases in line with that approach.
- Supporters: say this ensures consistent handling of high-stakes matters and maintains public protection during appeals.
- Critics: warn prolonged exclusion or detention can cause hardship if appeals stretch on for months.
The Home Office has reiterated that deprivation remains a last-resort tool. Data showing an average of 12 deprivations per year from 2018 to 2023 underlines how few people are affected in absolute terms. Still, the consequences for those individuals are profound — affecting travel, detention, access to consular help from another country, and the right to live and work in the UK.
Clear guidance and swift court timetables will shape how fair the system feels in day-to-day practice.
What people involved should do
- People involved in active cases should seek legal advice on how the Act affects their timelines and travel plans.
- Official guidance on deprivation powers and appeal rights is available on GOV.UK: see the Home Office’s policy materials on deprivation of British citizenship at Home Office guidance on deprivation of British citizenship.
While the Act alters when citizenship can be treated as restored, it does not reduce the ability to challenge a deprivation order or the legal tests the Home Secretary must meet.
With Royal Assent 2025 recorded on 27 October and the rules in force from 28 October 2025, the Deprivation of Citizenship Orders framework now operates on the clear rule that a deprivation order remains effective until every appeal avenue is exhausted. For individuals in these cases, that means planning for a longer window before any status change takes effect if they win. For the government, it means keeping risk controls in place until the last legal word is spoken.
This Article in a Nutshell
The Deprivation of Citizenship Orders (Effect during Appeal) Act 2025, enacted with Royal Assent on 27 October 2025 and effective from 28 October 2025, closes a legal gap that previously allowed automatic reinstatement of British citizenship after a successful initial appeal. Under the Act, a deprivation order remains in force until all appeals are completed or appeal deadlines expire. The law permits continued detention or re-entry bans for those assessed as national security risks while appeals proceed, prevents tactical renunciation of other nationalities during litigation, and applies retroactively to ongoing cases. The Act does not change the grounds for deprivation, preserves rights of appeal, and aligns deprivation litigation timing with asylum and human rights practice. Officials note the measure affects a small number of cases—an average of 12 deprivations annually between 2018–2023—while closing a short window of reinstatement that risked public protection concerns.
 
					
 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		 
		