(UNITED KINGDOM) The UK Home Office will cut the Graduate visa post-study route from two years to 18 months for most international students from January 1, 2027. This change reshapes the plans of thousands finishing bachelor’s and master’s degrees and applies to applications made on or after that date. Those who apply by December 31, 2026 will still receive the current two-year grant. PhD graduates are not affected and will continue to receive three years under the same route.
Why the change was made
Officials said the move follows internal data showing many Graduate visa holders were not moving into graduate-level roles during the two-year window. By reducing the allowance to 18 months, ministers expect more timely switches into the Skilled Worker route, which requires employer sponsorship and a role that meets salary and skill thresholds.

- According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the change targets the point when many new graduates weigh permanent job offers against extended job searches or lower-skilled work.
- The Home Office framed the policy as a way to manage migration levels without shutting out high-potential talent.
Universities and business groups are assessing how the timing could affect recruitment, particularly for students from India and other large source countries.
Who is affected and key dates
- Students who complete degrees and apply before December 31, 2026: eligible for two years.
- Students who apply from January 1, 2027: eligible for 18 months, if they meet requirements.
- Applies to most bachelor’s and master’s graduates.
- Doctoral (PhD) graduates: remain on the three-year post-study grant.
The rule draws a clear line between those already in the pipeline and those entering later.
Current Graduate visa rules (unchanged except for duration)
Applicants must:
– Hold a valid Student visa.
– Be inside the UK when applying.
– Have completed an eligible UK degree.
– Have their education provider confirm course completion to the Home Office before a decision is made.
Other characteristics of the route:
– Does not require sponsorship.
– Does not set a minimum salary.
– Cannot be extended beyond the original grant.
– Graduates can switch to other visa types (most commonly the Skilled Worker route) if they secure a qualifying job.
Practical impact
Graduates will face a tighter clock to secure a skilled, sponsored role. While 18 months is still a substantial period, the cut from two years will be felt most by:
– Those in sectors with slower hiring cycles (e.g., certain public-sector or academic roles).
– Candidates who need extra time to meet skill or salary thresholds.
– Employers that recruit on annual cycles may move faster on sponsorship decisions, especially in fields like tech, engineering, and health care.
Universities are likely to monitor effects on international recruitment for the 2026–27 intake and beyond. For many Indian students, the two-year length has been a key factor in choosing the UK; the reduction may prompt some to:
– Apply earlier to secure the longer grant.
– Consider other countries offering longer post-study windows.
VisaVerge.com reports that students nearing graduation in 2026 will weigh submission dates carefully to avoid falling into the shorter post-2027 allowance.
Context within wider migration reforms
The timing fits into broader reforms the government unveiled in 2025, including:
– Raising English language requirements for work visas from January 2026.
Together, these steps aim to steer more graduates into skilled work sooner while curbing routes that allow prolonged stays without sponsorship.
- Supporters: argue it will focus the route on genuine graduate-level outcomes.
- Critics: warn that squeezing the timeline could limit social mobility for international students who need more time to network, complete internships, or navigate regional job markets.
What applicants must know and action points
- Submit by December 31, 2026 to keep the two-year grant.
- For those finishing later, the 18-month period will set the pace for job searches and relocation decisions.
- No extension option on the Graduate visa; once granted, the end date is fixed.
- Graduates who cannot switch into Skilled Worker or other eligible visas by the end of their grant must leave the UK or risk falling out of status.
That certainty is intended to create a sharper transition into sponsored work.
Support and adjustments
Even with the change, the UK remains a major study destination, and the Graduate visa still offers a bridge from campus to career. The policy continues to welcome PhD graduates with three years — a recognition of longer horizons in research, academia, and advanced industry roles.
- Career services, alumni networks, and international student offices are expected to:
- Adjust support.
- Urge earlier job-hunting.
- Encourage closer contact with employers that hold sponsor licences.
Official guidance
Official guidance on the route, including eligibility, application steps, and fees, is available on the UK government website at Graduate visa (GOV.UK). That page also links to details on switching to the Skilled Worker route and other options.
While the Home Office has not signaled further cuts to the Graduate visa beyond the 18 months change, officials have tied the move to ongoing efforts to balance the UK’s need for skilled workers with public pressure to reduce overall migration. The next admission cycles will show how students and employers respond.
This Article in a Nutshell
The UK will shorten the Graduate visa for most bachelor’s and master’s graduates from two years to 18 months from January 1, 2027; applications filed by December 31, 2026 keep two years. PhD holders remain on a three-year grant. The Home Office cites internal data showing many graduates did not reach graduate-level roles within two years and expects the change to prompt quicker moves into the Skilled Worker route. Universities, employers and students must adjust recruitment, career support and application timing.