The immigration squeeze: how skilled worker visa reforms are reshaping UK STEM

The UK’s science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) sectors have long depended on global talent to fuel innovation and maintain competitiveness. Recent immigration reforms, however, are creating significant barriers, threatening the country’s ability to attract and retain skilled professionals.

As a result, the UK is experiencing a significant outflow of STEM talent, largely due to the restrictive immigration policies and rising visa costs. Nearly 24% of UK STEM employers reported losing skilled workers to overseas opportunities in the past year, while 13% of STEM professionals plan to relocate abroad and 25% would consider doing so within 12 months. Additionally, 31% of professionals have been approached by international employers.

These figures are concerning to say the least! How exactly are rising Skilled Worker visa thresholds and related policy changes impacting STEM recruitment, research, and long-term growth?

Policy shifts: what’s changed?

Policy changes have exacerbated the challenges faced in the sector. Between 2024 and 2025, the UK government introduced sweeping changes to the Skilled Worker visa route, with further updates due to be implemented:

  • Salary thresholds: Increased from £26,200 to £38,700 in April 2024, then to £41,700 by July 2025.
  • Qualification level: Eligibility raised from RQF 3 (A-level) to RQF 6 (degree level).
  • Occupation lists: Over 100 medium-skill roles removed and no longer eligible for new sponsorship; the Shortage Occupation List replaced with a temporary list that bans dependants.
  • Settlement rules: Indefinite Leave to Remain wait time to be extended.
  • Language & cost: English requirement will be raised to B2 by 2026; visa and health surcharge costs surged.

While these measures aim to prioritise high-skilled, high-paid roles, they have unintended consequences for sectors where salaries and career stages vary widely.

Impact on STEM talent supply

The reforms have triggered a sharp decline in visa applications for STEM roles, which decreases by 33% in late 2024. Employers report mounting challenges:

  • Cost barriers: Sponsorship now costs £4,500–£8,400 per visa, with some institutions spending up to £100,000 annually on fees.
  • Employer retrenchment: 41% of STEM employers have stopped sponsoring visas, and, while this mainly consists of SMEs, 32% of employers say recruitment is hindered.
  • Early-career exodus: PhD graduates, postdoctoral, and junior engineers face the greatest hurdles, making the UK less attractive for emerging talent.

Competitiveness at risk

STEM sectors are vital for achieving the UK’s ambitions for net zero, digital transformation, and industrial strategy. Yet:

  • Skills shortages: Engineering and tech firms report 49% hiring difficulties, with R&D and manufacturing vacancies at 46%.
  • Brain drain: Skilled professionals are increasingly moving to countries with more flexible immigration policies.
  • Research fragility: Universities and labs note that only 10–15% of applicants are UK nationals, underscoring reliance on global talent.

Sector and government responses

Business leaders are sounding the alarm at the most senior levels. To stem the outflow and attract global expertise, they advocate for a national STEM strategy that addresses immigration barriers, invests in skills development, and creates incentives for talent retention. Failure to act could result in widening skills gaps, slowing innovation, and diminishing the UK’s position as a global leader in science and technology.

Industry bodies and research institutions are calling for urgent reform:

  • Reduce visa costs: Lower fees and surcharges to ease employer burden.
  • Expand flexible routes: Broaden Global Talent and High Potential Individual pathways.
  • Retention strategy: Develop a national STEM talent plan to prevent the UK from becoming a “training ground for talent that leaves.”

The House of Lords has warned that current immigration policy risks becoming “an act of national self-harm,” undermining the UK’s innovation capacity.

Why this matters for business

STEM roles underpin the UK economy, employing approximately 10 million people. Yet, without decisive action, the UK risks becoming a training ground for talent that ultimately benefits other economies.

The Skilled Worker visa changes were designed to tighten immigration control and raise wage standards. However, for STEM sectors, these policies have created a perfect storm of talent shortages, rising costs, and declining competitiveness. Without swift action to balance control with accessibility, the UK risks losing its edge in science and technology, at a time when global innovation leadership is more critical than ever. Investing in domestic STEM talent isn’t just a moral imperative, it’s a commercial necessity.

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