Graduate Route 2027 — what changes and who it affects
Graduate Route is a post-study visa that lets you work in the UK 2 years after a Bachelor's/Master's (3 years for a PhD) without a sponsor. From 1 January 2027 the period is reduced from 2 years to 18 months for Bachelor's/Master's. PhD stays at 3 years. The change affects those who finish their course after 1 January 2027.
What is the Graduate Route
Graduate Route (introduced in July 2021) is an unsponsored work visa for graduates of UK universities. After you get your degree you apply for this visa and can stay in the UK 2 years (Bachelor's/Master's) or 3 years (PhD), working in any job for any employer — no sponsor needed.
- No job offer needed when you apply — you can apply right after your degree
- No sponsor needed — your employer does not need a sponsor licence
- Any job — full-time, part-time, freelance, self-employed, starting a business
- Cannot be extended — after 2 years (or 18 months from 2027) you must switch to another visa or leave
- Does not count towards ILR — years on the Graduate Route do not directly count towards the 5 years for permanent residence
Why this visa existed: The UK wanted to attract international students by giving them time to find a sponsored job (Skilled Worker) after their degree. Without the Graduate Route many graduates would have to find a sponsor while still studying, which is almost impossible.
What changes from 1 January 2027
In May 2025 the UK government published an Immigration White Paper that announced a series of changes to the student and post-study system. The main change for the Graduate Route is the reduction of the period.
| Parameter | Before 2027 | From 1 January 2027 |
|---|---|---|
| Bachelor's graduate | 2 years | 18 months |
| Master's graduate | 2 years | 18 months |
| PhD graduate | 3 years | 3 years (unchanged) |
| Sponsor needed? | No | No |
| Job offer needed? | No | No |
Exact implementation dates as of April 2026 are still being confirmed. The White Paper said "during 2026/27", the exact date will be confirmed closer to the end of 2026. Follow the news from UKVI and gov.uk/government/publications/restoring-control-over-the-immigration-system.
Why the reduction: The government explained it as "focusing on the most productive migrants" — they said 2 years is too long, and in 18 months those who have really found a job should be able to switch to Skilled Worker. Criticism: 18 months is too short, especially for industries with a long recruitment cycle (graphics, academia, creative industries).
Who the reduction affects
This is a very important question for those applying in 2026 for courses in 2026/27.
- If you finish your course BEFORE 1 January 2027 — the old rules apply to you (2 years). Example: a 1-year Master's starting in September 2025, finishing in September 2026 — old rules.
- If you finish your course AFTER 1 January 2027 — the new rules apply to you (18 months). This includes almost everyone starting a Bachelor's in September 2026 (finishes in 2029) and most Master's starting in 2026.
- PhD candidates — unchanged, still 3 years regardless of when they finish.
What this means for applying in 2026: if you plan a Bachelor's starting September 2026, you get the Graduate Route under the new rules — 18 months after your degree. Plan your career with this in mind.
Requirements for the Graduate Route
- Finished a course at a UK university with a track record ("international student" with a Student visa), at Bachelor's, Master's or PhD level
- The university must be on the list of Track Record sponsors — more than 180 institutions, almost all normal universities are included
- You must be in the UK when you apply
- The course must be fully completed — the university must tell UKVI that you have successfully finished (this is an automatic process)
- Apply before your Student visa expires — usually you have 4-6 months after the end date of your course
- NOT required: job offer, sponsor, minimum salary, IELTS again
How to apply
- Wait for confirmation from your university that you have successfully completed the course. The university itself tells UKVI — this step is called "course completion notification". Without it you cannot apply.
- Go to gov.uk/graduate-visa and start the online application. You can only apply from inside the UK — if you go home after your degree you cannot apply.
- Fill in the form — your passport details, BRP/eVisa, CAS number from your old Student visa, academic details.
- Pay the fee and IHS — see the section below.
- Biometrics — usually through the UK Immigration: ID Check app, a selfie and documents. Sometimes you need to visit a Service Centre.
- Wait for a decision — usually 8 weeks, sometimes faster. You can work full-time from the moment you apply (Section 3C leave protection).
Cost in 2026
- Application fee: £880
- Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS): £1,035 per year × visa length. For 2 years — £2,070. For 18 months (from 2027) — £1,553. Paid as one lump sum when you apply
- Biometrics: free through the app, ~£200 if you need to visit a Service Centre
- Total for a 2-year visa: ~£2,950
- Total for an 18-month visa (from 2027): ~£2,433
IHS rates go up from time to time — the numbers above are correct as of April 2026, check gov.uk before you apply.
Working on the Graduate Route
The main advantage — there are no restrictions. You can:
- Full-time for any employer — without a sponsor licence
- Several jobs at the same time — OK
- Self-employed / freelance — OK (unlike the Student visa)
- Start a business — OK, but not at the Innovator visa level
- Internship / volunteering — OK
- Work in any industry — no minimum salary, no minimum skill level
What you cannot do:
- Work as a professional sportsperson — you need a separate visa
- Receive public funds (Universal Credit, Housing Benefit, etc.)
- Bring dependants who were not already on your Student visa
Reality in 2026: most graduates start in entry-level jobs (graduate schemes, junior roles) with a salary of £22-32k. This is normal — the main goal of the Graduate Route is not "find your dream job", but "get UK work experience and switch to Skilled Worker before the visa expires".
Switching to Skilled Worker
The main scenario: during the Graduate Route find an employer who will sponsor you for a Skilled Worker visa. This gives you a long-term path to ILR.
Requirements for Skilled Worker (as of April 2026):
- Sponsor licence for the employer — this is key
- Minimum salary: £38,700/year or the going rate for the profession (whichever is higher). Reduced for new entrants and shortage occupations
- Skill level RQF 6+ (roughly Bachelor's level for the profession)
- English B1+ (usually confirmed by a UK university degree — IELTS not needed)
- CoS (Certificate of Sponsorship) from the employer
If you get a Skilled Worker job before your Graduate Route expires, you switch inside the UK without leaving. Time on the Graduate Route does NOT count towards the 5 years for ILR — the count starts from the moment you start the Skilled Worker visa.
Minimum salary £38,700 — this is a serious bar for entry-level. For graduates there is a new entrant discount (~30%, down to £30,960), but only in the first 4 years after your degree. This works in your favour — but check the specific going rates for your profession.
Path to ILR (Permanent Residence)
Standard path:
- Student visa (3-4 years Bachelor's or 1 year Master's) — does NOT count towards ILR
- Graduate Route (2 years or 18 months from 2027) — does NOT count towards ILR
- Skilled Worker (5 years continuously) — THESE years count towards ILR
- Apply for ILR — usually after 5 years on Skilled Worker
- British citizenship — 1 year after ILR (usually)
Realistic timeline for a Bachelor's in 2026:
| Year | Status | What happens |
|---|---|---|
| 2026–2029 | Student visa | 3 years Bachelor's |
| 2029–2030.5 | Graduate Route | 18 months finding a sponsored job |
| 2030.5–2035.5 | Skilled Worker | 5 years continuous work |
| 2035.5 | ILR | Apply for permanent residence |
| 2036.5 | Citizenship | Apply for British citizenship |
Total: from starting a Bachelor's to ILR — about 9.5 years. To a passport — 10.5 years. This is the general path for those going "study → work → ILR" without a family route or Global Talent.
Strategy for students applying in 2026
If you are applying in 2026 and fall under the new 18 months — here is what is important to consider:
- Start looking for a job while you are still studying. Do not wait for your degree. UK graduate schemes accept applications in September-November of your final year. Spring Weeks for first-years (Goldman, JPMorgan, Linklaters) are a real entry point.
- STEM / technical subjects switch to Skilled Worker more easily — many employers have a sponsor licence, salary thresholds are lower.
- Humanities / creative subjects — more difficult. Fewer sponsor licence holders, lower average salaries. You definitely need a Plan B: family / Global Talent / return home.
- Internships are essential. 18 months without UK work experience — it is almost impossible to convert to Skilled Worker. With 1-2 internships it is realistic.
- Networking is more important than your CV. 60-70% of all graduate jobs in the UK are found through personal connections. LinkedIn, alumni events, career fairs.
- Alternatives to Skilled Worker: Global Talent (for exceptional people + endorsement), High Potential Individual (for graduates of the top 50 world universities), Innovator Founder (for a business with investment).
Frequently asked questions
When exactly does the Graduate Route reduction come into force?
The White Paper said "during 2026/27". The most likely date is 1 January 2027, but final confirmation will come closer to the end of 2026 in a Statement of Changes to Immigration Rules. Follow gov.uk.
If I finish my Bachelor's in June 2027 — old or new rules?
New rules (18 months). The deciding date is when you finish your course, not when you apply for the Graduate Route. If you finish after the cut-off date, the new rules apply.
Can I apply for the Graduate Route from outside the UK?
No. You can only apply from inside the UK and only while your Student visa is still valid. If you go home after your degree you can no longer get the Graduate Route.
Do the years on the Graduate Route count towards the 5 years for ILR?
No, they do not count for the standard Long Residence path through Skilled Worker. They only count in the 10-year Long Residence path if you have been continuously legally resident in the UK for 10 years.
Can I extend the Graduate Route after it expires?
No. It is a one-time visa. You must either switch (Skilled Worker, Global Talent, family) or leave.
What if I cannot find a job in 18 months?
You leave the UK or switch to another visa (visitor, family, study again). Overstaying is a serious violation, it damages future visas and closes the path to ILR.
Is there a minimum salary on the Graduate Route?
No. You can work any job with any salary (even minimum wage). The minimum salary only starts when you switch to Skilled Worker.
Can I study again while on the Graduate Route?
You can start a new course, but it does not extend the Graduate Route. To study formally and have all student rights you need to switch back to a Student visa.