students, including Indians, starting courses at British universities this month will no longer be able to bring family members on all but postgraduate research courses and courses with government-funded scholarships under tougher UK visa norms effective from Monday. The UK Home Office said the changes, first announced by former home secretary Suella Braverman in May last year, are aimed at clamping down on people using the student visa as a backdoor route to work in the UK and will see an estimated 140,000 fewer people come to the UK.
The tougher rules are geared towards cutting what Home Secretary James Cleverly dubbed as an «unreasonable practice» of overseas students bringing dependants, which official figures show have risen by more than 930 per cent since 2019.
«This government is delivering on its commitment to the British public to cut migration.
We have set out a tough plan to rapidly bring numbers down, control our borders and prevent people from manipulating our immigration system, which will come into force throughout this year,» Cleverly said in a statement.
«Today, a major part of that plan comes into effect, ending the unreasonable practice of overseas students bringing their family members to the UK.
This will see migration falling rapidly by the tens of thousands and contribute to our overall strategy to prevent 300,000 people from coming to the UK,» he said.
The UK's Office for National Statistics (ONS) found that in the year ending September 2023, as many as 152,980 visas were issued to dependants of students, a massive rise from the 14,839 in the year ending September 2019.
«Our world-leading universities rightly attract some of the brightest students from around the world to the UK. But we have