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The english language requirement uk framework changed significantly on 8 January 2026, when the Home Office raised the mandatory standard from B1 to B2 on the Common European Framework of Reference (CEFR) for first-time applications on the Skilled Worker, Scale-up and High Potential Individual routes. The March 2026 Statement of Changes confirmed staggered operational dates running through to April 2026, with a further uplift to B2 for most indefinite leave to remain (ILR) and citizenship applications taking effect on 26 March 2027. For corporate sponsors, the immediate priority is an end-to-end audit of recruitment workflows, Certificate of Sponsorship (CoS) assignment processes, offer-letter wording and evidence-retention protocols, all of which must now reflect the higher threshold.
This guide provides the practical, step-by-step compliance checklist that HR directors, global mobility managers and in-house immigration teams need to act on now.
The GOV.UK English language requirement levels page sets out the full CEFR mapping for each route and should be treated as the primary reference document for compliance teams.
Not every immigration route was affected on the same date. The table below summarises the position for the three routes most commonly used by corporate sponsors, together with the employer obligation that attaches to each.
| Route | English Standard Required | Effective Date | Employer Obligation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skilled Worker | B2 (CEFR), reading, writing, speaking, listening | 8 January 2026 | Confirm B2 evidence before assigning CoS; retain copy on sponsor file |
| Scale-up | B2 (CEFR), reading, writing, speaking, listening | 8 January 2026 | Verify B2 evidence at recruitment; include requirement in offer terms |
| High Potential Individual (HPI) | B2 (CEFR), reading, writing, speaking, listening | 8 January 2026 | Verify evidence at onboarding; apply Ecctis check for overseas degrees |
| ILR / Settlement (most work routes) | B2 (CEFR), from 26 March 2027 | 26 March 2027 | Plan transitional support for existing sponsored employees approaching settlement |
The Skilled Worker route is the most heavily used sponsor route. As detailed on the GOV.UK Skilled Worker visa: Knowledge of English page, applicants must now demonstrate B2-level English in all four skills. Sponsors should verify that evidence meets this threshold before assigning a CoS, because a refusal attributable to insufficient English may count against the sponsor’s compliance record.
Scale-up visa applicants must satisfy the same B2 standard. Because the Scale-up route does not tie the worker to a single sponsor after the initial six months, employers bear a front-loaded obligation to verify English evidence at the point of recruitment and initial CoS assignment.
HPI applicants qualify on the basis of a degree from an eligible global university. Where that degree was not taught in English, B2 evidence from a Secure English Language Test (SELT) or an Ecctis-verified qualification is now required. Sponsors recruiting HPI holders should confirm the language of instruction before onboarding.
The Home Office recognises several categories of evidence. The following table lists the principal english tests accepted for uk visas at B2 level, together with their CEFR equivalences and key notes for sponsors.
| Test Provider / Evidence Route | Test Name | CEFR Level | Typical IELTS Equivalence | Notes for Sponsors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trinity College London | ISE II (SELT) | B2 | 5.5–6.5 | UKVI-approved SELT; test result valid for two years from date of award |
| IELTS (UKVI SELT) | IELTS for UKVI (Academic or General Training) | B2 (minimum 5.5 in each component) | 5.5–6.5 | Must be the UKVI SELT version taken at an approved centre |
| Pearson | PTE Academic UKVI | B2 | 5.5–6.5 equivalent | UKVI-approved version only; check component score mapping |
| LanguageCert | International ESOL SELT B2 Communicator | B2 | 5.5–6.5 equivalent | UKVI-approved SELT; online or centre-based delivery |
| Degree taught in English | N/A, documentary evidence | B2 (or above) | N/A | Overseas degrees require Ecctis confirmation of language of instruction |
| GCSE / A-level or equivalent | English Language (Grade C / 4 or above) | B2 (or above) | N/A | UK qualifications; verify certificate authenticity |
| Nationals of majority English-speaking countries | N/A, nationality exemption | Exempt | N/A | Full list on GOV.UK; verify passport or travel document |
Sources: GOV.UK, Prove your knowledge of English; Trinity College London SELT B2 ISE II.
Where a candidate relies on a degree taught or researched in English at an institution outside the UK, an Ecctis confirmation of the language of instruction is required. Sponsors should build Ecctis turnaround time (typically several weeks) into recruitment timelines and not assign a CoS until the confirmation is received.
Nationals of countries on the Home Office’s approved list, including the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and several other jurisdictions, are exempt from the testing requirement. Sponsors should verify the applicant’s nationality against the current GOV.UK list and retain a passport copy as evidence.
In some cases, applicants who proved B2 English in an earlier visa application may rely on that evidence for an extension. Certain regulated health professionals whose registration body confirms English competence may also benefit from specific exemptions. Industry observers expect further Home Office guidance on the interaction between professional registration and the B2 standard for healthcare routes in the coming months.
One of the most common questions from sponsor compliance teams concerns the boundary between internal English screening and the formal evidence UKVI requires. The short answer: internal assessments serve a useful recruitment function but cannot substitute for the documentary evidence listed above.
An employer may use its own English-language screening at the pre-offer stage to evaluate a candidate’s practical communication skills. This is a commercial decision and does not engage the Immigration Rules. The internal assessment helps shortlisting but has no legal weight in the visa application itself.
If a sponsor assigns a CoS on the basis of an internal assessment alone, without obtaining a qualifying SELT certificate, degree-based evidence or nationality exemption, the resulting visa refusal is attributable to sponsor error. Repeated refusals may trigger a Home Office compliance visit or downgrade of the sponsor licence. The GOV.UK Skilled Worker guidance makes clear that right to work english evidence for visa purposes must come from an accepted category.
To manage this boundary cleanly, offer letters should include a conditional clause. The following sample wording can be adapted to local HR templates:
“This offer is conditional upon the successful candidate providing, prior to CoS assignment, documentary evidence of English language competence at CEFR B2 level in all four skills (reading, writing, speaking and listening) through an accepted Secure English Language Test, a qualifying degree taught in English, or confirmation of nationality exemption, as specified in the current Immigration Rules.”
This wording protects the sponsor by linking the employment start to the availability of compliant evidence and creates a clear audit trail.
This employer checklist for english language compliance should be treated as the operational core of your response to the 2026 changes. Each step maps to a specific sponsor obligation or best-practice recommendation.
The 2026 changes apply to new applications made on or after 8 January 2026. Industry observers expect that existing sponsored employees who were granted leave under the previous B1 standard will not be required to re-prove English at B2 level until they make a further application, for example, an extension, a change of employer, or an ILR application.
However, three scenarios require proactive attention from sponsors:
Sponsors should identify all employees within 12 months of an ILR application date and issue a clear internal communication explaining the transition, available SELT options and any financial support the company offers for test fees.
Effective sponsor compliance for english language evidence depends on a structured retention framework. The table below sets out recommended retention periods by evidence type.
| Evidence Type | Where Stored | Retention Period | Owner | Trigger for Disposal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SELT certificate (scan / original) | Sponsor management system / secure HR file | Duration of employment + 6 years | Immigration Coordinator | 6 years after termination date |
| Ecctis degree confirmation | Sponsor management system / secure HR file | Duration of employment + 6 years | Immigration Coordinator | 6 years after termination date |
| Passport copy (nationality exemption) | Right to work file (linked to sponsor record) | Duration of employment + 2 years (statutory RTW) or + 6 years (best practice) | HR / Compliance | Whichever retention period the employer adopts |
| CoS assignment sign-off checklist | Sponsor management system | Duration of employment + 6 years | Immigration Coordinator | 6 years after termination date |
| Internal assessment results (pre-offer only) | Recruitment file | 6 months from recruitment decision | Recruiting Manager / HR | 6 months after hire/reject decision |
The six-year post-termination period reflects best-practice guidance for sponsor compliance record-keeping. Sponsors should ensure that data-protection privacy notices cover the retention of immigration evidence and that disposal is handled in line with the organisation’s data retention policy.
The following mistakes appear frequently in sponsor compliance audits. Each should be treated as a red-flag item in internal quality reviews.
| Date | Change | Applicability / Employer Action |
|---|---|---|
| 8 January 2026 | Higher B2 threshold introduced for first-time applications on Skilled Worker, Scale-up and HPI routes | Update recruitment and CoS procedures immediately; require B2 evidence at point of CoS assignment |
| January–April 2026 (staggered) | Further route-specific implementation details published in Statement of Changes | Check route-specific guidance; prioritise hires with imminent CoS assignments |
| 26 March 2027 | B2 becomes the standard for many ILR and citizenship applications | Plan transitional remediation for employees approaching ILR; advise staff to upgrade certificates where needed |
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Anna Bose at ADBH Advisory Limited, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
The 2026 changes to the english language requirement uk framework represent the most significant operational shift for sponsors in recent years. Early action protects the sponsor licence, avoids costly visa refusals and ensures a smooth recruitment pipeline for international talent.
To take immediate action:
The english language requirement uk rules will continue to evolve, particularly as the March 2027 ILR threshold approaches. Bookmark this guide and check back for updates as new Home Office guidance is published.
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