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Last updated: 11 May 2026
The UK asylum rule changes introduced on 2 March 2026 represent the most significant shift in protection policy since the Nationality and Borders Act 2022. Through a Statement of Changes to the Immigration Rules laid on 5 March 2026 and the accompanying policy paper Restoring Order and Control, the Home Office replaced the previous five-year refugee leave framework with a new 30-month “core protection” model subject to periodic safe-return reviews. The changes also convert the statutory duty to provide asylum support into a discretionary power (planned from June 2026) and amend the rules governing dependent children and applicants under Appendix VDA (Victims of Domestic Abuse).
For asylum seekers in the UK, immigration lawyers and NGO advisers, the practical consequences are immediate: evidence strategies must be recalibrated, litigation timelines adjusted, and new challenge routes mapped out.
The March 2026 UK asylum rule changes restructure protection claims around three central pillars. Understanding them quickly is essential for anyone with a pending or prospective claim.
Key changes at a glance:
Three immediate actions for claimants and lawyers:
The immigration rules 2026 amendments derive from several interlocking instruments published between 2 and 5 March 2026. Understanding which instrument governs which change is critical for drafting grounds of appeal or judicial review.
The principal vehicles are:
The core protection and safe-return review provisions apply to all new grants of protection from the date of the Statement of Changes. The asylum support duty-to-power conversion is subject to a separate commencement order, with 2 June 2026 confirmed as the planned implementation date.
Under the previous framework, a person recognised as a refugee under the 1951 Convention received five years’ limited leave to remain, after which they could apply for ILR. The March 2026 changes replace this with a 30-month grant of “core protection” leave.
At the point of renewal, roughly 28 months into the initial grant, to allow processing time, the Home Office will conduct a safe-return review. This review assesses whether conditions in the claimant’s country of origin have changed sufficiently to allow safe return. If the review concludes that return is not yet safe, a further 30-month grant is issued. If it concludes that return is safe, the claimant’s leave may not be renewed, and removal directions can follow.
As the Migration Observatory at Oxford has noted, this mechanism introduces a rolling uncertainty into the refugee’s status that has no precedent in the UK’s post-war protection system. Industry observers expect that the practical effect will be a sharp increase in renewal-stage disputes, with many claimants needing legal representation at each 30-month interval. The ILR pathway is now governed by the Restoring Order and Control policy paper’s proposed 20-year qualifying period, though this element may require further primary or secondary legislation to implement fully.
One of the most operationally significant UK asylum changes concerns asylum support. Currently, the Home Office has a statutory duty under the Immigration and Asylum Act 1999 to provide accommodation and financial support to destitute asylum seekers. From 2 June 2026, this duty is planned to become a discretionary power.
The House of Commons Library has highlighted that this conversion could leave claimants without a legally enforceable right to support, increasing the risk of destitution, particularly for those awaiting renewal under the new 30-month cycle. Right to Remain has advised that claimants should secure independent accommodation or community support arrangements as a precaution, and that lawyers should consider judicial review where support is refused without adequate reasoning.
The Statement of Changes also amends the criteria for VDA dependent children and other dependants. Key adjustments include:
The 2026 asylum rules do not alter the legal definition of a refugee under the 1951 Convention, nor do they change the standard of proof (a “reasonable degree of likelihood” of persecution). However, the structural shift to temporary core protection has several knock-on effects that reshape how protection claims in the UK are prepared and argued.
For practitioners, the following evidence-bundle priorities emerge:
Claims grounded in political opinion asylum face particular challenges under the new regime. The safe-return review means the Home Office will periodically reassess whether political conditions have improved, a particular risk for claimants from countries with fluctuating political environments.
Practitioners should now ensure that political-opinion claims include:
Early indications suggest that the First-tier Tribunal will scrutinise country guidance determinations closely at renewal hearings, making it essential that initial claims establish a strong factual record that can be built upon.
The shift to temporary leave introduces a credibility risk that practitioners must manage carefully. A claimant who is granted 30-month core protection and then presents substantially different evidence at the renewal stage may face adverse credibility findings. Consistency between the initial application, any appeal bundle and subsequent renewal submissions is therefore critical.
Vulnerable claimants, including trafficking survivors, individuals with PTSD and those with cognitive impairments, should have their vulnerability documented from the outset, with reports refreshed before each review cycle.
The March 2026 Immigration Rules changes create new procedural obligations for practitioners representing families and vulnerable individuals. Errors at this stage can be difficult to correct later.
Practitioners should distinguish between accompanied and unaccompanied children and apply the following steps:
Appendix VDA now requires corroborating evidence from at least two independent sources. Best practice for practitioners includes:
Refugees on core protection leave retain the right to apply for family reunion for a spouse or partner and children under 18. However, the practical effect of 30-month temporary leave is that family-reunion applicants must demonstrate that the sponsor’s leave is current at the point of decision. Practitioners should submit family-reunion applications promptly after the principal claimant’s grant and allow time for processing, which currently averages six to twelve months.
The introduction of 30-month core protection, combined with safe-return reviews, creates multiple decision points at which a claimant may need to challenge a Home Office decision. Practitioners must be familiar with the full range of remedies.
A refusal of protection or a decision not to renew core protection leave is appealable to the First-tier Tribunal (Immigration and Asylum Chamber). The key deadlines and tactical considerations are:
Judicial review of asylum decisions is appropriate where there is no statutory right of appeal, where the decision involves an unlawful policy application or where procedural unfairness cannot be remedied through the tribunal process. Under the new 2026 asylum rules, JR is likely to be the primary challenge route for:
JR checklist for counsel:
A “fresh claim” under paragraph 353 of the Immigration Rules allows a claimant who has been refused to submit further submissions that amount to a new claim. Under the 30-month review framework, fresh claims are particularly relevant where:
Practitioners should note that the Home Office’s obligation to consider further submissions as a fresh claim is itself amenable to judicial review if refused without adequate reasons.
Before formal proceedings, a well-drafted pre-action letter can resolve many disputes. Where challenging Home Office decisions, the letter should cite the specific rule or policy misapplied, attach key evidence and set a clear deadline for response. In practice, the Home Office frequently concedes or reconsiders at this stage, particularly where the legal error is clear and the cost of litigation is disproportionate. Settlement negotiations at the permission stage of JR, including consent orders, are also an effective tool for securing rapid outcomes.
The following table summarises the key differences between the pre- and post-March 2026 regimes. It is designed as a quick-reference tool for practitioners and advisers navigating the immigration rules 2026 changes.
| Item | Before March 2026 | After March 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Initial refugee leave | 5 years’ limited leave to remain | 30 months’ core protection leave |
| Safe-return review | Not routine; status generally maintained unless actively revoked | Mandatory review at each 30-month renewal point |
| Route to ILR (settlement) | Eligible after 5 years’ continuous leave | Potentially up to 20 years under proposed settlement pathway |
| Asylum support | Statutory duty to provide accommodation and financial support | Discretionary power (planned from 2 June 2026) |
| Dependent children | Included on principal claim with standard family evidence | Amended criteria: proof of sole responsibility or serious welfare grounds for late additions |
| Appendix VDA evidence | Single-source evidence accepted in some cases | Corroboration from at least two independent sources required |
| Unaccompanied children (UASC) | Distinct provisions with 5-year leave pathway | Distinct provisions retained, but transitional rules for age-out at 18 remain ambiguous |
Checklist 1: Claimant, evidence and immediate steps
Checklist 2: Lawyer, litigation timetable and evidence
Checklist 3: Duty solicitor / NGO, child and VDA triage
Scenario 1, Political-opinion claimant from Country X. A journalist who criticised the government of Country X arrived in the UK in January 2026 and claimed asylum. She receives a grant of 30-month core protection in April 2026. Her lawyer should immediately begin compiling a renewal evidence bundle, including updated press-freedom reports, a record of continued sur place journalism activity in the UK and a refreshed expert country report, so that when the safe-return review is initiated at approximately the 28-month mark, the evidence is ready. If Country X’s political situation fluctuates, immigration tribunal appeals grounds should be pre-drafted addressing any Home Office reliance on short-term improvements.
Scenario 2, VDA dependent child. A mother on a spousal visa with two children (aged 6 and 9) experiences domestic abuse and claims protection, relying on both Appendix VDA and asylum grounds (fear of honour-based violence on return). Under the amended rules, her lawyer must provide corroborating evidence from at least two independent sources, the police report and the GP’s documentation of injuries. The nine-year-old has lived in the UK for over seven years, so a concurrent private-life application under paragraph 276ADE(1)(iv) should be lodged. If the VDA application is refused, a fresh claim incorporating updated social-services evidence and the child’s seven-year residence is the next step, alongside an appeal to the First-tier Tribunal.
The March 2026 UK asylum rule changes demand immediate action from claimants and the professionals who advise them. Whether you are preparing an initial protection claim, facing a safe-return review or challenging a refusal, specialist legal advice is essential. Explore our Human Rights practice area for further resources, or find a UK Human Rights lawyer through our directory to connect with an experienced practitioner who can assess your case under the new rules.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Charles Burnett at Gherson Solicitors LLP, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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