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Migrants will be required to pass A Level standard of English

Education: Secondary / Wed 15th Oct 2025 at 09:12am

MIGRANTS will be required to pass tough new English language requirements under a law introduced in Parliament today (14 October), as the government continues to replace Britain’s failed immigration system with one that is controlled, selective and fair.

Immigrants applying through certain legal routes must meet an A level equivalent standard in speaking, listening, reading and writing.

Credit: A Level: Editor’s Own

The Secure English Language Test must be conducted with a Home Office-approved provider, and the results will then be verified as part of the visa application process.

Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, said:

This country has always welcomed those who come to this country and contribute.

But it is unacceptable for migrants to come here without learning our language, unable to contribute to our national life.

If you come to this country, you must learn our language and play your part.

Laid in changes before Parliament this week, the measures form part of the government’s flagship immigration white paper and Plan for Change to deliver on the priorities of working people for tighter control of who comes to this country while continuing to attract top global talent.

The time for international students to find a graduate-level job after completing their studies will also be cut to 18 months from the current two years.

The immigration skills charge (ISC), which is paid by employers sponsoring skilled foreign workers and reinvested in training the domestic workforce, is being raised by 32%.

The ISC increase is the first since 2017 and will be used to boost investment in British workers and reduce reliance on overseas recruitment. The Parliamentary process to increase the charge will begin later this week.

To ensure graduates contribute effectively to the economy, the maximum post-study stay will be reduced to 18 months from the current 2 years for most from 1 January 2027. It comes after data clearly showed that many holders had not transitioned into graduate-level employment as intended.

Finance requirements for student visas will also be increased for the 2025 to 2026 academic year, meaning foreign students will have to demonstrate they have sufficient funds to support themselves.

A series of changes to position the UK as a global leader in attracting highly skilled talent, outlined in the immigration white paper, and aligned with the UK’s industrial strategy, are also being made.

Changes include:

Expansion of the High Potential Individual (HPI) route to graduates from the top 100 international universities, with a cap of 8,000 applications per year. The number of people coming to the UK through the HPI route is expected to double from 2,000 to 4,000, giving graduates from the world’s best universities the chance to base their careers in the UK.

The world’s most talented entrepreneurs studying in the UK will also be able to seamlessly establish innovative business ventures in the UK after concluding their studies, while transitioning from a student visa to the Innovator Founder route.

Enhancements to the Global Talent route, including an expanded list of prestigious prizes and changes to expand some of the evidential requirements of achievement and contribution for architects.

The government aims to double the number of highly skilled people coming to the UK on our high skilled routes, including the best researchers, designers, and creatives working in film and TV to ensure continued competitiveness in growth sectors. Further changes, including to the Global Talent route, will be made in 2026.

The immigration white paper forms part of the Plan for Change to reform our immigration system, with further measures on asylum and border security to be announced later this autumn.

In further changes, effective from 3pm today, all nationals of Botswana will now be required to obtain a visa before travelling to the UK, including for short visits.

This decision comes in response to a high number of Botswana nationals arriving since 2022 as visitors and subsequently claiming asylum, which is a misuse of the UK’s immigration system.

21 Comments for Migrants will be required to pass A Level standard of English:

David Forman
2025-10-15 09:27:19

I wonder what the percentage is of Harlow citizens that have an A-level in English? Let's hope Spain never requires an A-level in Spanish to live there, because then we will have an influx of criminals crossing the Channel.

Stu
2025-10-15 10:11:23

These days if you say you're English you'll be arrested and you'll be thrown in jail.

AB
2025-10-15 10:40:38

This should apply to the local population before they're allowed to vote.

Max
2025-10-15 10:42:21

David- good one lol ,agree in 100% with you

Emily Pankhurst
2025-10-15 11:17:20

Majority of our British born citizens cannot speak English let alone pass an A level

Philip Steel
2025-10-15 12:39:08

I saw this on the BBC yesterday - The headline read 'Migrants will need A-level standard English to work in UK' and the very next line said 'Some migrants coming to the UK will need to speak English to an A-level standard under tougher new rules set to be introduced by the government.' - So no need to worry, you'll still be able to sit at home and order your food to be delivered by a poorly paid, poorly educated migrant - Only the highly skilled will need to speak English!

Tim smith
2025-10-15 13:04:15

All smoke and mirrors, this only applies to students and skilled workers of which most will speak decent English, what about the family members that they bring whose English is terrible, a lot of these people end up on min wage, should apply to them as well, another half baked plan from Labour

Ted
2025-10-15 17:35:54

Dave Foreman. I don't have an A level in English , but like many people I don't need one because I am English. So whats the big deal about your post. Are you suggesting we are all thick. Plus I did not need to Google to send this reply , as you continuously do.

English 4 the English
2025-10-15 21:52:33

Ted you seem to struggle with being English. There is no need to put a space before a comma. The word you were looking for at the end is "constantly". You also write a reply before you send it. In this context, the emphasis is on composing it.

Ted
2025-10-16 06:00:10

English for the English. This lesson for me comes from someone who puts a 4 instead of the word for. 🫣🤣🤣🤣

Ted
2025-10-16 06:42:54

Anyway. , I aint bovvered. , I , got me point across.

Stuart G
2025-10-16 09:14:20

I wonder if this requirement will be levied on English migrants in Spain. Or indeed English people in England, given how illiterate a lot of the commentators are!

Deb Bee
2025-10-16 10:02:20

If you move to any country you should be, or become, fluent in their native language, both written and spoken. That goes for anyone. I'm not sure A Level is necessary though, that seems overkill. But I do think the bigger issue is dealing with why there is a need for mass immigration to fill these jobs when unemployment is so high. It seems large numbers of low skilled jobs are now done by people from outside the UK. How is this happening? What is the future for our young people? Why aren't they doing these jobs? is it a problem with skill sets, accessing to training, wages being too low to live on? I'm sure it's not a case of all young people not wanting to work. It's depressing.

Jerry Anderson
2025-10-16 11:03:36

English immigrants rarely bother to learn

David Forman
2025-10-16 11:10:09

Deb Bee, migrant labour has been a feature of Britain since the canals were dug from 1745 onwards. A Construction News article on the book 'The Men Who Built Britain says: "A witness to an emigration committee of 1827 said that, of any work done on a drain, canal or road, up to 90 men out of a 100 could be expected to be Irish. Little had changed a century later. An inter-war government committee, set up to investigate allegations that Irish immigrants were a burden on the over-stretched social welfare system, reported that most Irish immigrants rejected state benefits in favour of navvying or other heavy labouring work." This rather undermines the nonsense Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood spouts as migrants today are no different. See article at https://www.constructionnews.co.uk/archive/the-men-who-built-britains-canals-and-railways-by-hand-18-10-2001/

Ted
2025-10-16 15:19:46

Deb Bee . Laziness, and enough benefits to live on.

Dan
2025-10-16 15:59:04

Yeah Ted - Take away their 'Triple Lock' and that Winter Fuel Allowance nonsense - You're so right, we're too soft on them - Bring back workhouses for the elderly who haven't saved for their retirement. No excuses, they had long enough to plan.

Ted
2025-10-16 16:11:04

Your find most oap,s have paid National insurance and tax all their lives. Many years ago there was no benefits so oap,s of today deserve what they get. There is lots of jobs available, and I know of people fit and healthy who cannot be bothered to get.out of their pits.

Ted
2025-10-16 16:12:43

So you tell me Dan why the youth of today who have put nothing in get benefits.

dan
2025-10-16 17:08:59

I think it’s intergenerational Ted - I did some work on estates in the North, where there were 3 generations living in the same street and none had ever had a job. I guess if you see your grandparents and they’ve got to retirement and never managed to move out of their council house and are on a state pension, but have a car and can afford holidays, you might think, I’m going to have some of that. Harlow proves it - Lots of older people in council houses and their kids with no aspiration. It’s years and years of being too soft.

Ronald McRonald
2025-10-20 05:23:03

Nobody should be allowed in this country illegally,if you come here legally and contribute that's a good thing,it's no argument to say British people are not intelligent enough that's the fault of the education system,. a differant issue.

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