New immigration rules will still allow companies to hire lower-skilled overseas office workers on skilled-worker visas, despite government claims of a major clampdown. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said the overhaul, laid before Parliament this week, marked a "complete reset" of the UK's work migration regime - aimed at "higher skills, lower number and tighter controls".
From now on, work visas would be limited in principle to graduate-level roles, with salary thresholds rising in line with domestic wage growth, she insisted. However, a temporary exemption list - in force until the end of 2026 - reveals that a wide range of lower-paid and non-graduate jobs will still be eligible for visas. These include debt collectors, mortgage administrators, sales staff, HR officers, marketing associates, book-keepers, IT helpdesk technicians, and business support workers.

While migrants in these roles will not be able to bring dependants, and will be subject to higher visa fees and salary minimums, their inclusion has raised eyebrows among migration experts, the Financial Times reported.
The Home Office said the roles were being retained temporarily to help plug immediate labour shortages and to support the Government's industrial strategy, which focuses on eight key sectors seen as critical to long-term economic growth.
Some jobs on the list - such as lab technicians, welders and engineering staff - have in the past faced severe domestic shortages. Others, like architectural technicians, industrial climbers and administrators of clinical trials, are considered highly specialised.
However, the inclusion of broader white-collar positions will inevitably raise questions about how tight the new regime being overseen by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer really is - and how far the Government is willing to go in reducing net migration.
Brian Bell, chair of the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC), confirmed that 111 roles would be removed from the eligible list altogether.
Nevertheless, he acknowledged that ministers had rushed in the changes to avoid a "closing-down sale" effect, with employers scrambling to hire before restrictions kicked in.
He said the MAC would revisit the shortage list before it expires at the end of 2026. Any occupations included after that point would need a credible workforce plan in place to train up domestic workers.
Hospitality is likely to be hit hardest, with chefs no longer eligible for visas under the new rules.
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