One of the Committee's strongest conclusions is that the Government should abandon proposals to make most migrants wait ten years before becoming eligible for indefinite leave to remain.
The Committee also rejects proposals that would extend qualifying periods even further for some groups, including up to 15 years for certain lower-skilled workers and 20 years for refugees on the proposed core protection route.
According to the Committee, longer settlement timelines would:
Instead, the Committee suggests retaining the existing five-year route to settlement and, if ministers wish to limit access to public funds, consider maintaining No Recourse to Public Funds for a longer period rather than delaying settlement itself.
Perhaps the most significant finding for existing visa holders is the Committee's criticism of retrospective implementation.
Although the Government has not yet confirmed whether people already living in the UK on a five-year route could be required to wait ten years before qualifying for settlement, The Committee concludes that such an approach would be "manifestly unfair" and potentially unlawful because many migrants have made important decisions about their careers, housing and family life based on the current Immigration Rules.
It also warns that changing the rules mid-way through a migrant's journey could damage the UK's international reputation and make it less attractive to highly skilled workers.
The Committee therefore recommends that any future changes should apply only to new entrants and not to those already on a qualifying route.
The Committee is not opposed to the principle of earning settlement. It accepts that settlement should continue to depend on factors such as English language ability, good character and financial contribution.
However, it concludes that many elements of the Government's proposed model remain unclear and lack an evidence base.
Among its recommendations, the Committee says the Government should:
The Committee also calls for greater protection for vulnerable applicants, including those on maternity leave, people with disabilities and unpaid carers.
A recurring theme throughout the report is that integration should be encouraged through opportunity rather than longer periods of temporary immigration status.
The Committee recommends:
The report is also highly critical of the complexity of UK immigration law.
The Committee describes the current UK immigration system as a "farrago" of legislation and guidance that creates confusion, delay and poor decision-making.
It recommends urgent simplification of both immigration legislation and the Immigration Rules, particularly if further settlement reforms are introduced.
The Committee also raises concerns about the increasing cost of immigration applications, suggesting that fees should be capped at no more than 150% of administrative costs and that surplus income should be reinvested into improving the immigration system and expanding fee waiver schemes.
Another significant theme is whether the Home Office has sufficient resources to implement such extensive reforms.
The Committee notes that the department is already managing significant operational pressures and warns that introducing more frequent extension applications and increasingly complex settlement requirements would substantially increase workloads.
It recommends additional recruitment, improved staffing levels and full impact assessments before any major reforms are introduced.
The report is also highly critical of the quality of migration data available to Government. It says current statistics focus largely on people entering the UK while providing little information about what happens afterwards, making it difficult to assess the impact of migration or develop evidence-based policy.
The Committee calls for improved data sharing across Government, the publication of exit check statistics and much stronger evidence before major changes to settlement policy are introduced.
The Government must formally respond to the Committee's report within two months.
However, ministers have yet to publish their final response to the Earned Settlement consultation or the accompanying Impact Assessment. With continued political uncertainty and no confirmed timetable for implementation, significant questions remain about the future direction of settlement reform.
Although the Committee's recommendations are not legally binding, they represent a substantial challenge to the Government's current proposals. Its clear opposition to extending settlement routes and applying changes retrospectively is likely to influence parliamentary scrutiny and may ultimately shape the final policy.
For now, nothing has changed. The current five-year routes to settlement remain in place and there is no confirmed implementation date for any new settlement framework.
However, the report reinforces concerns already raised by employers, representative bodies and immigration practitioners about the practical consequences of the proposed reforms. Until the Government publishes its final policy, organisations sponsoring overseas workers should continue to monitor developments closely and be prepared for further announcements later this year.
The House of Lords Committee has recommended against extending the standard settlement route from five to ten years. However, the Government has not yet confirmed its final decision.
The Committee strongly recommends that reforms should not apply retrospectively to migrants already on a pathway to settlement.
The Earned Settlement model is a proposed system where migrants qualify for settlement based on criteria such as English language ability, economic contribution and compliance with immigration rules.
Employers should continue following current rules while monitoring developments and preparing for potential policy changes.