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Sponsor Licence Compliance Changes 2026: What HR Must Do

New Home Office sponsor rules tighten compliance. Learn key risks, salary changes, CoS rules and what HR teams must do now.

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The Home Office has introduced significant updates to sponsor guidance, tightening compliance expectations for licence holders.

For sponsor licence holders, compliance is no longer a reactive exercise. It must be proactive, robust, and demonstrable at all times to avoid enforcement actions.

The latest changes introduce:

  • A new eligible role test
  • Stricter salary compliance requirements
  • Increased scrutiny of Certificate of Sponsorship (CoS) accuracy
  • New worker welfare obligations

This article explains the key changes to sponsor guidance, what they mean in practice for HR teams, and the immediate steps sponsors should take to reduce compliance risk. 



A More Stringent Sponsorship Regime

The Home Office has moved away from a lenient, discretionary approach to enforcement.

Sponsor licences can now be revoked even where:

  • Breaches are unintentional

  • Sponsors fail to demonstrate effective governance or oversight.

Discretionary refusal and revocation powers have also expanded to include:

  • Risks to immigration control
  • Weak internal compliance frameworks

What this means for HR teams

  • Organisations must be able to evidence that compliance systems are not only in place, but actively working.

HR Action:

  • Conduct a full internal audit

  • Identify and address any compliance gaps immediately before Home Office intervention.




Eligible Role Test: A Fundamental Change

The new eligible role test replaces the genuine vacancy requirement and introduces a broader, more rigorous standard.

An eligible role must:

  • Exist, or be reasonably anticipated to exist, at the point of CoS assignment
  • Match the duties, responsibilities, and working hours stated on the CoS
  • Meet all route requirements, including:
    • Skill level
    • Salary thresholds
  • Comply with wider UK employment law, including:
    • National Minimum Wage
    • Working Time Regulations
  • Be appropriate to the organisation’s size, structure, and business model
  • Continue to meet these requirements throughout the sponsorship period

Key risks

  • Non-compliance triggers mandatory refusal or licence revocation
  • Increased financial scrutiny, including:
    • Salary affordability
    • Alignment with organisational turnover

HR considerations

You should be able to clearly evidence:

  • The genuineness and necessity of the role
  • How the salary is sustainably funded



Increased Digital Scrutiny and Data Matching

The Home Office now relies heavily on data-sharing across government systems, including:

  • HMRC (PAYE data)
  • Companies House (for example, change in company ownership)

UKVI compliance checks may take place:

  • Without prior notice
  • Without direct engagement from the Home Office

Implications

  • Increased focus on salary discrepancies 
  • Role legitimacy is under greater scrutiny
  • There has been a significant increase in sponsor licence revocations 



Certificate of Sponsorship (CoS): Accuracy is Critical

Core Requirements:

  • The CoS must accurately reflect:

    • Occupation code
    • Job description
    • Salary
    • Duration of employment
  • Sponsors must also:

    • Report changes within 10 working days
    • Ensure the role performed in practice matches the CoS details

Risks

  • Any mismatch between the CoS and the actual role can result in mandatory licence revocation

  • Failure to report changes is a serious compliance breach

Best practice

  • Maintain clear communication between HR, compliance teams, and line managers
  • Restrict access to the Sponsor Management System (SMS) to trained personnel only



Salary Compliance: New Rules from April 2026

The key requirement is that salary must meet the required salary thresholds in each pay period, not just on an annual basis.

Assessment periods:

  • Monthly (or less frequent pay): assessed over 3 months
  • Weekly (or more frequent pay): assessed over 12 weeks

UKVI will also assess:

  • Irregular pay patterns
  • Salary deductions and repayments
  • Alignment between working hours and pay

Importantly, the following do not count toward salary thresholds:

  • Bonuses
  • One-off payments such as golden handshakes or similar payments

Risks

Errors in salary structure or payments can lead to:

  • Licence revocation
  • Visa or settlement refusals
 


New Worker Welfare Obligations

Sponsors must now actively ensure that sponsored workers are informed of their UK employment rights.

This must include information on:

  • National Minimum Wage
  • Working Time Regulations
  • Pension auto-enrolment
  • Statutory leave and pay
  • Health and safety
  • Trade union rights
  • Equality obligations
  • Grievance procedures

HR requirement

You must implement systems to:

  • Provide this information clearly
  • Retain evidence that this information has been provided to a sponsored worker
 


Right to Work Checks: Expanded Scope

Right to work obligations have been widened. Checks must now be carried out for workers who are:

  • Employed
  • Or “engaged” by the organisation

Potential impact:

This may extend to:

  • Contractors
  • Self-employed individuals
  • Secondees

Risk

  • Engaging a worker without evidence of right to work will normally lead to revocation of sponsor licence

Recommendation

  • Adopt a consistent approach and conduct right to work checks for all workers, regardless of employment status.




Additional Compliance Requirements

Sponsors must also ensure:

  • Sponsored workers start work within 28 days of their CoS start date or visa grant

  • All required regulatory registrations or licences for the business are in place

  • Any future re-application after revocation is supported by compelling evidence of improved compliance




Enforcement Trends: A Clear Warning

Recent data highlights the scale of enforcement activity:

  • Over 3,100 sponsor licences were revoked in 2025
  • A sharp increase was recorded in late 2025
  • High-risk sectors include:
    • Social care
    • Hospitality
    • Retail
    • Construction

Common compliance failures include:

  • Underpayment of salary
  • Poor record-keeping
  • Failure to meet reporting duties

Key takeaway

  • The Home Office is increasingly relying on data-led enforcement, rather than traditional site visits.




What HR Teams Should Do Now

Organisations should act immediately to strengthen compliance.

Immediate priority actions:

  • Audit internal policies and processes to ensure they are practical and effective
  • Review salary structures and ensure sustainability by aligning pay with financial position
  • Audit sponsored roles against CoS records
  • Strengthen reporting procedures to meet 10-day reporting deadlines
  • Ensure document retention complies with Appendix D
  • Train HR teams, compliance staff, and hiring managers



Final Takeaway

The updated sponsor guidance signals a move to strict, zero-tolerance and data-driven enforcement.

Maintaining a sponsor licence now depends on:

  • Strong internal controls
  • Accurate and up-to-date records
  • Proactive compliance management

Even minor errors can now have serious consequences. Early, compliance-focused action is essential.

 



How Paragon Law Can Help

Paragon Law supports employers with:

  • Sponsor licence compliance audits
  • Ongoing compliance management
  • Training for HR and key personnel
  • Support during UKVI audits and enforcement action

If you have any questions or would like to discuss your compliance position or prepare for a potential UKVI audit, please get in touch with our team.

Contact Us

 

 

🛑 The law applicable in this article is correct as of 17 April 2026. Immigration rules frequently change, and the information here may not reflect the latest legal position. For advice tailored to your specific circumstances, please contact us to arrange a consultation with our legal team.

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