Home/Legal guides/United Kingdom
Immigration · United Kingdom

UK Student and Graduate Visas: The Study-to-Work Route Explained

BRBy Brisamo editorial·Updated June 2026·7 min read

For many people, studying in the United Kingdom is also a first step toward working there. The system is built around two connected permissions — the Student visa, which gets you onto a UK course, and the Graduate visa, which can let you stay and work for a period after you finish. Understanding how the two fit together helps you plan with confidence.

How the Student visa works

The Student visa is the main route for adults coming to the UK to study at a university or another approved institution. It is a sponsored route, which means you cannot simply enrol and apply on your own — your place must be backed by an education provider the UK government has approved.

In practice, the process usually runs in this order:

  • You receive an offer and accept a place on an eligible course.
  • The institution issues you a sponsorship reference, often called a CAS (Confirmation of Acceptance for Studies).
  • You apply for the visa using that reference, along with your supporting documents.

The visa is generally granted for the length of your course plus a short extra period. You may be able to do some part-time work alongside full-time study, but the number of hours is usually limited and the rules are strict. These work conditions change from time to time, so confirm the current limits with a qualified adviser before you take any job.

Sponsorship: the foundation of the route

Sponsorship is the heart of how the UK manages study and work migration. Only institutions holding a valid sponsor licence can bring in international students, and your permission to be in the UK is tied to that sponsor.

This matters in two ways. First, always check that the school, college or university is a licensed student sponsor before you pay any fees. Second, your status depends on staying enrolled on the course you were sponsored for. If you stop studying, change institutions, or your provider loses its licence, your immigration position can be affected. Tell your university and, where needed, the authorities promptly if your circumstances change.

Keeping your sponsorship in good standing

Sponsored students are generally expected to attend, make progress, and keep their contact details up to date. These obligations are routine for genuine students, but ignoring them can put your visa at risk.

The financial requirement

UK study applications usually involve a financial requirement — the principle that you should show you can pay for your course and support yourself without relying on public funds. The aim is to demonstrate that you have realistic means to live and study in the UK.

Broadly, you are typically asked to show:

  • Enough money for your tuition (or the first year of it, depending on the course), and
  • A set amount of living costs for a defined number of months, which often differs depending on whether you will study in London or elsewhere.

The funds usually need to have been held for a continuous period before you apply, and there are rules about acceptable evidence, whose account the money can be in, and which documents are accepted. The exact figures, the qualifying period, and any exemptions change from time to time, so treat any number you read online as approximate and confirm the current thresholds and evidence rules with a qualified adviser before you apply.

You should also budget for additional costs that sit outside the financial requirement itself, such as the application fee and the healthcare surcharge that gives access to the National Health Service. These amounts also change, so check the current position before you commit.

The Graduate visa: studying your way into work

The Graduate visa is what makes the UK a genuine study-to-work route. It is designed to allow eligible people who have successfully completed an approved course to stay in the UK for a further period to look for and do work — without needing an employer to sponsor them at that stage.

Its key features are usually:

  • You apply from inside the UK, while you still hold valid Student permission.
  • You must have completed your course, with your university confirming this to the authorities.
  • It generally allows most types of work and self-employment, giving you freedom to gain experience.
  • It is granted for a fixed length of time and cannot normally be extended.

The amount of time the Graduate visa gives, the eligibility conditions, and whether it differs for higher research degrees have changed before and may change again, so verify the current rules when you plan. Because it does not lead directly to settlement on its own, many people use this period to find an employer who will sponsor them on a longer-term work route before it expires.

Thinking ahead

The Graduate visa is best treated as a bridge, not a destination. If your goal is to build a long-term life in the UK, it usually helps to use the time to secure sponsored employment or another qualifying route well before your permission runs out, rather than leaving it to the final weeks.

A few practical points

Small details cause most problems. Keep your passport valid, apply before your current visa expires, and try not to let a gap open up in your permission. Be honest and consistent across your documents, and keep copies of everything you submit. If anything about your course or personal situation changes, raise it early rather than hoping it will not matter.

Where to get reliable help

This guide gives general information only and is not legal advice for your situation. Immigration rules in the United Kingdom are detailed and they change regularly, so the safest step is to speak with a qualified immigration lawyer or a properly regulated adviser who can look at your specific circumstances, confirm the current requirements and figures, and help you move from study to work with as little risk as possible.

BR
Brisamo editorial
General information, not legal advice

This guide is general information. For advice on your situation, get matched with a firm — free.

Find an immigration lawyer →
Get matched with a lawyer — free