When is a Skilled Worker visa curtailed? A sponsored worker’s Skilled Worker visa may be cancelled (“curtailed”) by the Home Office where: the individual is dismissed or resigns and sponsorship ends; the sponsor’s licence is revoked or surrendered; or other cancellation grounds apply (for example criminality, deception or breach of conditions). Curtailment does not happen […]
A sponsored worker’s Skilled Worker visa may be cancelled (“curtailed”) by the Home Office where:
Curtailment does not happen automatically when employment ends. A worker’s visa is only curtailed once the Home Office issues a formal curtailment decision.
Where curtailment is not due to the worker’s fault (for example, dismissal or sponsor licence loss), the Home Office will usually shorten the individual’s permission to stay to 60 days, unless the visa would otherwise expire sooner.
The curtailment decision should set out:
During the 60-day grace period, the individual may:
They must not work during this period if they no longer have valid sponsorship, including for the former sponsor or by way of supplementary employment.
By the end of the grace period, the individual must either:
The 60-day grace period starts when the Home Office issues and serves the curtailment decision, not when employment or sponsorship ends.
This distinction is critical.
A curtailment decision may be served by the Home Office to:
The Home Office may contact the former or current sponsor to request the individual’s contact details.
It is the individual’s responsibility to ensure that their contact details are kept up to date in their UKVI account.
Once a curtailment decision is considered served (including service “on file”), the 60-day grace period begins even if the individual does not actually receive or read the notice.
It is possible for an individual not to receive a curtailment decision for a number of reasons, including:
Failure to receive a curtailment notice does not, by itself, mean the individual has continuing lawful status.
If the Home Office has issued a curtailment decision and validly served it (including “on file”), then the grace period will run regardless of whether the individual personally received the notice.
This means an individual may unknowingly overstay if they assume their visa remains valid simply because no letter was received.
There is no automatic right to remain simply because a curtailment letter has not been received.
In practice, one of the following situations may apply:
This may occur if the sponsor did not report termination or the Home Office has not yet processed it. In this scenario, the visa may technically remain valid, but this position is unstable and can change without notice. The individual must not work.
In this case, the 60-day period may already have expired, even if the individual was unaware of it. The individual is likely to be overstaying, which can have serious consequences for future immigration applications.
Sometimes the Home Office issues curtailment months after employment ends. The grace period will then run from service of that decision, not from termination.
Because of these variables, time since termination alone does not determine immigration status.
If an individual becomes aware that their sponsorship has ended but has not received a curtailment decision, they should act promptly. Recommended steps include:
Waiting without taking action carries risk.
Where status is uncertain, early advice is essential.
If you wish to discuss the above or have questions about skilled worker visa applications or sponsor licence applications please contact our UK immigration lawyers on 02079036888.
Disclaimer
The material contained on this website contains general information only and does not constitute legal or other professional advice and should not be relied upon as such. While every care has been taken in the preparation of the information on this site, readers are advised to seek specific advice in relation to any decision or course of action.