12 September 2025
The Home Office has confirmed 1,948 sponsor licences were revoked between July 2024 and June 2025 – more than double the previous year’s total of 937. The announcement marks the highest number of revocations on record, reflecting a significant step-up in compliance activity and a move towards tougher, intelligence-led enforcement.
This is not just a policy headline. A revocation stops sponsorship overnight, triggering curtailment of sponsored workers’ visas, operational disruption, and significant reputational and financial risk.
What’s changed?Intelligence-led enforcement: active monitoring of PAYE/HMRC data, visa allocations and Sponsor Management System (SMS) activity, coupled with unannounced compliance visits.Lower tolerance for “technical” breaches: minor lapses in record-keeping, reporting or monitoring can tip a licence into suspension or revocation.Wider enforcement: rising illegal working arrests (51% increase in the last year), increased use of civil penalties (fines, business closure orders and potential prosecutions), and a visible drive to be tough on non-compliance.
Sectors hit hardest include social care, hospitality, retail and construction – industries already grappling with acute labour shortages. Common sponsor licence breaches include:
Underpayments and miscalculations: salaries falling below the applicable threshold or going rate, especially once allowance, deductions, hours or location changes are factored in; Facilitating entry to circumvent immigration rules; andFailing to provide the promised work.
In practice, we regularly assist sponsors to avoid breaches involving:
Reporting gaps: late or missed reports for changes in job, salary, location, working pattern, or corporate structure.Filing weaknesses: incomplete HR files, inconsistent right-to-work checks, and poor absence tracking.
The Home Office has warned that current trends show that sponsor licence revocations are expected to exceed this record high again this year.
What does this mean for sponsor licence holders?
The message from the government has always been clear: compliance is not optional. But with smarter data-sharing between government departments and intelligence-led enforcement, licence holders are under more scrutiny than ever. Employers should assume that their data (including PAYE, HMRC returns and visa allocations) is being actively monitored against sponsor compliance duties.
Licence holders should expect ongoing scrutiny and a lower tolerance for technical breaches. Even seemingly minor failings or unintentional errors in record-keeping, monitoring absences, or failing to report changes can, in practice, be enough to put a licence at risk.
What should employers do?Consider an internal audit: ensure HR files, right-to-work checks and reporting procedures are watertight.Train key personnel: sponsor compliance cannot sit with one individual. The Authorising Officer has ultimate responsibility for the sponsor licence, even if tasks are delegated. The Level 1 user should manage the day-to-day functions on the Sponsor Management System (SMS) and must ensure all reporting and record-keeping duties are met. The Key Contact is the Home Office’s main liaison point for the organisation. If these roles are not properly understood, there are missed SMS updates, poor systems and incomplete files, the business can quickly become exposed if they do not make the requisite reports within the required timeframe.Prepare for compliance visits: It is worth keeping a “compliance pack” ready for the instance where the Home Office may conduct an in-person visit.Act early: if problems are identified, take corrective action and document the steps taken, as mitigation may make a difference in an investigation.
Record numbers of visa sponsor licences revoked for rule breaking. More than twice the number of licences were revoked in the first year of this government than the year before, showing delivery of real action to secure our border.