UK Universities Slam Doors on Pakistani and Bangladeshi Students Amid Visa Crackdown
London, December 7, 2025 (BNN Web Staff) –
In a sweeping policy shift that’s left thousands of aspiring international students in limbo, at least nine British universities have suspended or severely restricted admissions from Pakistan and Bangladesh, citing skyrocketing visa refusal rates and intensified scrutiny from the UK Home Office. The move, driven by fears of asylum abuse and non-genuine applications, has ignited fury among education advocates who decry it as a “devastating blow” to legitimate dreams of higher education abroad.
The crackdown, first reported by The Financial Times earlier this week, stems from regulatory changes implemented in September 2025. Under the revised Basic Compliance Assessment (BCA) framework, universities sponsoring international students must now maintain visa refusal rates below 5% – a steep drop from the previous 10% threshold. Failure to comply risks losing their sponsor license entirely, a financial catastrophe for institutions reliant on overseas tuition fees.
Official Home Office data reveals the stark reality: In the year ending September 2025, student visa refusals for Pakistani applicants hit 18%, while Bangladeshi rates soared to 22% – rates that dwarf the new limits and account for nearly half of all 23,036 student visa rejections recorded during that period. This surge coincides with a notable uptick in asylum claims from these nationalities, many of whom entered the UK on study or work visas, prompting officials to label Pakistan and Bangladesh as “high-risk” countries.
Affected Universities and Their Measures
The restrictions vary by institution but collectively target undergraduate and postgraduate intakes, often extending into 2026. Here’s a breakdown of the nine confirmed universities taking action:
| University | Restrictions | Duration/Reason |
|---|---|---|
| University of Chester | Suspended all recruitment from Pakistan | Until autumn 2026; “unexpected rise in visa refusals” |
| University of Wolverhampton | No undergraduate applications from Pakistan or Bangladesh | Ongoing; compliance risks |
| University of East London | Paused recruitment from Pakistan; restrictions on Bangladesh | Temporary; high refusal rates |
| University of Sunderland | Suspended from Pakistan and Bangladesh | Risk mitigation; BCA compliance |
| Coventry University | Restricted admissions from both countries | Upholding visa framework integrity |
| University of Hertfordshire | Paused from Pakistan and Bangladesh | Until September 2026; long processing times and action plan |
| Oxford Brookes University | Paused undergraduate recruitment from both | For January 2026 intake; compliance fears |
| Glasgow Caledonian University | Paused for select programs from both | Temporary; reinstated for some January courses |
| London Metropolitan University | Halted from Bangladesh (60% of refusals from here) | Ongoing; visa refusal spike |
| BPP University | Temporary halt from Pakistan | Risk mitigation strategy |
These pauses aren’t isolated; they reflect a broader sector-wide scramble to avoid sanctions. Mid-tier universities, which attract a disproportionate number of applicants from South Asia due to lower fees, are hit hardest – international students contribute billions to the UK’s economy annually, but the compliance burden has tipped the scales.
Voices of Outrage and Official Stance
The backlash has been swift and emotional. Education consultant Maryem Abbas called the policies “heartbreaking,” arguing they punish genuine students for a “profit-driven system” fueled by lax recruitment agencies in Pakistan and Bangladesh that encourage dubious applications. Prospective students, many in the final stages of applications, now face deferred dreams and mounting anxiety. “This isn’t about quality – it’s about survival for universities, but at what cost to us?” one anonymous Pakistani applicant told ProPakistani.
The Home Office defends the reforms as essential to safeguarding the visa system from becoming a “backdoor to migration,” while insisting it “strongly values” international education. Universities echo this, framing the restrictions as non-discriminatory compliance measures rather than targeted bans. Yet critics, including Pakistani media outlets like Dawn, warn of long-term damage to UK-Pakistan ties and a potential brain drain to rival destinations like Canada or Australia.
As applications for the 2026 intake loom, affected students are urged to explore alternatives: bolstering applications with stronger financial proofs, seeking scholarships, or pivoting to EU programs. For now, what was once a golden gateway to global education feels like a locked door for far too many.







