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Business immigration

Business immigration

In today’s competitive job market, finding skilled workers is proving difficult for many employers. Hiring talent from outside of the UK or relocating employees from overseas can provide businesses with a solution to this problem.

Our Business Immigration lawyers can help you to engage a worker or student from overseas, whilst making sure you are staying compliant with UK laws.

Get in touch with us today on 020 3814 2020 or email enquiries@blasermills.co.uk.

Areas of expertise

  • Tier 1 (Investor) Category
  • Tier 1 (Exceptional Talent)
  • Tier 1 (General) Representative of Foreign Company
  • Tier 2 Skilled Worker
  • Sponsor Licence Applications
  • Business Visitor
  • International immigration and Visalaw Alliance
  • Immigration advice for USAF personnel
  • British citizenship
  • Permanent residence
  • Personal immigration advice

We understand the pressure businesses face when dealing with immigration law and business visa matters. Our expert immigration lawyers will work with you to simplify corporate immigration by delivering tailored business immigration services that will help you overcome the challenges.

Contact us

Get in touch with us today on 020 3814 2020 or email enquiries@blasermills.co.uk.

Graeme Kirk

Graeme is a Business Immigration Law Consultant at Blaser Mills Law, supporting foreign businesses establishing operations in the UK who wish to transfer staff to the UK.

Grame is one of UK’s leading immigration lawyers, specialising in business immigration law since 1981. He was Chair of the Immigration and Nationality Committee of the International Bar Association from 2000-2004 and chaired or co-chaired the IBA Global Immigration Conference from 2003-2019.

Graeme’s expertise covers most areas of UK immigration law, including assisting companies in obtaining Sponsor Licence to employ foreign nationals, Global Mobility Visas, Skilled Worker Visas, all employment and business immigration visa applications and related family applications, spouse/partner visas – supporting foreign businesses’ expansion into the UK.

Graeme has also been recognised as a ‘Leading Individual’ in the Legal 500 and  as a “Senior Statesman “ by Chambers legal directories in the UK

Sports immigration routes

Sports – Immigration routes

Any UK employer (including professional football clubs) seeking to employ an overseas national who is not a settled worker and who does not otherwise have immigration permission to work in the UK, will need to apply to the Home Office for a sponsor licence. 

Following a successful application for a sponsor licence, a UK football club would then need to comply with the relevant UK Immigration Rules when looking to recruit a player or coach from the EU or elsewhere overseas. In addition, the player or coach would require a governing body endorsement (GBE) from the Football Association in order to gain entry clearance and thereafter employment with a UK football club.

The International Sportsperson visa is for elite sportspersons and qualified sports coaches who are recognised as being at the highest level of their sport internationally. The individual in question will need to be sponsored on a short or long-term contract and have been endorsed by the FA via a GBE.

International Sportsperson visas are available for a period of 12 months or more. We advise clubs on their GBE scoring technology to help streamline international player recruitment for football clubs, providing an important solution for clubs post-Brexit.

Business immigration

Immigration route – Football Players

Once the sponsor licence has been obtained, then a sporting organisation can then look to bring in athletes from overseas.

The main immigration routes available to football players are:

  • Standard Visitor
  • International Sportsperson
  • Permitted Paid Engagement

Anyone coming to undertake/work in sporting activities in the UK, will normally need an International Sportsperson visa. The individual will need to be sponsored on a short or long-term contract and have been endorsed (a GBE) by an appropriate UK sport governing body – i.e. The FA. An example of the most common route- International Sportsperson – is set out below.

International Sportsperson

The International Sportsperson visa is designed for elite sportspersons and qualified sports coaches over the age of 16 who are internationally recognised as being at the highest level of their sport internationally. Applicants need to be sponsored on a short or long-term contract and have been endorsed by an appropriate UK sport governing body.

Your sponsor will be a UK-based sporting body, sports club, events organiser or other organiser operating in the sporting sector and will hold a sports sponsor licence. Agents and overseas-based sports clubs and organisations cannot sponsor workers on the International Sportsperson route

International Sportsperson visas are available for a period of either 12 months or less, or for a period exceeding 12 months. If your International Sportsperson visa application is successful, you will be permitted to work in the job you have been sponsored for. Supplementary employment and study will also be permitted.

Your partner and any children under the age of 18 may accompany you as your dependents. International Sportspersons who have, at any point in the last 5 years, been granted leave as an International Sportsperson for a period exceeding 12 months, can apply for settlement (indefinite leave to remain) in the UK after 5 years’ continuous residence in the UK.

International Sportsperson Visa Processing Times

Most International Sportsperson visa applications are decided within 3 weeks.  It may be possible to secure a faster decision if the visa application centre offers a priority service.

Most applications to extend stay as an International Sportsperson are decided within 8 weeks.

Sponsor Licence Applications

Generally, most football clubs operating in the Premier League and the Championship will have obtained a sponsor licence already. However, each licence type has its own specific requirements. Clubs should note that most EU, EEA and Swiss nationals arriving in the UK since 31 December 2020 now need to be sponsored in order to work in the UK.

A sponsor licence grants permission to a UK club to recruit players and coaches from outside the UK to work for them.

Clubs will need a sponsor licence in order to employ most overseas players and coaches, and this includes both non-EU nationals and most citizens of the EU, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland.

How Blaser Mills Law can help

We have experience in international and domestic regulation of football and on various matters involving stakeholders in the game.

We also advise football clubs, agents, and individual players and their families on all aspects of immigration to the UK. Our experience allows us to quickly assess eligibility and to spot issues before they develop into problems.

We are here to help with personal immigration matters including the International Sportsperson visa, Standard Partner/EEA Nationals & Family visas and more. We are also able to assist if you require any advice or help with obtaining a sponsor licence, maintaining a sponsor licence as well as complying with your sponsor duties.

Get in touch with us today on 020 3814 2020 or email enquiries@blasermills.co.uk.

Sponsor Licences: How can a business secure more skilled workers?

Sponsored licence application: What route can I take as an employer?

The UK job market is experiencing a significant labour shortage at the moment; particularly in the skilled sector. As a consequence of Brexit, the Government changed the UK’s Immigration Rules, making it easier for UK based organisations to bring in skilled migrant workers from the EU and beyond. Following an initial implementation phase, these new rules are fully operational and any UK employer will now need to apply to the Home Office for a sponsor licence when looking to employ an overseas national who is not a settled worker, and who does not otherwise have immigration permission to work in the UK.     

The type of sponsor licence application you will need to make will depend on the immigration route that the overseas worker is seeking to be sponsored to work on. Our team has a wealth of experience in this area and has assisted many UK employers in obtaining the right sponsor licence. We recently advised a major UK restaurant chain in obtaining a sponsor licence to allow it to bring in nearly 200 skilled Chefs and Sous Chefs from overseas.  

Here are some of the possible routes available.

Business immigration

Sponsor Licence Applications

If you are an employer seeking to employ an overseas national who is not a settled worker and who does not otherwise have immigration permission to work for you in the UK, you will need to apply to the Home Office for a sponsor licence

The type of sponsor licence application you will need to make will depend on the immigration route that the overseas worker is seeking to be sponsored to work on.  Each licence type has its own specific requirements. Employers should note that most EU, EEA and Swiss nationals arriving in the UK since 31 December 2020 now need to be sponsored in order to work in the UK.

A sponsor licence grants permission to a UK business to employ workers from outside the UK to work for them, in their business.

You will need a sponsor licence in order to employ most overseas workers, including Skilled Workers and UK Expansion Workers. This includes both non-EU nationals and also most citizens of the EU, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland who arrived in the UK after 31 December 2020.

In order to secure a sponsorship licence you will need to submit an application to the Home Office and pay an application fee.

Businesses of all sizes, operating in all sectors, can apply for a sponsor licence, providing they are able to satisfy the business eligibility and job suitability requirements for the category of sponsor licence they are applying for.

We also assist with sponsor licence renewals and certificates of sponsorship.

Key points for UK employers

The key points for UK employers are:

  • UK businesses need sponsor licences to sponsor workers from overseas and this includes both non-EU nationals and also most citizens of the EU, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland
  • Rebranding of visas so there are similar (but different) intra company transfer visa and sole representative routes
  • There are no changes to the skilled worker visa

Examples of the various routes under the global business mobility (GBM) route are set out below

The GBM visa route

The new GBM visa is in part a re-branding exercise of existing work and business visa routes but with the addition of a new visa routes for workers being seconded to work in the UK.

The five elements of the GBM visa route are:

  • Senior or specialist worker visa route – this replaced the intra company transfer visa and is designed for senior managers or specialist employees who are being transferred to a UK branch of an overseas company. There is a minimum salary threshold for this route or one hundred percent of the going rate for the job, whichever is higher. Applicants do not need to meet the English language requirement. However, senior or specialist worker applicants need to be currently working for an overseas business or organisation that is transferring their employment on a temporary basis to a UK based company that is linked by common ownership or control, or by a joint venture on which they are sponsored to work. 

The visa applicant must have worked outside the UK for the linked business for a cumulative period of at least twelve months, unless the worker is earning a specified sum per year or more. The senior or specialist worker route does not lead to settlement in the UK.

  •  Graduate trainee visa route – this replaces the graduate trainee intra company transfer visa and is intended for those on graduate trainee schemes who will spend part of their graduate training in the UK.
  • UK expansion worker – this somewhat nebulous title is the route that replaces the sole representative visa and is designed for senior employees of overseas businesses who are tasked with setting up a new branch or subsidiary company in the UK of the overseas parent company.
  • Service supplier route – this route replaces the contractual service supplier and independent professional route under the current temporary worker international agreement route. It is designed for contractual service suppliers employed by an overseas service provider or for self-employed independent professionals who work and are based overseas but who need to carry out an assignment in the UK and the assignment covers services covered by one of the international trade commitments of the UK.
  • Secondment worker – this is the new route and is intended for use by workers being seconded to the UK by an overseas based employer company as part of a high value contract or investment being undertaken by the employer.

How Blaser Mills Law can help

We are here to help and assist if you require any advice or help with obtaining a sponsor licence, maintaining a sponsor licence as well as complying with your sponsor duties. We also assist with personal immigration matters including short and long term visas including the Skilled Worker visa, Partner/EEA Nationals & Family visas.