How will the UK immigration system work post-Brexit?
Home Secretary Priti Patel pledges points-based system

Priti Patel has vowed to “take back control” of Britain’s borders by ending the free movement of people “once and for all” after Brexit.
“Instead, we will introduce an Australian-style points-based immigration system,” the home secretary told delegates at the Conservative Party conference in Manchester.
She said this would attract the best and brightest, while remaining under the control of the British government, The Times reports.
Subscribe to The Week
Escape your echo chamber. Get the facts behind the news, plus analysis from multiple perspectives.

Sign up for The Week's Free Newsletters
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
From our morning news briefing to a weekly Good News Newsletter, get the best of The Week delivered directly to your inbox.
Such a system was proposed by Prime Minister Boris Johnson earlier this year.
“What I would like to do is get the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) to look really properly at the Australian-style points-based system,” he said while on the Tory leadership campaign trail in June.
So will the UK adopt a points based system - or another immigration system entirely?–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––For more political analysis - and a concise, refreshing and balanced take on the week’s news agenda - try The Week magazine. Get your first six issues free–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
A points-based system
The Australian system is cited by UK anti-immigration campaigners as an effective way to reduce net migration - a goal promised but not delivered by successive Conservative governments since at least 2010.
As the BBC notes, people who want to work in Australia “generally need to be pursuing an occupation that is in demand”. Applicants are “assigned points based on a number of professional and personal characteristics, with higher points awarded for more desirable traits”, the broadcaster says.
According to Patel, the points-based system proposed by the UK government would be “one that works in the best interests of Britain. One that attracts and welcomes the brightest and the best. And one that is under the control of the British government.”
But introducing a new system immediately after the UK exited the EU would be extremely difficult. “Supposing a policy could somehow be devised and implemented, the UK labour market would still need time to adjust to the new system,” says The Guardian’s Marley Morris.
Unless the EU and UK reach a deal, EU citizens would be subject to the same rules as those that now apply to third-country (non-UK and non-EU) nationals. The European Commission is currently advising EU nationals that “after Brexit, you will be subject to UK immigration law”.
The May government’s position
In December last year, then-prime minister Theresa May announced that a new immigration system was to come into effect on 1 January 2021 that would favour “experience and talent over nationality”, according to the Home Office.
The scheme was due to run until 2025 and was “understood to have been designed as a safety valve after businesses and some government ministers warned cutting off low-skilled labour from Europe would damage the UK economy”, Sky News reports.
Workers from the EU and beyond would have been able to enter Britain so long as they met a minimum salary threshold.
But with May now long gone, that plan “appears to have been superseded by Johnson’s commitment to introduce an “Australian-style” points-based system”, says The Guardian.
Sign up for Today's Best Articles in your inbox
A free daily email with the biggest news stories of the day – and the best features from TheWeek.com
-
Tariffs were supposed to drive inflation. Why hasn’t that happened?
Talking Points Businesses' planning ahead helped. But uncertainty still looms.
-
How can you find a financial adviser you trust?
the explainer Four ways to detect professionals who will act in your best interest
-
8 gifts for the host that does the most
The Week Recommends Show your appreciation with a thoughtful present
-
Is Starmer's plan to send migrants overseas Rwanda 2.0?
Today's Big Question Failed asylum seekers could be removed to Balkan nations under new government plans
-
California may pull health care from eligible undocumented migrants
IN THE SPOTLIGHT After pushing for universal health care for all Californians regardless of immigration status, Gov. Gavin Newsom's latest budget proposal backs away from a key campaign promise
-
Why are white South Africans emigrating?
The Explainer As the US welcomes Afrikaner refugees, the general exodus of South Africa's white population continues to grow
-
Can Starmer sell himself as the 'tough on immigration' PM?
Today's Big Question Former human rights lawyer 'now needs to own the change – not just mouth the slogans' to win over a sceptical public
-
How does the Alien Enemies Act work?
Feature President Trump is using a long-dormant law to deport Venezuelans. How does it work?
-
Trump offers migrants $1,000 to 'self-deport'
speed read The Department of Homeland Security says undocumented immigrants can leave the US in a more 'dignified way'
-
Deportations ensnare migrant families, U.S. citizens
Feature Trump's deportation crackdown is sweeping up more than just immigrants as ICE targets citizens, judges and nursing mothers
-
Trump is not sure he must follow the Constitution
speed read When asked about due process for migrants in a TV interview, President Trump said he didn't know whether he had to uphold the Fifth Amendment