🚨 The UK’s 2024 Dependant Visa Ban: What It Means, and Where Students With Families Are Going Instead
On 1 January 2024, the UK introduced one of the biggest immigration shifts in modern international education: most international students can no longer bring their families.
The rule was originally announced in May 2023 after the Home Office reported a 930% rise in dependant visas, from 14,839 in 2019 to 152,980 in 2023. The government estimated the new restrictions would reduce arrivals by around 140,000 people.
But the impact has been far bigger than anyone expected.
🇬🇧 What Changed?
Under the new rules, only two groups of students can bring dependants:
Postgraduate research students (PhD, MRes, research-based programmes)
Students funded by a full national government scholarship
Everyone else, undergraduates, taught master’s students, and most postgraduate applicants — is excluded.
And the numbers show the consequences:
31% drop in sponsored study visa applications (Home Office)
17% drop in international applicants for 2024/25 (UCAS)
17% fall in postgraduate taught enrolments
22% rise in MRes enrolments as students try to stay eligible to bring family
Even after a change of government, Labour confirmed it will not reverse the ban. This is now a bipartisan UK position.
🌍 The Global Shift: Students With Families Are Looking Elsewhere
While the UK tightens, many other countries are doing the opposite, openly welcoming students and their families.
Your document highlights 14 countries where international students can still bring dependants, often with generous work rights for spouses and clear pathways for children.
Here’s the landscape at a glance:
🌏 14 Countries Where Students Can Bring Their Families
🇦🇺 Australia
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work (unlimited for research students)
✔ Clear financial requirements
🇨🇦 Canada
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses of master’s/PhD students get an open work permit
✔ Family-friendly immigration targets
🇩🇪 Germany
✔ Family reunification for programmes 1 year+
✔ Spouses can work full-time
✔ A1 German required for partners
🇺🇸 United States
✔ F-2 and J-2 visas available
✘ F-2 spouses cannot work
✔ J-2 spouses can apply for work authorisation
🇳🇿 New Zealand
✔ Postgraduate students can bring partners and children
✔ Partners get open work visas
✔ Children attend school as domestic students
🇸🇪 Sweden
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses get full work rights
✔ Cohabiting partners recognised
🇫🇮 Finland
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work freely
✔ Low visa fees
🇩🇰 Denmark
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work or run a business
✔ Even parents can join — rare globally
🇳🇱 Netherlands
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work
✔ Clear monthly financial minimums
🇦🇹 Austria
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Dependants can work
✔ Long-stay visa fee applies
🇭🇰 Hong Kong
✔ Full-time degree students can bring spouses/children
✔ Same-sex registered partners recognised
✘ Work rights limited without permission
🇨🇳 China
✔ S1/S2 visas for family members
✔ Work rights require extra permits
✔ Parents-in-law included, unusual globally
🇯🇵 Japan
✔ Spouses/children allowed
✔ Work permission required (up to 28 hrs/week)
✔ Strong safety and affordability appeal
🇲🇹 Malta
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can apply for work rights
✔ English-speaking, growing education hub
📉 Why This Matters
The UK’s dependant ban has become a global case study in how immigration policy can reshape student flows overnight.
Students with families, often older, more experienced, and higher-spending, are now choosing destinations that support:
Dual-income households
Children’s schooling
Long-term settlement
Family stability
Countries like Australia, Canada, Germany, and the Nordics understand that supporting families boosts economic productivity and integration.
🎯 The Bottom Line
If you’re an international student with a spouse or children, the UK is no longer the welcoming destination it once was. But the world is big, and many countries are actively competing for you.
Family-friendly policies are now a major deciding factor alongside tuition fees, post-study work rights, and scholarships.
On 1 January 2024, the UK introduced one of the biggest immigration shifts in modern international education: most international students can no longer bring their families.
The rule was originally announced in May 2023 after the Home Office reported a 930% rise in dependant visas, from 14,839 in 2019 to 152,980 in 2023. The government estimated the new restrictions would reduce arrivals by around 140,000 people.
But the impact has been far bigger than anyone expected.
🇬🇧 What Changed?
Under the new rules, only two groups of students can bring dependants:
Postgraduate research students (PhD, MRes, research-based programmes)
Students funded by a full national government scholarship
Everyone else, undergraduates, taught master’s students, and most postgraduate applicants — is excluded.
And the numbers show the consequences:
31% drop in sponsored study visa applications (Home Office)
17% drop in international applicants for 2024/25 (UCAS)
17% fall in postgraduate taught enrolments
22% rise in MRes enrolments as students try to stay eligible to bring family
Even after a change of government, Labour confirmed it will not reverse the ban. This is now a bipartisan UK position.
🌍 The Global Shift: Students With Families Are Looking Elsewhere
While the UK tightens, many other countries are doing the opposite, openly welcoming students and their families.
Your document highlights 14 countries where international students can still bring dependants, often with generous work rights for spouses and clear pathways for children.
Here’s the landscape at a glance:
🌏 14 Countries Where Students Can Bring Their Families
🇦🇺 Australia
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work (unlimited for research students)
✔ Clear financial requirements
🇨🇦 Canada
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses of master’s/PhD students get an open work permit
✔ Family-friendly immigration targets
🇩🇪 Germany
✔ Family reunification for programmes 1 year+
✔ Spouses can work full-time
✔ A1 German required for partners
🇺🇸 United States
✔ F-2 and J-2 visas available
✘ F-2 spouses cannot work
✔ J-2 spouses can apply for work authorisation
🇳🇿 New Zealand
✔ Postgraduate students can bring partners and children
✔ Partners get open work visas
✔ Children attend school as domestic students
🇸🇪 Sweden
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses get full work rights
✔ Cohabiting partners recognised
🇫🇮 Finland
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work freely
✔ Low visa fees
🇩🇰 Denmark
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work or run a business
✔ Even parents can join — rare globally
🇳🇱 Netherlands
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work
✔ Clear monthly financial minimums
🇦🇹 Austria
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Dependants can work
✔ Long-stay visa fee applies
🇭🇰 Hong Kong
✔ Full-time degree students can bring spouses/children
✔ Same-sex registered partners recognised
✘ Work rights limited without permission
🇨🇳 China
✔ S1/S2 visas for family members
✔ Work rights require extra permits
✔ Parents-in-law included, unusual globally
🇯🇵 Japan
✔ Spouses/children allowed
✔ Work permission required (up to 28 hrs/week)
✔ Strong safety and affordability appeal
🇲🇹 Malta
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can apply for work rights
✔ English-speaking, growing education hub
📉 Why This Matters
The UK’s dependant ban has become a global case study in how immigration policy can reshape student flows overnight.
Students with families, often older, more experienced, and higher-spending, are now choosing destinations that support:
Dual-income households
Children’s schooling
Long-term settlement
Family stability
Countries like Australia, Canada, Germany, and the Nordics understand that supporting families boosts economic productivity and integration.
🎯 The Bottom Line
If you’re an international student with a spouse or children, the UK is no longer the welcoming destination it once was. But the world is big, and many countries are actively competing for you.
Family-friendly policies are now a major deciding factor alongside tuition fees, post-study work rights, and scholarships.
🚨 The UK’s 2024 Dependant Visa Ban: What It Means, and Where Students With Families Are Going Instead
On 1 January 2024, the UK introduced one of the biggest immigration shifts in modern international education: most international students can no longer bring their families.
The rule was originally announced in May 2023 after the Home Office reported a 930% rise in dependant visas, from 14,839 in 2019 to 152,980 in 2023. The government estimated the new restrictions would reduce arrivals by around 140,000 people.
But the impact has been far bigger than anyone expected.
🇬🇧 What Changed?
Under the new rules, only two groups of students can bring dependants:
Postgraduate research students (PhD, MRes, research-based programmes)
Students funded by a full national government scholarship
Everyone else, undergraduates, taught master’s students, and most postgraduate applicants — is excluded.
And the numbers show the consequences:
31% drop in sponsored study visa applications (Home Office)
17% drop in international applicants for 2024/25 (UCAS)
17% fall in postgraduate taught enrolments
22% rise in MRes enrolments as students try to stay eligible to bring family
Even after a change of government, Labour confirmed it will not reverse the ban. This is now a bipartisan UK position.
🌍 The Global Shift: Students With Families Are Looking Elsewhere
While the UK tightens, many other countries are doing the opposite, openly welcoming students and their families.
Your document highlights 14 countries where international students can still bring dependants, often with generous work rights for spouses and clear pathways for children.
Here’s the landscape at a glance:
🌏 14 Countries Where Students Can Bring Their Families
🇦🇺 Australia
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work (unlimited for research students)
✔ Clear financial requirements
🇨🇦 Canada
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses of master’s/PhD students get an open work permit
✔ Family-friendly immigration targets
🇩🇪 Germany
✔ Family reunification for programmes 1 year+
✔ Spouses can work full-time
✔ A1 German required for partners
🇺🇸 United States
✔ F-2 and J-2 visas available
✘ F-2 spouses cannot work
✔ J-2 spouses can apply for work authorisation
🇳🇿 New Zealand
✔ Postgraduate students can bring partners and children
✔ Partners get open work visas
✔ Children attend school as domestic students
🇸🇪 Sweden
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses get full work rights
✔ Cohabiting partners recognised
🇫🇮 Finland
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work freely
✔ Low visa fees
🇩🇰 Denmark
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work or run a business
✔ Even parents can join — rare globally
🇳🇱 Netherlands
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can work
✔ Clear monthly financial minimums
🇦🇹 Austria
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Dependants can work
✔ Long-stay visa fee applies
🇭🇰 Hong Kong
✔ Full-time degree students can bring spouses/children
✔ Same-sex registered partners recognised
✘ Work rights limited without permission
🇨🇳 China
✔ S1/S2 visas for family members
✔ Work rights require extra permits
✔ Parents-in-law included, unusual globally
🇯🇵 Japan
✔ Spouses/children allowed
✔ Work permission required (up to 28 hrs/week)
✔ Strong safety and affordability appeal
🇲🇹 Malta
✔ All levels allowed
✔ Spouses can apply for work rights
✔ English-speaking, growing education hub
📉 Why This Matters
The UK’s dependant ban has become a global case study in how immigration policy can reshape student flows overnight.
Students with families, often older, more experienced, and higher-spending, are now choosing destinations that support:
Dual-income households
Children’s schooling
Long-term settlement
Family stability
Countries like Australia, Canada, Germany, and the Nordics understand that supporting families boosts economic productivity and integration.
🎯 The Bottom Line
If you’re an international student with a spouse or children, the UK is no longer the welcoming destination it once was. But the world is big, and many countries are actively competing for you.
Family-friendly policies are now a major deciding factor alongside tuition fees, post-study work rights, and scholarships.