Global Law Experts Logo
how to challenge a sponsor licence revocation UK

What to Do If Your UK Sponsor Licence Is Suspended or Revoked: Step‑by‑step Legal Response (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Understanding how to challenge a sponsor licence revocation UK employers face is now an operational priority, as UKVI enforcement activity, including compliance visits, suspensions and outright revocations, has intensified through 2025 and into 2026. A sponsor licence revocation or suspension strips an employer of the ability to assign Certificates of Sponsorship (CoS), triggers curtailment of sponsored workers’ leave, and can cause immediate commercial disruption. There is no statutory right of appeal against such a decision; the practical remedies are making representations to UKVI, requesting an administrative review where the decision letter permits it, or, if those routes are unavailable or unsuccessful, bringing a judicial review in the Administrative Court.

This guide sets out the complete procedural playbook for employers: triage and evidence preservation, HR operational steps, representations and administrative review, pre‑action protocol (PAP), judicial review, parallel business remediation, required documents, deadlines, costs and the 2026 guidance changes that affect each stage.

Overview of the sponsor licence revocation process and who it applies to

UKVI can take several distinct enforcement actions against a sponsor, each with different operational consequences and different remedial pathways. Employers must understand the differences before deciding how to respond.

  • Suspension. The licence remains formally in force, but the employer cannot assign new CoS or extend existing ones. UKVI typically suspends a licence while it investigates compliance concerns. Sponsored workers already in post usually retain their immigration status during a suspension, but no new assignments can be made.
  • Revocation. The licence is cancelled outright. All unassigned CoS are invalidated. Sponsored workers’ leave may be curtailed, giving them a limited window, typically 60 days, to find a new sponsor, switch to a different immigration route, or leave the United Kingdom. This is the most severe outcome.
  • Downgrading. The sponsor’s rating is reduced from A to B. The employer must complete an action plan to regain A‑rated status within a set period, or risk revocation.
  • Curtailment of sponsored workers. Where a licence is revoked, UKVI may curtail the leave of every worker sponsored under that licence. According to GOV.UK guidance, affected employees are typically granted 60 days to take alternative action.

Crucially, there is no statutory appeal mechanism for a sponsor licence revocation. The Home Office treats these as administrative decisions, not immigration decisions that carry in‑country appeal rights. Employers therefore depend on two principal remedial routes: administrative review (where the decision letter specifically offers it) and judicial review under CPR Part 54. In addition, employers may make informal representations to UKVI during a suspension period, before a final decision is taken. The Workers and temporary workers: guidance for sponsors, Part 3, published by GOV.UK, sets out sponsor duties and the compliance framework against which these decisions are assessed.

Eligibility and prerequisites for how to challenge a sponsor licence revocation UK

Not every employer will have access to every remedial route. Eligibility depends on the type of action taken, the wording of the decision letter and the grounds on which the employer intends to challenge.

When administrative review is possible

Administrative review is a formal mechanism through which an eligible applicant can ask the Home Office to reconsider a decision on the grounds that a caseworker error was made. The GOV.UK Administrative review caseworker guidance confirms that this route is available only where the original decision letter expressly states that administrative review may be requested. Employers must check the decision letter carefully: if it does not reference administrative review, the route is not available and the employer must turn to judicial review instead. Where administrative review is offered, the time window for filing is stated in the decision letter itself and is typically short.

When judicial review is needed

Judicial review is appropriate where an employer can demonstrate arguable grounds that the decision involved an error of law, procedural unfairness, a failure to follow published policy (such as the Compliance Casework Guidance), or was so unreasonable that no reasonable decision‑maker could have reached it (the Wednesbury standard). It is also the only route when UKVI does not offer administrative review. Employers should consider judicial review whenever a revocation or suspension threatens imminent harm, for example, curtailment affecting large numbers of sponsored workers, or significant commercial losses, and where a UKVI compliance visit did not follow published guidance.

Step‑by‑step procedure: how to challenge a sponsor licence revocation UK employers face

The following numbered steps form the core procedural pathway. Each step identifies the responsible actor, the timeframe and the output required. Employers should treat these steps as concurrent rather than purely sequential, evidence preservation, HR actions and legal instructions should run in parallel.

Step 0, Triage and evidence preservation (0–24 hours)

Within 24 hours of receiving a suspension or revocation notice, or immediately after a UKVI compliance visit, the employer must secure all immigration and HR records. Assign a single internal lead, usually the compliance officer or general counsel, to coordinate the response. Key actions include:

  1. Scan and index the Home Office decision letter, recording the exact date and time of receipt.
  2. Preserve all Sponsor Management System (SMS) records, including CoS allocations, compliance audit logs and caseworker notes.
  3. Lock down HR files: right‑to‑work check copies, payroll records, RTI submissions and recruitment documentation for every sponsored worker.
  4. Instruct IT to preserve all email chains and call logs related to the UKVI compliance visit.
  5. Record a contemporaneous note of everything that occurred during the compliance visit: who attended, what was requested, what was said.

The output at this stage is a comprehensive evidence bundle index that will underpin representations, administrative review submissions or judicial review grounds.

Step 1, Immediate operational HR actions (24–72 hours)

The sponsor licence suspension or revocation has direct consequences for sponsored workers. Within 72 hours, the HR team should complete the following:

  1. Identify all employees whose immigration status depends on the sponsor licence (Workers and temporary workers visa holders).
  2. Determine whether CoS validity is affected. During a suspension, existing CoS may remain valid, but no new CoS can be assigned. On revocation, all unassigned CoS are invalidated.
  3. Prepare internal communication scripts for affected employees. These should explain the situation factually, avoid premature conclusions and confirm that the employer is taking legal steps.
  4. Issue instructions to payroll: sponsored workers must continue to be paid in accordance with their contracts unless and until their leave is curtailed and they cease employment.
  5. Check whether any sponsored workers are approaching visa expiry dates and may need to apply for alternative leave independently.
  6. Where UKVI curtails workers’ leave, prepare employee letters setting out the 60‑day window and available options (finding a new sponsor, switching visa category, or making arrangements to leave the UK), in accordance with GOV.UK guidance on employees affected when a visa sponsor loses their licence.

Step 2, Draft and serve representations or request administrative review

If the decision letter offers administrative review, the employer, or its legal representatives, must file within the period stated. The submission should be a clear, indexed evidence pack that addresses each of UKVI’s findings point by point. Include:

  • A schedule of alleged errors. Identify each factual or procedural error in the decision.
  • Supporting documents. Cross‑reference the evidence bundle index prepared in Step 0.
  • Remediation evidence. If compliance failures are admitted, document corrective actions already taken, disciplinary measures, updated policies, new training programmes, SMS record corrections.

If administrative review is not offered in the decision letter, or if the employer is still within the suspension phase and a final decision has not yet been made, representations should be submitted directly to UKVI. These representations follow the same structure and should be treated with equal rigour.

Step 3, Engage external counsel and issue the pre‑action protocol letter

External immigration counsel should be instructed immediately on receipt of a revocation notice. Where administrative review is unavailable or has been unsuccessful, the next step is to serve a pre‑action protocol letter on the Home Office before issuing judicial review proceedings. The PAP letter must:

  1. Identify the decision under challenge and the date it was received.
  2. Set out the legal grounds on which the employer contends the decision is unlawful.
  3. Request that the Home Office reconsider or withdraw the decision within a specified response period.
  4. Be served on the correct Home Office addressee (the Government Legal Department acts for the Home Office in immigration judicial reviews).

The PAP stage serves a dual purpose. It satisfies the Pre‑Action Protocol for Judicial Review (a procedural requirement under the Civil Procedure Rules) and may prompt the Home Office to reconsider without the need for court proceedings. If the revocation is causing imminent, irreparable harm, for example, mass curtailment of employees, counsel should simultaneously consider applying for urgent interim relief.

Step 4, Judicial review: permission stage

If the Home Office does not withdraw or amend its decision following the PAP letter, the employer must file for permission to bring judicial review. Under CPR Part 54, the claim must be filed promptly and in any event not later than three months after the grounds to make the claim first arose. In practice, courts expect claimants to act well within this outer limit, particularly where third parties (such as sponsored workers) are affected. The claim form must be accompanied by:

  • Detailed statement of grounds. Setting out the legal errors alleged.
  • Witness statements. From the employer’s compliance lead and, where appropriate, affected employees.
  • The evidence bundle. Including the decision letter, SMS records, remediation plan and all correspondence with UKVI.

If the case is urgent, for instance, workers face imminent curtailment, counsel should request an expedited listing or apply for an interim injunction to maintain the status quo pending determination.

Step 5, Parallel business remediation and post‑decision actions

Regardless of whether legal proceedings succeed, the employer should begin compliance remediation immediately. This demonstrates good faith to both UKVI and the court, and positions the business for re‑application if the revocation stands. Actions include:

  1. Conduct an internal compliance audit against the requirements in the Workers and temporary workers guidance for sponsors, Part 3.
  2. Update SMS records and ensure all historical reporting obligations are met.
  3. Implement new training for Authorising Officers and Key Contacts.
  4. Prepare a formal remediation report, signed by senior management, documenting every corrective action.
  5. If the revocation is upheld, prepare a fresh sponsor licence application with the remediation report as a supporting document.

Procedural timeline summary

Step Who does it Typical duration
Triage and evidence preservation HR / GC / IT 0–24 hours
Operational HR actions (curtailment checks, CoS review, employee communications) HR / GC 24–72 hours
Draft and serve representations or PAP letter GC / external counsel 3–7 days (initial PAP); administrative review response 14–28 days (varies per decision letter)
Administrative review submission (if available) External counsel / GC File within period stated in decision letter
Issue judicial review claim (permission stage) Litigation counsel File promptly, normally within 3 months of decision (CPR Part 54)
Judicial review (permission decision + substantive hearing) Litigation counsel Permission decision: weeks; substantive hearing: months (case‑dependent)
Business remediation and re‑application (if revocation upheld) Compliance lead / external counsel Weeks to months depending on remediation scope

Required documents and evidence for challenging a sponsor licence revocation

Assembling the right documents quickly is critical. The table below maps every key document to its source and the stage at which it is used. Employers should begin compiling this pack within 24 hours of receiving a suspension or revocation notice.

Document Notes
Home Office decision letter (suspension or revocation) Official notice from UKVI. Scan to PDF immediately and index the date of receipt. This is the primary document for all remedial steps.
Compliance visit report / UKVI interview notes If provided by UKVI or recorded in SMS. Preserve originals and internal contemporaneous notes with timestamps.
Sponsor Management System (SMS) records Export CoS allocation history, compliance audit logs and retention records as CSV or PDF. Required for representations, administrative review and JR evidence bundles.
Payroll records and RTI evidence for sponsored workers Issued by payroll or finance. Demonstrates salary levels, payment history and whether the sponsor met its pay‑related duties.
HR files and Right to Work checks Copies of right‑to‑work documents on file, recruitment records, training and compliance logs for each sponsored worker.
Disciplinary records (if relevant) Records showing corrective steps taken in response to any issues identified during the compliance visit. Include author names and dates.
Remediation / compliance action plan Internal document signed by the compliance lead, detailing every action taken to fix identified breaches. Critical for demonstrating good faith.
Witness statements Signed, dated statements from managers and, where appropriate, employees, addressing facts challenged by UKVI. Prepare early.
Copies of all communications with UKVI Emails, call logs and letters with the caseworker. Archive originals and log timestamps.
Pre‑Action Protocol (PAP) letter and proof of service Drafted by counsel or GC. Retain proof of sending (email delivery receipt or recorded delivery confirmation).
Administrative review submission pack All evidence indexed and paginated, with a short statement of the errors alleged in the original decision. Required only where administrative review is offered.
Judicial review claim form and grounds Prepared by litigation counsel in accordance with CPR Part 54 and Administrative Court procedural requirements.

The evidence bundle should be continuously updated as new documents become available. Counsel will advise on pagination and indexing conventions required by the Administrative Court.

Timeline and key deadlines for sponsor licence revocation challenges

Missing a deadline can be fatal to an employer’s case. The table below consolidates the critical time limits. All deadlines should be diarised by both the internal team and external counsel on the day the decision letter is received.

Task Typical deadline Action owner
Administrative review request (where offered) Within the period stated in the decision letter, typically 14 to 28 days GC / external counsel
Serve Pre‑Action Protocol (PAP) letter As soon as possible after the decision; must be issued before filing JR to satisfy pre‑action expectations External counsel / GC
File permission for judicial review Promptly and in any event within 3 months of the decision date (CPR Part 54) Litigation counsel
Apply for interim relief or urgent injunction Immediately, if the revocation causes imminent, irreparable harm Litigation counsel
Employee curtailment and CoS actions Immediate once licence is suspended or revoked, follow sponsor duties under GOV.UK guidance HR / GC

A critical nuance: while CPR Part 54 sets a three‑month outer limit for filing judicial review, the rules also require claimants to act “promptly.” Courts have refused permission where claimants waited until near the three‑month mark without good reason. Industry observers expect this to be applied strictly in sponsor licence cases given the impact on third‑party workers. The safest approach is to instruct counsel and serve the PAP letter within days of the decision.

Costs and fees for challenging a sponsor licence revocation UK

The financial commitment varies significantly depending on the complexity of the case and the stage reached. The table below provides indicative ranges. All court fees should be verified against the current HMCTS fee schedule on GOV.UK before proceedings are issued.

Item Indicative amount Notes
Administrative Court permission fee (judicial review) Verify current HMCTS fee on GOV.UK Fee is payable on filing; check GOV.UK court and tribunal fees page for the current amount and any fee remission eligibility
Counsel fees (permission + substantive hearing) £5,000–£50,000+ Varies by complexity, urgency and seniority of counsel instructed; VAT applies
External immigration solicitor (representations / administrative review) £1,500–£10,000+ Depends on evidence volume and whether urgent out‑of‑hours drafting is required
HR operational and remediation costs Variable Internal costs: staff time, compliance training, policy redrafting, SMS remediation
Sponsor licence re‑application (if revocation upheld) Current Home Office application fee, verify on GOV.UK Fees are updated periodically; check the GOV.UK sponsor licence application fees page

Employers should also budget for the possibility of adverse costs if judicial review is unsuccessful, although protective costs orders may be available in public‑interest cases.

What changed in the sponsor licence revocation process in 2026

UKVI updated several pieces of guidance in 2026 that directly affect how employers should respond to a sponsor licence suspension or revocation. The key changes, reflected in the updated Compliance Casework Guidance published on GOV.UK, include the following:

  • Strengthened evidence expectations. The updated Compliance Casework Guidance places greater emphasis on documentary evidence of ongoing compliance, not just compliance at the point of the original licence application. Employers must demonstrate continuous adherence to sponsor duties throughout the life of the licence.
  • Expanded scope of compliance visits. Early indications suggest that UKVI is conducting more unannounced visits and that the scope of Basic Compliance Assessments now covers a wider range of sponsor duties, including record‑keeping and reporting obligations under the Workers and temporary workers guidance for sponsors, Part 3.
  • Administrative review process refinements. The GOV.UK administrative review caseworker guidance has been updated to clarify the types of caseworker errors that can be corrected on review. Employers and their representatives should review the updated guidance to ensure submission packs are framed around the permissible grounds.
  • Increased use of suspension as an intermediate measure. Industry observers expect UKVI to use suspension more frequently as a precursor to revocation, giving employers a narrow window to make representations. This window is critical and should not be wasted.

The practical effect of these 2026 changes is that employers must maintain compliance‑ready documentation at all times, not merely assemble it reactively after a visit. The remediation plan prepared in Step 5 above should explicitly reference the updated Compliance Casework Guidance to demonstrate awareness of current standards.

Common pitfalls when responding to a sponsor licence revocation and how to avoid them

  • Failing to preserve evidence immediately. Delaying even 48 hours can result in lost SMS data, overwritten emails or incomplete records. Initiate evidence lockdown within hours of the visit or notice.
  • Delaying instruction of external counsel. The administrative review and JR timetables are tight. Instruct specialist immigration counsel on the day the decision letter arrives.
  • Ignoring the PAP requirement. Filing judicial review without first serving a pre‑action protocol letter risks an adverse costs order and may undermine credibility with the court.
  • Poor communication with sponsored workers. Oversharing (speculating about outcomes) or under‑communicating (leaving employees in the dark) both create risk. Use prepared scripts reviewed by counsel.
  • Overlooking SMS record deficiencies. If SMS records are incomplete, this will be identified by UKVI. Proactively audit and correct SMS entries as part of the remediation plan.
  • Missing the administrative review window. The deadline stated in the decision letter is strict. Diarise it on the day the letter is received and work backwards to set internal drafting deadlines.
  • Submitting unstructured or incomplete evidence packs. Administrative review and JR submissions must be clearly indexed and paginated. Disorganised bundles delay processing and weaken the case.
  • Failing to implement remediation in parallel. Courts and UKVI respond positively to evidence that the employer has already taken corrective action. Waiting for the legal outcome before remediating is a missed opportunity.
  • Not budgeting for adverse costs. If JR is unsuccessful, the employer may face the Home Office’s legal costs. Discuss costs risk and protective costs orders with counsel at the outset.
  • Assuming re‑application is straightforward. A fresh sponsor licence application after revocation requires comprehensive evidence that all previous failings have been addressed. Treat the re‑application as a new compliance case, not a formality.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Anna Bose at ADBH Advisory Limited, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. GOV.UK, Workers and temporary workers: guidance for sponsors (Part 3: sponsor duties and compliance)
  2. GOV.UK, Employees: if your visa sponsor loses their licence
  3. GOV.UK, Administrative review: caseworker guidance
  4. GOV.UK, Compliance Casework Guidance (Home Office)
  5. Civil Procedure Rules (CPR) Part 54, Judicial Review procedure (legislation.gov.uk)
  6. GOV.UK, HMCTS court and tribunal fees
  7. Judiciary of England & Wales, Administrative Court guidance

FAQs

Can you appeal a sponsor licence revocation?
There is no statutory right of appeal against a sponsor licence revocation. The two practical routes are administrative review, available only where the decision letter expressly offers it, and judicial review in the Administrative Court under CPR Part 54. Administrative review examines whether a caseworker error was made. Judicial review tests the lawfulness of the decision on grounds such as error of law, procedural unfairness or failure to follow published policy.
Within 24 hours: assign an internal lead, preserve all immigration and HR records, secure SMS data and instruct external counsel. Within 72 hours: identify all affected sponsored workers, check CoS validity, prepare employee communication scripts, issue payroll instructions and begin compiling the evidence bundle. Representations or an administrative review request should follow as soon as the evidence pack is ready.
Check the decision letter to confirm whether administrative review is available and note the filing deadline. Prepare a clearly indexed evidence pack that addresses each of UKVI’s findings, cross‑referencing supporting documents (SMS records, payroll evidence, remediation steps). If administrative review is not offered, representations can be made directly to UKVI during a suspension period, or the employer can proceed to the PAP and judicial review route.
Judicial review should be considered where there are arguable errors of law or procedural unfairness and administrative review is unavailable or has been exhausted. Under CPR Part 54, the claim must be filed promptly and in any event within three months of the decision. In practice, courts expect action well within this outer limit. Serve the PAP letter first, then file the claim if the Home Office does not reconsider.
UKVI may curtail the leave of all workers sponsored under the revoked licence. According to GOV.UK guidance, affected employees are typically given 60 days to find a new sponsor, switch to a different immigration category or make arrangements to leave the United Kingdom. Employers must inform affected workers promptly and provide practical support, including reference letters and information about alternative visa routes.
External immigration counsel should be instructed immediately, on the day a suspension or revocation notice is received, or as soon as a UKVI compliance visit escalates into formal enforcement action. Early instruction is essential because the deadlines for administrative review and judicial review are tight, PAP letters require specialist drafting, and counsel can advise on interim relief if the situation is urgent.

Find the right Advisory Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading advisory professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
ADVISORS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF ADVISORS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.

Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.

About Us

Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

GAE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

What to Do If Your UK Sponsor Licence Is Suspended or Revoked: Step‑by‑step Legal Response (2026)

Send welcome message

Custom Message