• insights-banner

    In the Press

The Grocer quotes Kelvin Tanner on the impact of upcoming visa changes on the hospitality industry

The government announced in December changes to immigration law that will see the minimum salary required for a skilled overseas worker visa increase from £26,200 to £38,700.

Several food businesses and trade associations have warned the move will cut out a lifeline of vital staff currently filling hard-to-hire roles such as chefs, butchers, poultry and fish processors, and farmers.

Our immigration team represent clients across hospitality, retail and manufacturing and  have observed a “clear increase in the number of skilled worker applications submitted over the past few months and a particular rush since the beginning of 2024."

Kelvin Tanner, Partner in our immigration team, provides comment for The Grocer:

“Amongst our clients, we have seen the biggest rush to file applications within the hospitality, retail and manufacturing sectors and for regional roles that would be unable to meet the higher minimum salary thresholds when they are introduced."

Kelvin adds that clients in the hospitality sector in London were “already finding it very difficult to fill vacancies for specialist chefs from within the UK following the end of the EU free movement”.

“In addition to training people locally, they were forced to develop overseas recruitment pipelines that will become unviable based on the new Skilled Worker salary levels.”

Read the full piece in The Grocer here

Our thinking

  • UK Labour Government + Immigration policy = More Quangos. UK business should follow the math and plan for 2030

    Paul McCarthy

    Quick Reads

  • Retailers and consumer credit – the need for regular check ups

    Richard Ellis

    Quick Reads

  • City AM quotes Mary Bagnall on the Thatchers v Aldi trademark appeal

    Mary Bagnall

    In the Press

  • Kelvin Tanner and Adam Kyte write for Personnel Today on the impact of government immigration plans on UK business strategy

    Kelvin Tanner

    In the Press

  • Charles Russell Speechlys ‘Client Conversations’ welcomes one of England’s most celebrated male cricketers of the past thirty years, Mark Ramprakash

    Simon Ridpath

    News

  • Client Conversations Podcast: Mark Ramprakash

    Simon Ridpath

    Podcasts

  • Charles Russell Speechlys strengthens its Financial Services Regulation offering with the appointment of Charlotte Hill as Partner

    Charlotte Hill

    News

  • Modernising Business Tenancies: Where and how should disputes be heard?

    Andrew Ross

    Insights

  • Broker duties, lender liability and secret commission: broking bad

    Rebecca Hollinshead

    Insights

  • The Telegraph quotes Henry Fea on the changes to inheritance tax breaks and the likely impact on family farms in the fictional BBC radio drama 'The Archers'

    Henry Fea

    In the Press

  • Hydrogen Hurdles: navigating the path to net zero in the UK

    Rachael Davidson

    Insights

  • The Law Society Gazette quotes Joe Cohen and Aileen Johnson in a feature on ‘GenAI two years on’

    Joe Cohen

    In the Press

  • Navigating UK Financial Services Regulation: A Guide for Insolvency Practitioners

    Daniel Moore

    Insights

  • Tamasin Perkins writes for the Financial Times’ Your Questions column on succession planning

    Tamasin Perkins

    In the Press

  • An Overview of the Court of Arbitration for Sport

    Benoît Pasquier

    Insights

  • A company can claim privilege against its own shareholder

    Emilie Brammer

    Insights

  • Radiotelevisione svizzera (RSI) interviews Sophie Dworetzsky on the UK non-dom tax changes and the appeal of Switzerland

    Sophie Dworetzsky

    In the Press

  • Tamasin Perkins writes for Wealth Briefing on the assisted dying bill and lessons from financial abuse claims

    Tamasin Perkins

    In the Press

  • A range of titles including the Financial Times, Daily Telegraph and The Times quote Claire Fallows on M&S receiving approval to demolish its flagship Oxford Street store

    Claire Fallows

    In the Press

  • Neurodiversity and the Law: Creating a Supportive Work Environment

    Briony Richards

    Insights

Back to top