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Related offices
- Atlanta, GA
- Auckland
- Beijing
- Bengaluru
- Boston, MA
- Brisbane
- Brussels (Benelux)
- Chicago, IL
- Miami, FL
- Dallas, TX
- Doha
- Dubai (DIFC)
- Frankfurt
- Hong Kong
- Houston, TX
- Irvine, CA
- Johannesburg
- Kochi
- Kuala Lumpur
- London
- Los Angeles, CA
- Matawan, NJ
- Melbourne
- Mexico City
- Nairobi
- New York, NY
- Perth
- Phoenix, AZ
- Rio de Janeiro
- San Diego, CA
- San Francisco, CA
- San Jose
- São Paulo
- Shanghai
- Sheffield
- Silicon Valley, CA
- Singapore
- Sydney
- Toronto
- Detroit, MI
- Washington, DC
- Zurich
Related offices
- Atlanta, GA
- Auckland
- Beijing
- Bengaluru
- Boston, MA
- Brisbane
- Brussels (Benelux)
- Chicago, IL
- Miami, FL
- Dallas, TX
- Doha
- Dubai (DIFC)
- Frankfurt
- Hong Kong
- Houston, TX
- Irvine, CA
- Johannesburg
- Kochi
- Kuala Lumpur
- London
- Los Angeles, CA
- Matawan, NJ
- Melbourne
- Mexico City
- Nairobi
- New York, NY
- Perth
- Phoenix, AZ
- Rio de Janeiro
- San Diego, CA
- San Francisco, CA
- San Jose
- São Paulo
- Shanghai
- Sheffield
- Silicon Valley, CA
- Singapore
- Sydney
- Toronto
- Detroit, MI
- Washington, DC
- Zurich
Last week I had the privilege of addressing 100 or so members of the UK's growing tech community. It was a really interesting and energised group, working on everything from virtual reality to innovative marketing.
It was also diverse in terms of experience. The larger portion of the audience consisted of tech whizzes from outside the EU, trying to understand how they can stay in the UK and ply their trade. We also had company founders, HR managers and investors.
The question then was -- how can you help a diverse group understand the visa system, whether in a ten-minute slot or in this blog? I decided to use the investment life cycle, a useful chart I found about six years ago.
Stages of the investment life cycle and immigration
The investment life cycle taught me that entrepreneurs start in what some call, ominously, the valley of death. Others call it sweat stage. This is where you are living hand to mouth, spending more money than is being brought in.
The UK visa system doesn't cater for every foreign entrepreneur during sweat stage. The government doesn't want to give free reign to everyone who can claim to have a good business idea. They do however cater for some with the Graduate Entrepreneur visa.
Graduate Entrepreneur status is available for two years to people who have completed their studies here and want to start a business. As always there is a control, and those young entrepreneurs need to be endorsed by a university. Can any university endorse them? No, but the list is pretty long.
Those who survive the valley of death can then move on to the Entrepreneur visa category. There are three main requirements here:
1. Funding: Normally £200k but you can rely on £50k from a prescribed investor (e.g. a seed competition) or from any legitimate source if you are switching from the graduate entrepreneur visa.
2. Genuineness: The Home Office does not want people masquerading as entrepreneurs to use the category. Be prepared to show your credentials and your business plan.
3. Job creation: Not an unreasonable requirement. The Home Office wants to see you are creating jobs before they extend your stay or give you a settlement.
As a company begins to scale up, possibly becoming a lifestyle business, it may need overseas expertise. That is where sponsorship comes in.
Companies can sponsor non-EU workers where there are no suitable resident workers available. First time around this can be a slow and cumbersome process -- to begin with you need a sponsor licence and the application can take one to three months to compile, submit and have considered. You are then looking at a two to nine weeks wait for a Certificate of Sponsorship or visa.
Once you have the licence things can move more quickly although you will normally need to advertise any permanent roles for 28 days before you can recruit from overseas. You might again need to wait two to nine weeks for a Certificate of Sponsorship and visa if the person is not in the UK.
Then we get to the people who really have made it, those who achieve a steep gazelle curve on the investment life cycle. If you are willing and able to invest £2,000,000 in the UK you can get an Investor visa and then permanent residence in five years. If you invest more it can be accelerated--£5,000,000 means permanent residence in three years, £10,000,000 gets you there in two years.
Personally, I would just buy an island somewhere and create my own visa system.
Last of all we have the Tech Nation visa. This is for the most exceptionally talented people in tech, whether on the coding or the business side (or both).
I'll write more about tech nation next week -- it deserves a piece by itself. But, essentially, if you are a leading person in your sector or think you could be a leading person, you can apply for an endorsement from Tech City. If their experts agree you can then apply to stay in the UK on that basis.
The UK system doesn't capture everyone who wants to stay and work in tech. But you have a decent chance of finding an option if you understand where you are against the investment life cycle.
Learn more about Ian Robinson.
Countries / Territories
- 🌐
Related offices
- Atlanta, GA
- Auckland
- Beijing
- Bengaluru
- Boston, MA
- Brisbane
- Brussels (Benelux)
- Chicago, IL
- Miami, FL
- Dallas, TX
- Doha
- Dubai (DIFC)
- Frankfurt
- Hong Kong
- Houston, TX
- Irvine, CA
- Johannesburg
- Kochi
- Kuala Lumpur
- London
- Los Angeles, CA
- Matawan, NJ
- Melbourne
- Mexico City
- Nairobi
- New York, NY
- Perth
- Phoenix, AZ
- Rio de Janeiro
- San Diego, CA
- San Francisco, CA
- San Jose
- São Paulo
- Shanghai
- Sheffield
- Silicon Valley, CA
- Singapore
- Sydney
- Toronto
- Detroit, MI
- Washington, DC
- Zurich
Related offices
- Atlanta, GA
- Auckland
- Beijing
- Bengaluru
- Boston, MA
- Brisbane
- Brussels (Benelux)
- Chicago, IL
- Miami, FL
- Dallas, TX
- Doha
- Dubai (DIFC)
- Frankfurt
- Hong Kong
- Houston, TX
- Irvine, CA
- Johannesburg
- Kochi
- Kuala Lumpur
- London
- Los Angeles, CA
- Matawan, NJ
- Melbourne
- Mexico City
- Nairobi
- New York, NY
- Perth
- Phoenix, AZ
- Rio de Janeiro
- San Diego, CA
- San Francisco, CA
- San Jose
- São Paulo
- Shanghai
- Sheffield
- Silicon Valley, CA
- Singapore
- Sydney
- Toronto
- Detroit, MI
- Washington, DC
- Zurich
Related offices
- Atlanta, GA
- Auckland
- Beijing
- Bengaluru
- Boston, MA
- Brisbane
- Brussels (Benelux)
- Chicago, IL
- Miami, FL
- Dallas, TX
- Doha
- Dubai (DIFC)
- Frankfurt
- Hong Kong
- Houston, TX
- Irvine, CA
- Johannesburg
- Kochi
- Kuala Lumpur
- London
- Los Angeles, CA
- Matawan, NJ
- Melbourne
- Mexico City
- Nairobi
- New York, NY
- Perth
- Phoenix, AZ
- Rio de Janeiro
- San Diego, CA
- San Francisco, CA
- San Jose
- São Paulo
- Shanghai
- Sheffield
- Silicon Valley, CA
- Singapore
- Sydney
- Toronto
- Detroit, MI
- Washington, DC
- Zurich
Explore more at Fragomen
Video
In this Mobility Minute, Associate Rebeca Lafond outlines key considerations for international travel to the United States during the holiday season, including documentation requirements, visa processing expectations and enhanced screening on entry.
Media mentions
Partner K. Edward Raleigh explains that the Department of Labor’s Project Firewall expands H-1B oversight beyond individual complaints and increases the scope of employer compliance reviews.
Media mentions
UK Government Affairs Strategy Director Shuyeb Muquit examines how proposed settlement reforms could reshape the path to UK residency by extending qualifying periods and linking eligibility to individual contribution.
Podcast
Partner Cosmina Morariu and Business Immigration Manager Ayana Ibrahimi discuss critical immigration strategies underpinning healthcare-sector staffing in Canada, unpacking how recent policy, mobility and compliance developments are affecting employers and global talent pipelines.
Awards
Fragomen named Private Client Team of the Year at The British Legal Awards 2025, recognising the strength of our UK Private Client practice.
Media mentions
Partner Daniel Brown highlights rising deceptive practices in immigration and emphasizes stronger verification and compliance measures for employers.
Media mentions
Senior Manager Louise Senior highlights how proposed UK reforms could expand right to work checks across hospitality and reshape compliance for businesses.
Video
Rick Lamanna, Jake Paul Minster and Lunga Mani discuss Africa’s path to the 2026 World Cup.
Media mentions
Partner Louise Haycock notes that the UK’s new fast-track residency route for high earners could affect how businesses plan for immigration costs.
Blog post
Senior Manager Zaur Gasimov outlines Georgia’s stricter residence-permit requirements and enhanced monitoring measures introduced under the country’s 2025 immigration reforms.
Media mentions
Senior Manager Jonathan Hill explains why more UK universities are on UKVI student visa action plans and how extended timeframes help them address compliance issues.
Media mentions
Partner Karolina Schiffter explains why Poland has paused online residence permit bookings and returned to paper-based submissions.
Video
In this Mobility Minute, Associate Rebeca Lafond outlines key considerations for international travel to the United States during the holiday season, including documentation requirements, visa processing expectations and enhanced screening on entry.
Media mentions
Partner K. Edward Raleigh explains that the Department of Labor’s Project Firewall expands H-1B oversight beyond individual complaints and increases the scope of employer compliance reviews.
Media mentions
UK Government Affairs Strategy Director Shuyeb Muquit examines how proposed settlement reforms could reshape the path to UK residency by extending qualifying periods and linking eligibility to individual contribution.
Podcast
Partner Cosmina Morariu and Business Immigration Manager Ayana Ibrahimi discuss critical immigration strategies underpinning healthcare-sector staffing in Canada, unpacking how recent policy, mobility and compliance developments are affecting employers and global talent pipelines.
Awards
Fragomen named Private Client Team of the Year at The British Legal Awards 2025, recognising the strength of our UK Private Client practice.
Media mentions
Partner Daniel Brown highlights rising deceptive practices in immigration and emphasizes stronger verification and compliance measures for employers.
Media mentions
Senior Manager Louise Senior highlights how proposed UK reforms could expand right to work checks across hospitality and reshape compliance for businesses.
Video
Rick Lamanna, Jake Paul Minster and Lunga Mani discuss Africa’s path to the 2026 World Cup.
Media mentions
Partner Louise Haycock notes that the UK’s new fast-track residency route for high earners could affect how businesses plan for immigration costs.
Blog post
Senior Manager Zaur Gasimov outlines Georgia’s stricter residence-permit requirements and enhanced monitoring measures introduced under the country’s 2025 immigration reforms.
Media mentions
Senior Manager Jonathan Hill explains why more UK universities are on UKVI student visa action plans and how extended timeframes help them address compliance issues.
Media mentions
Partner Karolina Schiffter explains why Poland has paused online residence permit bookings and returned to paper-based submissions.
