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Oct 29, 2025

British Red Cross warns refugee family-reunion overhaul could separate 4,900 families

British Red Cross warns refugee family-reunion overhaul could separate 4,900 families
A new British Red Cross report, "I Returned to Life", cautions that Government plans to tighten the UK’s refugee family-reunion rules could strand more than 4,900 families—including 6,300 children—between now and April 2026 . The family-reunion visa route has been suspended since September; proposals circulating in Whitehall would re-open it only with stringent financial, accommodation and English-language requirements and a minimum residence period for sponsors.

Because newly recognised refugees are barred from working while their asylum claims are decided, most would be unable to meet income thresholds. British Red Cross argues this would leave unaccompanied minors in unsafe regions and push desperate relatives toward dangerous irregular journeys. Historically, women and children have comprised 91 % of family-reunion grantees .

If implemented, the changes would mark the biggest overhaul of humanitarian family migration in two decades. NGOs fear reputational damage for the UK and additional pressure on already-stretched local authorities as separated families struggle to integrate. Corporate mobility teams that support refugee-talent or humanitarian sponsorship programmes should factor in longer lead-times and higher support costs for dependent visas.

The Red Cross is urging exemptions for unaccompanied children and high-risk cases, plus transitional support such as English classes and faster qualification recognition so families can meet the new criteria. With final policy details expected by Spring 2026, stakeholders still have a narrow window to influence the outcome.
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