UK Secondment Worker Visa
Global Business Mobility Guidance by Visa Aid
The UK Secondment Worker Visa is part of the Global Business Mobility immigration routes. It allows overseas employees to be temporarily assigned to the UK to work on high-value contracts or projects linked to their overseas employer.
This is a temporary assignment visa.
It does not lead to settlement and is not a general work visa.
Visa Aid provides precise, compliance-focused guidance to help businesses and employees understand whether this route is appropriate before applying.
Who the Secondment Worker Visa Is For
You may be eligible if you:
- Are employed by an overseas company
- Are being seconded to the UK as part of a linked commercial contract
- Have worked for the overseas employer for the required minimum period
- Will remain employed by the overseas business during the UK assignment
- Have a valid Certificate of Sponsorship from a UK sponsor
This visa is employer-led. Employees cannot apply independently.
Visa Aid verifies both the worker and the business arrangement before proceeding.
What Makes This Visa Different
This route is specifically designed for situations where:
- A UK business has a high-value contract with an overseas company
- Overseas staff are required in the UK to fulfil that contract
- The worker is not transferring permanently to the UK entity
It is not the same as:
- Skilled Worker Visa
- Intra-Company Transfer
- Graduate Trainee route
Applying under the wrong category leads to refusal.
Key Conditions You Must Understand
The Secondment Worker Visa has strict limits:
- Maximum stay of up to 2 years
- No extension beyond the permitted period
- No settlement or Indefinite Leave to Remain
- No switching into most other visa categories from inside the UK
- Work permitted only for the sponsored assignment
This is a controlled, temporary mobility route.
Employer and Contract Requirements
The UK sponsor must:
- Hold a valid Global Business Mobility sponsor licence
- Have an approved contract or agreement with the overseas employer
- Demonstrate the genuine need for overseas staff in the UK
- Assign workers only for contract-related duties
Many refusals happen because the contract evidence is weak or unclear.
Visa Aid reviews commercial documentation before submission.
Application Process Explained
The process typically involves:
- Verifying overseas employment history
- Confirming the qualifying contract
- Issuing a Certificate of Sponsorship
- Preparing supporting evidence
- Submitting the visa application
- Attending biometrics
- Waiting for a Home Office decision
Visa Aid focuses on consistency between employment, contract, and role.
Documents Commonly Required
Applicants usually need:
- Certificate of Sponsorship reference
- Evidence of overseas employment
- Details of the qualifying UK contract
- Assignment role description
- Valid passport
- Health and character documents
Incomplete contract evidence is one of the most common refusal reasons.
What This Visa Does Not Allow
This visa does not allow:
- Long-term residence
- Settlement
- Changing employers
- Unrelated employment
- Independent work in the UK
If your goal is long-term work or settlement, this is not the correct route.
Visa Aid will be direct about this.
Why Professional Guidance Matters
This visa sits between immigration law and commercial contracts.
Mistakes affect both visa outcomes and business relationships.
Visa Aid provides:
- Honest eligibility assessment
- Sponsor and contract verification
- Clear explanation of limits and risks
No shortcuts.
No assumptions.
Speak to Visa Aid
If your company is planning to second overseas staff to the UK, accuracy matters more than speed.
Do not rely on generic visa summaries.
Do not rely on outdated ICT advice.
Start with facts.
Book a confidential consultation with Visa Aid today