The UK kicked its wealthiest residents out the front door, and now it's quietly building a back door for the right kind of money to walk back in. Prime Minister Keir Starmer's government is quietly building a new investor visa - reportedly invite-only, with a price tag around £5 million - aimed at high-net-worth foreigners willing to put serious capital into strategic British industries.
A Response To A Record Millionaire Exodus
Henley & Partners' Wealth Migration Dashboard estimates Britain lost about 10,800 millionaires last year, which was the biggest wealth exodus on its record (though the figure is modeled and has been disputed). The trigger was Chancellor Rachel Reeves scrapping the country's non-dom tax regime and raising payroll taxes shortly after, with both moves hitting hiring and tax receipts at once.
The proposed visa is part of an immigration white paper saying the system should "attract the best talent, entrepreneurship and investment." Officials across the Home Office, Treasury, and Department for Business and Trade reportedly back the idea.
Eligible sectors include artificial intelligence, clean energy, and life sciences, while property investment, the old golden visa loophole, would be excluded from the new route.
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Why "Invite-Only" Is The Tell
The UK already tried a wide-open investor visa, which was the Tier 1 route that required £2 million in qualifying UK assets and gave faster settlement at £5 million and £10 million tiers. It was shut down in February 2022 after concerns that Russian money had used it to launder into British real estate and shell companies.
Going invite-only is the government's way of saying "not that again," with tighter vetting, pre-approved sectors, and a higher bar meant to filter out passive parkers of cash who just want a passport with their name on it.
The model has an echo in the US, where Donald Trump's "Gold Card" pitches residency to anyone who hands $5 million to the Treasury. The minimum threshold, holding periods, and exact application process for the UK plan haven't been finalized.
Government departments have declined to confirm details publicly, but the direction looks clear.
Worth Noting
When a country loses a record number of millionaires in 12 months, the response is rarely subtle. The UK's response is a velvet rope worth £5 million to step past.
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