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Thursday, February 19, 2026

UK Education Hub to support student mobility and degree recognition under India-UK Vision 2035

The UK and India have started a new chapter in their education collaboration with the opening of the UK Education Hub in New Delhi. The event was launched at the British Council on 18th February 2026, with UK Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy, British High Commissioner to India Lindy Cameron, and key figures from universities and education institutions in both countries in attendance.

The UK Education Hub aims to facilitate the education ambitions set out in the India-UK Vision 2035 roadmap, with a particular emphasis on collaboration between institutions, governments, and regulators. For students and young academics, this could translate to easier procedures for partnerships, recognition of qualifications, and opportunities.

At its core, the UK Education Hub aims to function as a central platform for engagement.

It will coordinate requests from UK universities seeking to collaborate in India and work with Indian ministries, regulators and sector bodies.

For students, this type of engagement can often influence what they experience on the ground, ranging from the availability of joint programs and dual degrees to easier credit transfers. When there are clearer channels of communication, collaborations in academics can progress faster with fewer obstacles.

The Hub will also create and manage a UK Universities in India Members Programme, designed to streamline interactions and information-sharing between participating institutions.

One of the Hub’s key responsibilities will be managing the Annual India-UK Education Dialogue at the ministerial level. These meetings help align priorities in areas such as research collaboration, skills development and regulatory frameworks.

For students, this type of engagement can often influence what they experience on the ground, ranging from the availability of joint programs and dual degrees to easier credit transfers. When there are clearer channels of communication, collaborations in academics can progress faster with fewer obstacles.

The Hub will also support inward and outward education and skills missions between the two countries.

These exchanges often lay the groundwork for research partnerships, faculty mobility and industry-academia collaboration — factors that indirectly expand options for students.

With UK institutions increasing their engagement in India, including the presence of campuses such as the University of Southampton’s Delhi campus, the education relationship is becoming more embedded locally. The Hub is expected to provide a more organised framework for this expanding footprint.

The British Council, which has worked in India for over seven decades, will anchor the initiative. As higher education becomes more international and policy-driven, platforms like this are likely to play a growing role in shaping how students move, study and build careers across borders.

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