Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) is the UK's gateway to permanent settlement — letting you live, work, and study in the United Kingdom without time limits or visa renewals. This complete 2026 guide covers ILR meaning, qualifying routes, the 180-day absence rule, the new £3,226 application fee from 8 April 2026, and how settlement compares to British citizenship under the current Immigration Rules.
The standard 5-year qualifying period for settlement remains in force as of May 2026, despite the Home Office's ongoing "earned settlement" consultation. From 8 April 2026 the ILR application fee rose to £3,226 per applicant; priority service is £500 extra and super priority £1,000 extra. The Immigration Health Surcharge is not payable on ILR. B1 English is the current standard, with B2 due to take effect from 26 March 2027 under HC 1691.
Understanding Indefinite Leave to Remain in the UK 2026
Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR), also called settlement or permanent residence, is an immigration status that allows you to live and work in the UK without any time restrictions. Unlike temporary visas that require renewal, ILR grants the right to stay in the UK indefinitely, provided you do not break its conditions. The rules governing ILR are set out across the Immigration Rules Appendices on settlement and vary depending on the visa category you hold.
What Is Indefinite Leave to Remain?
ILR Meaning and Status Explained
ILR stands for Indefinite Leave to Remain — the UK's permanent residence status. It lets you live, work, and study in the UK without a time limit. ILR holders can access public funds, sponsor family members, and apply for British citizenship after holding settlement for at least 12 months (or immediately for spouses of British citizens, subject to the 3-year naturalisation residence requirement).
ILR is the final immigration milestone before British citizenship. Children born in the UK to a parent with ILR automatically become British citizens at birth. For adult applicants, ILR is granted on the basis of a qualifying period of lawful residence — most commonly 5 years on a single eligible route — combined with English language, Life in the UK, and good-character requirements.
ILR vs Pre-Settled Status vs Settled Status
Under the EU Settlement Scheme, EU/EEA/Swiss nationals (and their family members) who were resident in the UK by 31 December 2020 obtained either pre-settled status (limited leave) or settled status (equivalent to ILR). Outside the EUSS framework, ILR is granted under the standard Immigration Rules. The application processes are separate, but settled status under the EUSS confers the same permanent rights as ILR.
ILR Routes and Eligibility Requirements
There are multiple ILR routes in the UK, each with its own qualifying period. Most work visas require 5 years of continuous residence, family visas typically require 5 years, and the Long Residence route requires 10 years of lawful stay. Global Talent and Innovator Founder visa holders can settle in just 3 years. BNO visa holders qualify after 5 years.
The ILR route you follow depends on your current immigration status. Each route has specific eligibility criteria including qualifying residence periods, English language requirements, and the Life in the UK test. The Home Office assesses applications under the rules in force at the time of application, not those in place when you arrived.
What Are the Main ILR Routes in the UK?
| ILR Route | Qualifying Period | Key Requirements |
|---|---|---|
| Skilled Worker sponsorship route | 5 years | Continuous sponsorship, salary threshold met, B1 English. See Skilled Worker ILR criteria for full details. |
| Spouse and unmarried partner route | 5 years (or 2 years pre-July 2012) | Genuine and subsisting relationship, £29,000 minimum income requirement, A2 English at extension stage |
| UK Ancestry route for Commonwealth citizens | 5 years | Commonwealth citizen with UK-born grandparent, evidence of working in the UK |
| Long Residence (Appendix Long Residence) | 10 years | Lawful continuous residence in the UK with no significant immigration breaches |
| Family Life 10-year route (Appendix FM) | 10 years | Article 8 family or private life basis where the 5-year route requirements are not met |
| Global Talent endorsement route | 3 or 5 years | 3 years for "exceptional talent"; 5 years for "exceptional promise" subcategory |
| Innovator Founder route for entrepreneurs | 3 years | Endorsed business meeting innovation, viability and scalability criteria |
| Dependent partner and child route | Same as main applicant | Relationship maintained throughout, apply with or after main applicant |
| British National (Overseas) 5+1 pathway | 5 years (plus 1 year for citizenship) | BN(O) status holders from Hong Kong and qualifying family members |
| Bereavement settlement after a partner's death | Immediate (during partner route) | Partner died during qualifying period; relationship was genuine at the time |
Core ILR Requirements for All Routes
Regardless of route, most ILR applicants must meet these standard requirements set out in the Immigration Rules:
- Continuous residence: Complete the required qualifying period without significant breaks under the continuous residence framework in Appendix CR
- 180-day absence rule: Not spent more than 180 days outside the UK in any rolling 12-month period
- English language: Pass a B1 CEFR English test (A2 was acceptable at extension stage on family routes; B2 mandatory from 26 March 2027 under HC 1691)
- Life in the UK test: Pass the £50 Life in the UK test on British history, culture, government and institutions — see our Life in the UK test preparation guide for content coverage and exam strategy
- Good character: No unspent criminal convictions and no Part 9 general grounds for refusal issues
- Valid immigration status: Lawful leave maintained throughout the qualifying period
The ILR 180-Day Absence Rule Explained
The 180-day rule requires ILR applicants to have spent no more than 180 days outside the UK in any rolling 12-month period during their qualifying residence. Since 11 January 2018, this is calculated on a rolling basis rather than fixed annual periods — meaning at any point during your qualifying period, looking back 12 months, you must not have been outside the UK for more than 180 days.
The 180-day absence rule is one of the most critical ILR requirements and a common reason for application refusals. The calculation method is codified in Appendix Continuous Residence in the Immigration Rules. Understanding how absences are calculated can make the difference between approval and refusal.
How Is the 180-Day Rule Calculated?
Since 11 January 2018, the Home Office calculates absences on a rolling 12-month basis. This means at any point during your qualifying period, looking back exactly 12 months, you must not have been outside the UK for more than 180 days. The rolling calculation continues right up to the date of your ILR application.
| Aspect | Before 11 January 2018 | From 11 January 2018 |
|---|---|---|
| Calculation method | Fixed 12-month periods from each visa anniversary | Rolling 12-month basis at any point |
| Maximum absence | 180 days per fixed visa year | 180 days in any rolling 12 months |
| Strategic timing | Could spread absences across visa years | Must track absences continuously |
| Where codified | Old paragraph 245 / route-specific paragraphs | Appendix Continuous Residence (CR 3.1–3.4) |
Exceptions to the 180-Day Rule
Appendix CR sets out limited exceptions where absences may be disregarded:
- Serious illness: Documented medical emergencies that prevented return, including treatment of the applicant or a family member
- Travel restrictions: Government-imposed travel bans (the COVID-19 concession previously applied)
- Conflict, civil unrest or natural disaster: Where the applicant was unable to return safely
- Crown service: Service overseas for the British government, British Council, armed forces, or a UK-based organisation in the public interest
- Dependent children: Children applying as dependants are generally not subject to the 180-day rule in the same way
- Research-related absences: Skilled Worker and Global Talent applicants on research projects with employer approval
ILR Application Process and Fees 2026
The standard ILR application fee from 8 April 2026 is £3,226 per applicant — including dependants applying at the same time. Applications are submitted online via the UKVI portal, followed by a biometric appointment at a UKVCAS service point. Standard processing takes up to 6 months; Priority Service (£3,726 total) targets 5 working days and Super Priority (£4,226 total) targets next working day.
Applying for indefinite leave to remain involves completing the correct application form, gathering supporting documents, and attending a biometric appointment. You can apply up to 28 days before completing your qualifying residence period. The Immigration Health Surcharge is not payable on ILR applications.
Step-by-Step ILR Application Process
- Step 1: Pass the Life in the UK test (£50) and obtain your English language certificate at B1 CEFR level
- Step 2: Complete the relevant SET application forms guide — SET(O) for work routes, SET(M) for family routes, or SET(LR) for long residence
- Step 3: Submit your application through the online application portal and pay the £3,226 fee
- Step 4: Book and attend your biometric appointment at a UKVCAS service point
- Step 5: Upload supporting documents including passport, travel history, sponsorship continuity (work routes), or relationship evidence (family routes)
- Step 6: Await decision — see our guide to UK visa processing time after biometrics for the full timeline
ILR Fees and Priority Service Options 2026
From 8 April 2026, ILR fees rose from £3,029 to £3,226 per applicant — an increase of £197. The complete breakdown of Home Office fees for ILR, BRP and citizenship is updated for the new schedule.
| Service Level | Total Cost per Applicant (2026) | Decision Target |
|---|---|---|
| Standard ILR application | £3,226 | Up to 6 months — see ILR decision timescales |
| Priority Service | £3,226 + £500 = £3,726 | 5 working days from biometrics |
| Super Priority Service | £3,226 + £1,000 = £4,226 | End of next working day |
| Immigration Health Surcharge | £0 (not payable on ILR) | — |
| Life in the UK test | £50 per person | One-off — valid indefinitely |
Both expedited options move your file to the front of the decision queue but do not influence the eligibility assessment. For the wider Priority and Super Priority services across all routes, including availability and limitations, see our dedicated guide. The Immigration Health Surcharge payment is not required at the settlement stage — IHS only applies to temporary leave.
Which ILR Application Form Do I Need?
- Form SET(O): Work routes (Skilled Worker, T2 General legacy, UK Ancestry, ECAA Turkish Workers and Businesspersons), Overseas Domestic Worker pathway, and the Turkish ECAA Worker and Businessperson route
- Form SET(M): Family routes (spouse / partner 5-year route ILR, parents, children of settled persons) — requires evidence of a genuine and subsisting relationship
- Form SET(LR): Long residence route (10 years lawful continuous residence under Appendix Long Residence)
- Form SET(F): Children of relatives with limited leave; refugees and humanitarian protection settlement
- Form SET(BUS): Legacy Tier 1 Entrepreneur settlement and other closed business routes still in legacy transition
ILR vs British Citizenship: Key Differences
ILR grants permanent residence but can lapse after 2+ years' absence or be revoked for serious criminal conduct. British citizenship is truly permanent, gives you a British passport, full voting rights, and cannot be revoked under normal circumstances. You can apply for citizenship 12 months after obtaining ILR (or immediately if married to a British citizen and meeting the 3-year residence requirement).
While indefinite leave to remain provides significant rights, it differs from British citizenship in important ways. Understanding these differences helps you plan the final step of your UK settlement journey.
| Aspect | Indefinite Leave to Remain | British Citizenship |
|---|---|---|
| Permanence | Lapses after 2+ years' absence; revocable for deportation | Permanent (except in cases of fraud or serious crime) |
| British passport | Not eligible | Eligible — £102 standard adult passport fee |
| Voting rights | Limited (Commonwealth & Irish citizens with ILR can vote in some elections) | Full voting rights including in general elections |
| Right to work | Unrestricted in the UK | Unrestricted in the UK |
| Access to public funds | Full access | Full access |
| Deportation risk | Possible for serious crimes | Very limited — only in cases of fraud, terrorism, or national security |
| Naturalisation fee 2026 | £3,226 application fee | £1,709 plus £130 citizenship ceremony fee |
| Time before next step | 12 months on ILR before citizenship (or 0 months for spouses of British citizens, subject to 3-year residence) | British status is the end of the immigration journey |
Life After ILR: Rights, Benefits, and Responsibilities
ILR holders can work without restrictions, access public benefits including the NHS, and sponsor family members for UK visas. Children born in the UK to ILR holders automatically become British citizens at birth. After 12 months with ILR — or immediately if you are married to a British citizen and have completed 3 years of UK residence — you can apply for British citizenship.
Once granted indefinite leave to remain, your immigration status changes significantly. However, ILR comes with ongoing responsibilities to maintain your status — particularly around travel and conduct.
ILR Benefits and Rights
- Work freely: No sponsorship or work permit required for any UK employment
- Access public funds: Eligible for benefits, NHS treatment without surcharge, and social housing
- Sponsor family: Can sponsor a spouse, partner, or dependent children to join you in the UK
- Children born in UK: Automatically British citizens at birth under section 1(1) of the British Nationality Act 1981
- Path to citizenship: Eligible for naturalisation after 12 months with ILR (subject to residence and good character requirements)
- Study freely: Access to home fees for higher education and student finance after 3 years' ordinary residence
- Start a business: No restrictions on self-employment, directorship, or business ownership
How Can You Lose ILR Status?
ILR is "indefinite" but not unconditional. It can be lost or revoked in the following circumstances:
- Extended absence: ILR lapses if you remain outside the UK for more than 2 consecutive years (section 76 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002)
- Deportation: Serious criminal convictions can lead to deportation orders and ILR revocation under the UK Borders Act 2007
- Fraud or deception: If ILR was obtained through false representation, concealment of facts, or other forms of deception
- National security: Involvement in activities threatening UK security, including terrorism-related conduct
Earned Settlement Consultation: Proposed Changes
In November 2025, the Home Office launched a consultation titled "A Fairer Pathway to Settlement", proposing the most significant overhaul of UK settlement rules in decades. The consultation closed on 12 February 2026 with over 200,000 responses. As of May 2026, no rule changes have yet been brought into force — the current 5-year baseline route remains the law.
Until new Immigration Rules are laid, the current settlement framework remains in force. Applications continue to be assessed under the rules in force on the date of submission. If you are approaching your 5-year qualifying date in 2026, applying as soon as you are eligible — and well before any rule change commencement date — is the safest course.
- Completed your qualifying residence period (typically 5 years on a single eligible route)
- No more than 180 days outside the UK in any rolling 12-month period
- Passed the Life in the UK test (£50, valid indefinitely)
- Met English language requirement at CEFR B1 level
- No unspent criminal convictions or Part 9 suitability issues
- Valid passport plus prior travel evidence (entry/exit stamps, eVisa travel log)
- Application fee of £3,226 per applicant ready (plus priority fees if used)
- Route-specific supporting documents prepared (sponsorship continuity, relationship evidence, or residence proof)
- Biometric appointment booked at a UKVCAS service point
- ILR grants permanent residence with unrestricted work, study, and public funds access
- Most routes require 5 years of continuous residence; Long Residence requires 10 years; Global Talent and Innovator Founder allow 3 years
- The 180-day absence rule is calculated on a rolling 12-month basis since 11 January 2018
- Application fee from 8 April 2026 is £3,226 per applicant — no IHS payable on ILR
- ILR can lapse after 2+ years' absence — many holders apply for British citizenship to lock in their status
- The Home Office's "earned settlement" consultation closed in February 2026; no rule changes are yet in force as of May 2026
Frequently Asked Questions
ILR stands for Indefinite Leave to Remain, which is the UK's permanent residence status. It allows you to live, work, and study in the UK without time restrictions. ILR holders can access public benefits, sponsor family members for visas, and apply for British citizenship after holding settlement for 12 months (or immediately if married to a British citizen, subject to a 3-year residence requirement for naturalisation).
ILR requirements include completing the qualifying residence period (typically 5 years), not exceeding 180 days outside the UK in any rolling 12-month period, passing the Life in the UK test, meeting B1 English language proficiency (B2 from 26 March 2027), having no unspent criminal convictions or Part 9 general grounds issues, and maintaining valid lawful immigration status throughout the qualifying period.
Most ILR routes require 5 years of continuous residence in the UK. The Long Residence route requires 10 years. Global Talent and Innovator Founder visa holders can settle in 3 years. After meeting the residence requirement, standard ILR application processing takes up to 6 months. Priority processing (5 working days) costs an additional £500, and super priority (next working day) costs £1,000 extra.
The 180-day rule means you cannot spend more than 180 days outside the UK in any rolling 12-month period during your qualifying residence. Since 11 January 2018, this is calculated on a rolling basis at any point during your qualifying period, not fixed annual periods. The rule is codified in Appendix Continuous Residence of the Immigration Rules. Exceeding the limit may break your continuous residence and reset your qualifying period.
ILR grants permanent residence but can lapse after 2 years' absence from the UK or be revoked through deportation for serious criminal conduct. British citizenship is truly permanent, allows you to hold a British passport, gives full voting rights, and cannot be revoked under normal circumstances. You can apply for citizenship 12 months after obtaining ILR, or immediately if married to a British citizen (subject to a 3-year UK residence requirement).
From 8 April 2026, the ILR application fee is £3,226 per person — including each dependant applying at the same time. Priority processing adds £500 (total £3,726) for a 5 working day decision; super priority adds £1,000 (total £4,226) for a next working day decision. You will also need to pay £50 for the Life in the UK test and approximately £150 for an English language test if required. The Immigration Health Surcharge is not payable on ILR.
Yes. ILR lapses if you stay outside the UK for more than 2 consecutive years under section 76 of the Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002. It can also be revoked through deportation following serious criminal convictions, if obtained through fraud or deception, or for national security reasons including terrorism. To secure permanent status that cannot be lost through absence, many ILR holders apply for British citizenship after holding settlement for 12 months.
ILR benefits include unrestricted right to work in any job without sponsorship, full access to public funds and benefits, NHS treatment without surcharge, ability to sponsor family members for UK visas, automatic British citizenship for any child born in the UK to an ILR holder, access to home student fees for higher education, freedom to start a business or be self-employed, and eligibility to apply for British citizenship after 12 months.
You can apply for ILR up to 28 days before completing your qualifying residence period — for most routes, this is 5 years from your visa start date. Applying earlier than 28 days before the end of the qualifying period will result in refusal. If your application is refused, you can request an Administrative Review process within 14 days, although these only consider case-working errors rather than re-assessing the merits.
The Home Office consulted on extending the standard ILR qualifying period from 5 years to 10 years under the proposed "earned settlement" model. The consultation closed on 12 February 2026 and received over 200,000 responses. As of May 2026, no rule changes have been brought into force — the current 5-year route remains the law. The Home Secretary has indicated that phased implementation may begin later in 2026 if and when new Immigration Rules are laid. Spouses of British citizens, BN(O) visa holders, and EUSS settled status holders are proposed to be exempt from any extension.
For the most accurate guidance on your specific ILR route, refer to the relevant Appendix in the Immigration Rules and consider taking professional advice if your circumstances are complex — particularly if you have significant absences, immigration history concerns, or are approaching settlement on a route that may be affected by future earned settlement reforms.