If you are married to or in a long-term relationship with a UK citizen or established visa holder, you can apply for a Family visa (Partner visa) to join them in the UK. The Partner visa is the primary family unification route, leading to settlement and eventual citizenship after five years. Unlike temporary visas, the Partner visa pathway is designed for those building long-term lives in the UK.
Who Can Apply for a Partner Visa?
You are eligible if:
- You are married to a UK citizen or visa holder (Skilled Worker, BN, ILR holder, etc.), or
- You are in a civil partnership with a UK citizen or visa holder, or
- You are in a long-term unmarried relationship (must have cohabited for 2+ years to qualify as “unmarried partner”)
Your UK partner must:
- Be a UK citizen, or
- Hold a valid visa granting them right of abode or indefinite leave
- Be a Skilled Worker, Family visa holder, or other long-term visa holder
Your partner cannot be on a Visitor, Student, or short-term visa; they must have established status.
You cannot apply as a Partner if:
- Your relationship is recent (less than 2 years for unmarried partners)
- Your partner is on a temporary visa (Student Route, Visitor)
- Your partner is polygamously married (in multiple simultaneous marriages)
Financial Requirements: The Sponsorship Threshold
Your UK partner must prove they can support you financially. The threshold is:
| Sponsorship Type | Annual Income Requirement | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employment income | £18,600 | Salary from employer |
| Self-employment | £18,600 | Average profit over 2–3 years |
| Pension | £18,600 | Retirement income |
| Savings alternative | £62,500 | (£18,600 × 3.33) if income insufficient |
| Combination | Proportional | Income + savings can combine |
Your partner must have been earning at least £18,600 for 6+ months (some exceptions for recent salary increases). Recent graduates on Graduate Route or Skilled Worker visa often struggle to meet this if earning just above the threshold.
Example: A partner earning £22,000/year meets the threshold. A partner earning £15,000/year does not; they would need £47,090 in savings (£18,600 − £15,000 = £3,600 shortfall × 3.33).
Proof of Financial Support: Documentation
Your partner must provide:
- Last 6 months of payslips and employment contract, or
- Last 2–3 years of accounts (if self-employed), or
- Pension statements showing regular income, or
- Bank statements showing savings (if using the savings route), or
- Combination: Mix of income and savings, proportionally calculated
All documents must be originals or certified copies, in English or professionally translated.
Proof of Relationship
You must prove your relationship is genuine and subsisting:
- Marriage certificate (original or certified copy)
- Civil partnership certificate (original or certified copy)
- Proof of cohabitation (for unmarried partners):
- Joint tenancy or mortgage documents
- Joint council tax registration
- Utility bills in both names
- Bank statements showing joint account or transfers
- Witness statements from family or friends
- Evidence of commitment:
- Photos together
- Communication records (emails, messages, call logs)
- Joint holidays or trips
- Plans to live together in the UK
For unmarried partners, you must evidence 2+ years of continuous cohabitation. Short breaks or separations do not restart the clock, but permanent separation ends the relationship.
Application Process and Timeline
Step 1: Your UK partner sponsors you by submitting a “Sponsorship Endorsement” through UK Immigration Online. This notifies UKVI that they are supporting your visa application.
Step 2: You apply for your Family/Partner visa on the UKVI portal using:
- Your partner’s sponsorship reference
- Proof of relationship (marriage certificate, etc.)
- Financial evidence of their income/savings
- Your personal details and passport
Step 3: Pay the visa fee and IHS:
| Cost | Amount (GBP) |
|---|---|
| Visa fee (indefinite leave or first extension) | £1,145 |
| IHS annual | £1,035/year |
| Total (1-year visa) | £2,180 |
Partner visas are typically granted for 2–5 years initially, not indefinite length.
Step 4: Attend biometric appointment.
Step 5: Receive visa decision (4–8 weeks typical).
Processing Timelines
| Phase | Duration |
|---|---|
| Sponsorship endorsement to application | 1–2 weeks |
| Application submission to biometric | 2–4 weeks |
| Biometric to decision | 4–8 weeks |
| Total | 7–14 weeks |
Partner visas process slightly slower than Student or Skilled Worker visas due to complex financial and relationship verification.
Visa Duration: Two-Year and Five-Year Routes
Partner visas are issued in two pathways:
Pathway 1 - Standard 2-5 Year Route:
- Initial visa: 2–5 years (UKVI decides based on circumstances)
- You can extend for another 2–5 years before settlement
- After two extensions (typically 5–10 years total), you can apply for ILR and settlement
Pathway 2 - Accelerated Route (if certain criteria met):
- If your partner is settled (ILR or citizen), you may qualify for a longer initial visa
- Check with UKVI or your adviser for eligibility
Most international students transitioning to Family visa follow the 2-5 year route, reapplying or extending before ILR.
Dependant Children on Partner Visa
If you have children, they can apply for dependent visas simultaneously with you. Financial requirements scale:
- First child: +£547/year
- Each additional child: +£410/year
Example: Partner earning £18,600 + spouse (£0 added) + 2 children = £18,600 + £957 = £19,557. The partner still meets the threshold.
Life in the UK on Partner Visa
With a Partner visa, you can:
- Work in any job: No sponsorship restriction (unlike Student Route’s 20-hour limit during term)
- Self-employment: Start your own business
- Study: Full-time or part-time, any level
- NHS access: Via IHS payment
- Travel outside UK: Ensure your visa is valid for re-entry
You cannot:
- Access most welfare benefits: No recourse to public funds (NRPF) typically applies to Partner visa holders
Transitioning to ILR and Settlement
After your Partner visa period (typically 5 years total if extended), you can apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR):
- You must have held Partner visa for 5 continuous years (or meet other criteria)
- You must still be in a genuine relationship with your sponsor
- Your sponsor must still meet financial requirements
- You must pass the Life in the UK test and English language requirement (if not exempt)
Once you have ILR:
- You have indefinite right to stay in the UK
- You are not dependent on your sponsor
- After 1 year of ILR, you can apply for British citizenship
This pathway—Student → Graduate → Skilled Worker → Partner → ILR → Citizenship—is one common route to full settlement.
Common Pitfalls and Issues
Relationship authenticity: UKVI carefully scrutinises Partner visa relationships for fraud. Provide extensive evidence of genuine relationship. Short relationships (under 2 years for unmarried) are rejected.
Financial shortfall: Ensure your sponsor truly meets the £18,600 threshold with documentation. Recent salary increases or variable income can complicate this.
Visa sponsor’s status: If your UK partner is on a temporary visa (Student, Visitor), they cannot sponsor you. Wait until they are settled or become a citizen.
Timing: Do not apply for Partner visa while you are on Student Route if you cannot afford it. Graduate Route combined with Skilled Worker visa can allow time to build the required income.
This article is for general information only and is not immigration advice. Consult a regulated OISC/IAA adviser for your case.
Sources
- gov.uk: Family Visas
- UKVI Immigration Rules, Appendix Family (Partner)
- UKCISA: Family Visas and Sponsorship
Last updated: 2025-09.