Getting a visa for your partner to live in the UK

 This advise is applicable to the United Kingdom. Advice for Northern Ireland, Scotland, and Wales can be found here.

If you want your husband, wife, or partner to join you in the UK, they may need to obtain a visa, depending on where you are from.

If your partner is one of the following, they can apply for a family visa to come and live with you:

your husband, wife, civil partner, planned civil partner, or fiancé(e) your partner with whom you have shared a home for at least two years

They will only be able to apply for a family visa if you have one of the following:

British nationality indefinite leave to remain or right of abode refugee or humanitarian protection established status under the EU Settlement Scheme

If you have a pre-determined status,

Your partner may be eligible for a family visa. Before they apply for a family visa, see if your partner may apply for the EU Settlement Scheme, which is simpler and less expensive than filing for a family visa.

If you arrived in the UK after 31 December 2020 and applied to the EU Settlement Scheme as a family member, your partner will be unable to apply for a family visa. If you are in this circumstance, your spouse will have to wait until you have obtained established status before applying for a family visa.

If you are in the UK on a skilled worker visa, your partner must apply on GOV.UK as a dependant of a Tier 2 (General) visa holder.

If you are a refugee or have humanitarian protection, your partner must apply for family reunification through GOV.UK.

The criteria fluctuate depending on the sort of partner, but you must always demonstrate that you have the money to support them and that your relationship is real.

Your partner may apply from outside the United Kingdom. They can also apply from within the UK if they have: been granted leave to remain in the UK for more than 6 months; are not in the UK on a visit visa; and are not applying as a fiancé (e)

If their original visa was for less than six months, they will not be able to change to a partner visa while staying in the UK. They'll have to leave the UK and reapply as a partner.

Coronavirus - if your visa is expiring and you are unable to extend it or leave the UK

If your visa expires before the end of September 2021, you must request an extension or leave the UK. This is referred to as 'extraordinary assurance.' GOV.UK has instructions on how to apply for extraordinary assurance.

For example, you may be unable to leave the UK if you have a medical condition that makes you 'very vulnerable' to coronavirus — check GOV.UK to see if you are extremely vulnerable.

Because of the coronavirus, the country you need to visit will not let you in, and you will be unable to arrange travel in time.

Check out how much you need to be earning Coronavirus - changes in how the government will assess your income

Normally, the government would examine your income in the six months preceding the date of your application to determine whether you make enough. If you earned less because of the coronavirus between 1 March 2020 and 31 October 2021, the rules are different.

If you are working and have lost your job or income,

The government will only consider your income in the six months before when you began earning less. This means that if you've earned less, your application will be unaffected.

If you've recently lost your job,

It's unclear how the government will compute your income if you've lost your job and haven't found another yet.

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