ILR 10-Year Rule 2026
What Indian Nationals in the UK Must Prepare For Now

ILR 10-year rule 2026

Introduction

Major changes to the UK’s ILR settlement rules are coming – and if you are an Indian national living and working in the UK, the time to prepare is right now, before those changes arrive. The UK Home Secretary, Shabana Mahmood, publicly confirmed in March 2026 that the proposed “Earned Settlement” reform – which would replace the current 5-year Skilled Worker ILR route with a new 10-year baseline – will be implemented in Autumn 2026. While nothing has changed on GOV.UK yet, the confirmed timeline means many Indian nationals currently mid-way through their qualifying period need to understand what is proposed, what is already in force, and what they should do today.

The SmartMove2UK has helped over 2,500 Indian nationals navigate UK immigration since 2009, and this guide gives you the clearest picture available as of April 2026.

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ILR 2026 – Current Rules vs Proposed Changes at a Glance

Topic Current Rules (In Force Today) Proposed Changes (Expected Autumn 2026)
5-year Skilled Worker route to ILR ✅ Still in force Standard ILR qualifying period: 5 years → 10-year baseline
10-year Long Residence route to ILR ✅ Still in force Proposed to be abolished for new qualifying periods
ILR application fee ✅ £3,226 (from 8 April 2026)
180-day absence limit per rolling year ✅ In force since 11 April 2024
B2 English for new Skilled Worker visa applications ✅ In force since 8 January 2026
B1 English for ILR applications (all routes) ✅ Still current requirement Proposed to move to B2
Fast-track options 3–5 years for high earners (proposed thresholds: £50,270 and £125,140)
Dependants Proposed to qualify independently

What Is ILR and Why These Proposed Changes Matter for Indian Nationals

Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) is the UK’s form of permanent residence. Once you hold ILR, you can live and work in the UK without any visa restrictions, sponsor family members, and – after 12 months – apply for British citizenship. For Indian nationals who have built careers and lives in the UK, ILR is the most important immigration milestone of all.

Under the current rules, most Indian professionals on a Skilled Worker visa can apply for ILR after five continuous years of residence. The proposed ILR 10-year rule 2026 would fundamentally change this, potentially doubling the qualifying period for most applicants. Understanding what is proposed – and acting now – can make a significant difference to your personal timeline.

The Current ILR Routes – Still Fully in Force Today

The 5-Year Skilled Worker Route (Currently Applies to You)

If you hold a Skilled Worker, Tier 2 General, or equivalent sponsored work visa, you can currently apply for ILR after five continuous years of lawful residence in the UK. This route remains fully live on GOV.UK as of April 2026. If your 5-year qualifying date falls before the proposed Autumn 2026 implementation, you should aim to apply under the current rules – time is important here.

The 10-Year Long Residence Route (Also Still Live)

The 10-year Long Residence route allows you to apply for ILR after ten years of continuous lawful UK residence across most visa categories – including combinations of student, work, and family visas. This route is proposed to be abolished when the earned settlement system launches. If you are close to 10 years of continuous lawful residence, a professional assessment right now is strongly recommended.

What the UK Government Has Proposed: The Earned Settlement System

The proposed reform originated from the UK government’s May 2025 Immigration White Paper – “Restoring Control Over the Immigration System.” A public consultation ran until 12 February 2026, and the Home Secretary confirmed in March 2026 that the changes will proceed, with Autumn 2026 as the planned implementation date.

The proposed new model is called “Earned Settlement.” Under this framework, ILR eligibility would no longer be based purely on time served – it would need to be earned through demonstrated contribution, integration, and good character across four pillars:

Pillar What It Would Assess
Residence Continuous, lawful stay with strict absence limits
Integration B2 English proficiency and Life in the UK Test
Economic Contribution Your salary level and tax record
Character Clean immigration history and no criminal convictions

The Proposed Qualifying Timelines: What May Apply to You from Autumn 2026

These timelines are proposed, not yet in force. The current 5-year route applies today.

Applicant Profile Proposed ILR Timeline
Skilled Worker earning £26,200–£49,999/year 10 years (proposed baseline)
Skilled Worker earning £50,270+/year 5 years (proposed fast-track)
Skilled Worker earning £125,140+/year 3 years (proposed super fast-track)
Global Talent visa holder 3–5 years (talent-based, already faster)
Designated NHS / key public sector worker Accelerated (sector-specific)
Roles below RQF Level 6 15 years (proposed extended route)
Applicants with compliance breaches or overstay history 20–30 years (proposed maximum)

The Proposed Abolition of the 10-Year Long Residence Route

Under the current rules, the 10-year Long Residence route allows combining time across different visa categories – for example, 4 years as a student and 6 years as a Skilled Worker equals 10 years of continuous lawful residence and ILR eligibility.

The government has proposed to abolish this route when the earned settlement system launches.
Under the proposed new system:

  • Time on a Student visa would not count toward the Skilled Worker ILR qualifying period
  • Combining visa categories for the main settlement route would no longer be permitted
  • Applicants who relied on mixing their visa time to reach 10 years would need to re-qualify from a single route

If you are currently using the Long Residence route, or were planning to combine your student and work visa time, this proposed change is critically important for you. The current route remains available now – but may not be available from Autumn 2026.

What Is Already in Force: Changes You Must Act on Now

While the main settlement reform is still a proposal, several immigration changes are already confirmed and in force:

B2 English – Already Required for New Skilled Worker Visa Applications

From 8 January 2026, every new Skilled Worker visa applicant must demonstrate English at B2 CEFR level – an upgrade from the previous B1 requirement. This applies to new applications and in-country switches into the Skilled Worker route. Extensions on the same route are generally exempt.

Accepted B2 English tests for the Skilled Worker visa:

  • IELTS for UKVI – minimum 5.5 in each skill (speaking, listening, reading, writing individually)
  • PTE Academic UKVI – B2 level per component
  • LanguageCert SELT – B2 level per component
  • Trinity College London SELT – B2 level per component
  • TOEFL is NOT accepted. Cambridge B2 First (FCE) is NOT accepted for UK visa purposes – only approved Secure English Language Tests (SELTs) count.
  • The current English requirement for ILR applications (all routes) remains at B1 CEFR. The proposed B2 requirement for ILR is part of the Autumn 2026 earned settlement changes and is not yet in force.

180-Day Absence Rule – Already in Force Since April 2024

From 11 April 2024, a new rolling 12-month absence limit applies to the 10-year Long Residence route. You must not spend more than 180 days outside the UK in any rolling 12-month period. This is strictly enforced and applies to all absences starting from 11 April 2024 onwards.

Important distinction:

  • Absences that started before 11 April 2024 – the old rule (no single trip over 180 days) applies to those periods
  • Absences from 11 April 2024 onwards – the rolling 12-month window of maximum 180 days applies

12-Month Current Permission Requirement – Already in Force

If your current visa permission was granted on or after 11 April 2024, you must have been on your current visa route for at least 12 months before you can apply for Long Residence ILR. If your permission was granted before that date, this 12-month requirement does not apply.

ILR Application Fee – Updated April 2026

From 8 April 2026, the ILR application fee increased to £3,226 per person. This applies to all ILR routes.

Fee Item Amount (April 2026)
ILR application – main applicant £3,226
ILR application – each dependant £3,226
Super priority (next working day decision) £1,000 additional
Immigration Health Surcharge Not payable once ILR is granted

Family planning: Applying with a spouse and two children means a total fee of £12,904 before priority services.
Begin saving now.

Current ILR English Requirements (What Applies Today)

For ILR applications under the current rules (both 5-year and 10-year Long Residence routes), the English requirement is B1 CEFR in all four skills, combined with the Life in the UK test. This is assessed under the Knowledge of Language and Life (KoLL) requirements in the Immigration Rules.

The proposed Autumn 2026 reform would raise this to B2 for ILR as well. If you are planning an ILR application in the next 12 months under the current rules, B1 is still the current requirement – but always confirm your specific route requirements with a professional adviser.

Current Absence Rules for Long Residence ILR Applications

Under the current rules for the 10-year Long Residence route:

Absence Rule Permitted Amount
Maximum absences in any rolling 12 months (from 11 April 2024) 180 days
Absences before 11 April 2024 – old rule (no single trip over) 180 days per trip
Absences during periods under Section C (in-time application pending) Counts only if underlying route counts toward ILR

Certain absences may be forgiven with strong documentary evidence – for example, urgent medical care abroad, a family bereavement, or a compassionate emergency. These are assessed on a case-by-case basis and require a detailed statement with supporting documents.

What Indian Nationals Should Do Right Now – Your 5-Step Action Plan

Step 1 – Identify Your ILR Qualifying Date Under Current Rules

Calculate your current ILR eligibility date based on the rules in force today. If you are on the 5-year Skilled Worker route, count from your first Skilled Worker visa start date. If you are on the 10-year Long Residence route, count from your first lawful entry into the UK (excluding excluded visa categories such as Visitor, Short-term Student, Seasonal Worker, and immigration bail).

Step 2 – Check Whether You Should Apply Before Autumn 2026

If your qualifying date falls before or around the proposed Autumn 2026 implementation, you may be able to apply under the current, more favourable 5-year rules.
Do not wait – book a professional assessment immediately if your 5-year date is approaching in 2026.

Step 3 – Audit Your Absences Using Our Free Calculator

Every day you spend outside the UK counts. Use our Free ILR Absence Calculator to check whether your travel history is within the permitted limits – before you submit an application and risk a refusal.

Step 4 – Understand Your Salary Position for the Proposed Fast-Track

If the earned settlement system launches in Autumn 2026, your annual salary will determine your ILR timeline. If you are earning below £50,270, discuss a pay review with your employer now. Moving above the proposed £50,270 fast-track threshold before implementation could significantly reduce your future qualifying period.

Step 5 – Secure Professional Advice Now, Not Later

The transition period between current rules and proposed new rules is the most complex time to navigate immigration planning. A professional assessment will identify whether you can apply under current rules, whether your absence record is clean, and which route gives you the earliest possible ILR eligibility.

Family Members: What the Current and Proposed Rules Mean for Dependants

Under the current rules, dependants on the Long Residence ILR route must each complete their own 10-year qualifying period independently. On the 5-year Skilled Worker route, dependants may be included but must meet their own suitability and English requirements.

Under the proposed earned settlement system, the government has indicated dependants would need to qualify independently across each of the four pillars. This is not yet in force but Indian families with children and spouse’s mid-way through qualifying periods should seek specific family planning advice now.

Frequently Asked Questions – ILR 10-Year Rule 2026

No. As of April 2026, the proposed ILR earned settlement reforms are not yet in force. The UK Home Secretary has confirmed implementation is planned for Autumn 2026. The current 5-year Skilled Worker route and 10-year Long Residence route both remain fully live on GOV.UK today. This guide is designed to help you prepare in advance of the expected implementation.
This depends on whether the Autumn 2026 implementation date falls before or after your qualifying date, and on any transitional provisions the Home Office announces. If your 5-year qualifying date is approaching, you should seek a professional assessment immediately. Applying before the new rules come into effect may allow you to qualify under the current, more favourable 5-year timeline.
Yes. As of April 2026, the 10-year Long Residence route to ILR is fully live and operational as confirmed on GOV.UK. The proposal to abolish it has been announced but is not yet law. If you are nearing 10 years of continuous lawful residence, you may be able to apply under the current rules before any changes are enacted.
Under the current rules, Student visa time can count toward the 10-year Long Residence route, subject to the eligibility conditions in the Immigration Rules. However, under the proposed earned settlement reform, this would no longer be allowed. If you are relying on combining student and work visa time, you should seek professional advice now to assess whether you can apply under current rules before Autumn 2026.
Under the current rules, ILR applicants (on all routes including Long Residence and 5-year Skilled Worker) must demonstrate B1 English in all four skills, along with passing the Life in the UK Test. The proposed earned settlement reform would raise this to B2 English for ILR – but that change is not yet in force. Note that B2 English is already required for new Skilled Worker visa applications from 8 January 2026.
For the Skilled Worker visa (B2 requirement, in force from 8 January 2026), only approved Secure English Language Tests (SELTs) are accepted: IELTS for UKVI (minimum 5.5 per skill), PTE Academic UKVI, LanguageCert SELT, and Trinity College London SELT. TOEFL and Cambridge B2 First (FCE) are not accepted for UK visa purposes.
From 8 April 2026, the ILR application fee is £3,226 per person. This applies to all ILR routes. A super priority service (next working day decision) costs an additional £1,000. You do not pay the Immigration Health Surcharge once you hold ILR.
Under the current 10-year Long Residence route, dependants must each qualify independently based on their own 10 years of continuous lawful residence – they cannot be included in your application. Under the current 5-year Skilled Worker route, dependants are typically included but must meet their own eligibility requirements. Seek professional advice for your specific family situation.

Plan Your UK Settlement with The SmartMove2UK – Before the Rules Change

The proposed ILR 10-year rule 2026 is the most significant proposed change to UK settlement law in two decades. The window to apply under the current, more favourable rules is open right now – but for many Indian nationals, that window is closing.

The SmartMove2UK’s OISC-regulated immigration consultants specialise in UK visa and settlement planning for Indian nationals. We have guided over 2,500 clients from across India through the UK immigration system since 2009, with offices in Mumbai, Bangalore, and Delhi.

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