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UK Immigration Law Update  ·  Special Edition  ·  May 2026 Sources: GOV.UK  ·  House of Commons Library  ·  Open Government Licence v3.0
In This Edition
  • The Government's Rationale: The Home Secretary's Foreword in full context
  • Official Settlement Forecast: 1.6 Million Grants 2026–2030 (GOV.UK Data)
  • The Four Pillars: Character, Integration, Contribution, Residence — in full
  • Mandatory Requirements: What Every Applicant Must Now Prove
  • The Qualifying Period Framework: Reductions and Additions (GOV.UK Tables 2 & 3)
  • House of Commons Library: Parliamentary Scrutiny, Petitions & Debates
  • Who Is Exempt and Who Is Protected
  • Adviser Action Points
  • All Primary Sources
GOV.UK — Home Office

'A Fairer Pathway to Settlement'
Statement & Consultation on Earned Settlement
CP 1448 · ISBN 978-1-5286-6105-8
Presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty
Published 20 November 2025 · Closed 12 February 2026

gov.uk/government/consultations/earned-settlement
House of Commons Library

Research Briefing CBP-10267
'Changes to UK visa and settlement rules after the 2025 immigration white paper'
Updated May 2026 · Also: CDP-2026-0006 (Westminster Hall debate pack, Feb 2026)

commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-10267/

Home Secretary's Foreword — GOV.UK, November 2025

The Government Acts on Settlement: Why the Five-Year Route Is Ending

"To become a part of this country, permanently, is therefore not a right but a privilege — and one that must be earned." — Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood MP, GOV.UK, November 2025

The Government's Rationale: In Its Own Words

The Home Secretary's Foreword to the official GOV.UK consultation document — presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty — sets out the government's case. The document acknowledges migration as part of Britain's story while identifying the scale of recent arrivals as unsustainable:

"Between 2021 and 2024, we have seen net migration of an additional 2.6 million people. Around one in every 30 people in this country today arrived in these four years. An attempt to fill between 6,000 and 40,000 jobs saw the arrival of 616,000 individuals from 2022 to 2024 [on the Health and Care visa]. Over half were not even arriving to work in that sector but were instead dependants of those who were."
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood MP — GOV.UK Consultation Foreword, November 2025

The Foreword continues: "The successful story of migration in Britain has always depended on two things. Firstly, that each wave of migrants becomes a part of our wider cultural life. And secondly, that they pay back to the country that has given them a home. This does not mean assimilation. We have built a multi-faith, multi-ethnic democracy that is pluralistic, grounded in tolerance towards difference. But it does demand contribution and integration."

"Today, settlement is near automatic. The only qualifications required are to have lived in this country for, in most cases, five years, and to have not received a prison sentence of over a year. Now, the qualifying bar will be set higher."
GOV.UK Consultation Document (CP 1448) — November 2025
Key Facts — Official GOV.UK Consultation
Title
'A Fairer Pathway to Settlement' — CP 1448
Published By
Home Office, DCMS, DWP, HM Treasury
Authority
Presented to Parliament by Command of His Majesty
Consultation Open
20 November 2025
Consultation Closed
12 February 2026
Responses
Over 200,000 received
Current Status
Government analysing responses — no rule change yet in force (HC Library, May 2026)
Expected Timing
"Later this year" — Home Secretary, 5 March 2026
Legislation Required
Yes — citizenship changes require primary legislation (British Nationality Act 1981)

The Settlement Forecast: Why the Government Says It Must Act

The GOV.UK consultation document contains detailed Home Office forecasting data — drawn from published immigration statistics — explaining the urgency of reform:

163,000
Settlement Grants
Year ending Q2 2025 — up 18% from previous year (Se_D02)
1.6M
Forecast 2026–2030
Central estimate (range: 1.3M–2.2M) — Home Office official figures
450,000
Peak Annual Grants
Expected in 2028 — approximately 4× the recent annual average
616,000
Health & Care Visas
Granted 2022–2024 — over half were dependants (GOV.UK)

Official Settlement Forecast by Route — GOV.UK Table 1 (Central Scenario, thousands)

Source: Table 1, 'A Fairer Pathway to Settlement', GOV.UK, November 2025. Based on published Migrant Journey data (MJ_D01, MJ_D02, May 2025) and entry clearance visa datasets.

Route (Initial Visa)202520262027202820292030
Skilled Worker36,00042,00073,00075,00074,00042,000
Health & Care Worker6,00047,000104,000210,00070,00032,000
Family & Dependants39,00040,00046,00060,00066,00068,000
Asylum18,00019,00024,00029,00033,00031,000
Study16,00016,00017,00021,00025,00026,000
Hong Kong BN(O)92,00054,00026,00016,0007,000
Other25,00029,00028,00028,00028,00028,000
TOTAL140,000286,000345,000449,000312,000233,000

The Four Pillars of Earned Settlement

The GOV.UK consultation document sets out that the earned settlement system will be built upon four core pillars. These are reproduced directly from the official document (Section: Key requirements of an earned settlement system):

01
Character

The reformed system will provide for the refusal of applications where core requirements relating to character and conduct are not met — including criminal record, compliance with immigration requirements, and public good considerations. "Our expectation is that you should not be able to settle with a criminal record." No ability to trade this requirement against other considerations.

02
Integration

The reformed system will ensure that applicants demonstrate meaningful engagement with British society. This includes passing the Life in the UK test and demonstrating English language ability at B2 CEFR level (upper intermediate) — a higher standard than the current B1 requirement.

03
Contribution

The reformed system will reward individuals who have made a sustained and measurable economic contribution to the UK. The principle is that any accelerated path to settlement should be earned through active participation in the economy. Earnings at or above £12,570 per year for 3–5 years are the proposed minimum.

04
Residence

The reformed system will recognise lawful, continuous residence in the UK. However, individuals will not normally qualify on the basis of residence alone — contribution and integration must also be demonstrated throughout the qualifying period.


The Mandatory Requirements: What Every Applicant Must Prove

The GOV.UK consultation document sets out, in its Table 1 (Minimum requirements that an application for settlement must meet to qualify), the mandatory baseline all applicants must meet. These are not subject to consultation — they are the government's stated minimum position:

PillarRequirementDetail — GOV.UK Table 1
Suitability No criminal conviction Must meet suitability requirements under Part Suitability of the Immigration Rules. No current litigation, NHS, tax or other government debt.
Integration English language at B2 CEFR Must evidence meeting English language requirements at B2 (upper intermediate) level under the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages.
Integration Life in the UK test Must evidence that they have passed the Life in the UK test.
Contribution Annual earnings > £12,570 Must have earned annual income above £12,570 for a minimum of 3 to 5 years (subject to consultation), in line with income tax / NIC thresholds. Exemptions proposed for maternity leave and long-term illness/disability.

The Full Qualifying Period Framework

The GOV.UK consultation document provides two tables governing how the baseline 10-year qualifying period may be adjusted. Only one consideration from each table applies — the one causing the largest adjustment. Where both tables apply, the adjustments combine.

▼ Considerations That Reduce the Qualifying Period — GOV.UK Table 2

PillarAttribute / CircumstanceAdjustment
IntegrationEnglish language at C1 level (above required B2 minimum)Minus 1 year
ContributionTaxable income of £125,140 for 3 years immediately before applyingMinus 7 years
ContributionTaxable income of £50,270 for 3 years immediately before applyingMinus 5 years
ContributionEmployed in a specified public service occupation for 5 yearsMinus 5 years
ContributionWorking in the community (volunteering etc.) — subject to consultationMinus 3–5 years
Entry & ResidenceParent/partner/child of a British citizen, holding that status throughout qualifying period — NOT subject to consultationMinus 5 years
Entry & ResidencePermission under British Nationals (Overseas) route — NOT subject to consultationMinus 5 years
Entry & Residence3 years continuous residence as Global Talent worker or Innovator FounderMinus 7 years

▲ Considerations That Increase the Qualifying Period — GOV.UK Table 3

Note: only one consideration applies (the one causing the largest increase). This takes precedence over any reduction to the baseline.

PillarAttribute / CircumstanceAdjustment
ContributionIn receipt of public funds for less than 12 months during route to settlementPlus 5 years (→ 15 years total)
ContributionIn receipt of public funds for more than 12 months during route to settlementPlus 10 years (→ 20 years total)
Entry & ResidenceArrived in the UK illegally (e.g. via small boat / clandestine entry)Plus up to 20 years (→ up to 30 years)
Entry & ResidenceEntered the UK on a visit visaPlus up to 20 years (→ up to 30 years)
Entry & ResidenceOverstayed a permission for 6 months or morePlus up to 20 years (→ up to 30 years)

House of Commons Library  ·  Parliamentary Scrutiny  ·  CBP-10267 (Updated May 2026)

Parliament's Response: 200,000+ Responses, Three Debates, Two Major Petitions

The Consultation Response

The House of Commons Library research briefing (CBP-10267, updated May 2026) confirms that the public consultation on earned settlement received over 200,000 responses — one of the largest responses to any Home Office consultation in recent history. The government is currently analysing those responses before publishing its final policy decisions.

House of Commons Library — Key Findings (CBP-10267, May 2026)
  • No changes yet in force: There have been no changes to the ILR qualifying period yet. There is no overall timetable for the white paper proposals to come into force.
  • Retrospective application: The consultation proposes applying changes to everyone currently in the UK who has not already received ILR — subject to final decisions on transitional arrangements.
  • Criminal record threshold: If 'no criminal conviction' means literally any conviction, this would be stricter than current rules (currently: sentence of 12 months or longer).
  • Timeline update: The Home Secretary originally said April 2026, then said "later this year" on 5 March 2026. Press reports suggest Autumn 2026.
  • Citizenship legislation: Changes to naturalisation law require an Act of Parliament — the government must secure endorsement of MPs for these elements.
  • Trade-offs acknowledged: A longer route to settlement involves "a trade-off between the financial benefits of higher immigration fees for the government, and the negative effects on the integration and wellbeing of migrants."
Parliamentary Activity — Key Dates
Westminster Hall Debates
8 September 2025, 2 February 2026, March 2026
Petition 727372
'Protect Legal Migrants: do not implement 10-Year ILR' — debated 2 Feb 2026
Petition 746363
'Keep 5-Year ILR' — 232,000 signatures (at time of HC Library briefing)
Government Response
4 December 2025: "No decision has been taken" on whether changes apply to those already in the UK
Committee Inquiry
Home Affairs Committee: Routes to Settlement Inquiry; Lords Justice & Home Affairs Committee: Settlement, citizenship and integration inquiry
Parliamentary Questions
HC Deb 12 May 2025 c68; HC Deb 2 June 2025 cc15-16; PQ 58441 (17 June 2025)
HC Library Briefing
CBP-10267 — 'Changes to UK visa and settlement rules after the 2025 immigration white paper' (updated May 2026)

Who Is Exempt and Who Is Protected

The GOV.UK consultation document explicitly identifies the groups who are out of scope of the earned settlement reforms and those who have specific protections. Green = fully exempt or protected; Amber = reduced qualifying period; Red = extended qualifying period.

GroupStatus Under Earned SettlementGOV.UK Source
EUSS holders — Settled & Pre-Settled Status FULLY EXEMPT — explicitly out of scope. UK Withdrawal Agreement obligations mean EUSS is unaffected. Consultation Introduction; HC Library CBP-10267
Windrush Scheme beneficiaries FULLY EXEMPT — Windrush Scheme grants of settlement are explicitly out of scope. Consultation Introduction
People who already hold settled status (ILR) FULLY PROTECTED — "We will not, and would never, take away settled status from those who have already been granted it." (Home Secretary Foreword) Home Secretary Foreword, GOV.UK
Victims of domestic abuse Protected under existing rules (immediate ILR under Appendix VDA). Consultation sought views on whether to maintain this exemption. Consultation — Vulnerable groups section
Bereaved partners Protected under existing rules — immediate ILR. Consultation sought views on whether to maintain. Consultation — Vulnerable groups section
HM Armed Forces — completed minimum service (4 years) Immediate settlement on leaving the Armed Forces, extended to immediate family. Government committed to maintaining at minimum this timetable. Consultation — HM Armed Forces section
Partners/parents/children of British citizens REDUCED — 5-year qualifying period (minus 5 years from baseline). NOT subject to consultation. Same as current rules. GOV.UK Table 2 — not subject to consultation
Hong Kong BN(O) visa holders REDUCED — 5-year qualifying period (minus 5 years from baseline). NOT subject to consultation. GOV.UK Table 2; Home Secretary Foreword
Global Talent / Innovator Founder (3-year route) REDUCED — Minus 7 years from baseline. Expected 3-year route maintained subject to mandatory requirements. GOV.UK Table 2
Refugees — asylum claims made by 1 March 2026 PROTECTED — Retain 5-year route to settlement under Appendix Settlement Protection. Transitional arrangement confirmed. HC Library CBP-10267; GOV.UK consultation
Refugees — new claims after 1 March 2026 EXTENDED — Proposed 20-year qualifying period under the new 'core protection' framework. Resettled refugees: 10-year baseline. Consultation document; Home Secretary speech
Health & Care Workers (below RQF Level 6) EXTENDED — Proposed 15-year qualifying period — three times the current 5-year route. Consultation sought views on this proposal. Consultation document; Home Secretary Foreword

Adviser Action Points — What You Must Do Now

Status Confirmed by House of Commons Library (May 2026)

No changes to the ILR qualifying period have been made yet. The consultation closed on 12 February 2026 and the government is analysing over 200,000 responses. There is no overall timetable for the proposals to come into force — but implementation is expected from Autumn 2026 onwards. Act under current rules now.

  • URGENT — Apply Now
    No changes to the ILR qualifying period have been made yet (confirmed by HC Library, May 2026). Clients who qualify for ILR under the current 5-year rules should be advised to apply immediately before rule changes take effect.
  • Care Workers
    Health & Care Worker clients below RQF Level 6 are the most at risk: the consultation proposes a 15-year qualifying period. Many arrived 2022–2024 and will reach their 5-year eligibility point from 2027. These clients need specialist advice as a priority.
  • Retrospective
    The government has confirmed its intention to apply changes to people already in the UK who have not yet obtained ILR. The HC Library briefing (CBP-10267) confirms this, noting it is subject to final decisions on transitional arrangements. Monitor GOV.UK for the consultation response.
  • Earnings Records
    The mandatory requirement of annual earnings above £12,570 for 3–5 years should be anticipated now. Advise clients to retain payslips, P60s, tax records, and evidence of NIC contributions — even though this requirement is not yet in force.
  • Refugee Clients
    Clients whose asylum claims were determined by 1 March 2026 retain their 5-year route under Appendix Settlement Protection (confirmed by GOV.UK and HC Library CBP-10267). Verify this on a case-by-case basis for all refugee clients.
  • Exempt Groups
    Reassure EUSS holders, Windrush beneficiaries, and Hong Kong BN(O) holders that they are explicitly exempt from the earned settlement reforms — confirmed in both the GOV.UK consultation document and HC Library briefing CBP-10267.
  • Monitor GOV.UK
    The government will publish a consultation response and then a statement of changes to the Immigration Rules. Watch gov.uk/government/consultations/earned-settlement for updates.
  • Citizenship
    Citizenship changes require primary legislation (British Nationality Act 1981 amendments confirmed by HC Library). Monitor Parliament for any Immigration and Asylum Bill. Apply for naturalisation under current rules where clients are eligible — earned citizenship changes will take longer to implement.

Primary Sources — GOV.UK & House of Commons Library Only

Disclaimer

This newsletter is an independent educational summary for immigration advisers and practitioners. It is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Home Office, UKVI, or Parliament. It does not constitute legal advice. All content is sourced from GOV.UK publications (Open Government Licence v3.0) and House of Commons Library research briefings (Parliamentary copyright). Always check current GOV.UK guidance before advising clients — the rules in this area are subject to imminent change.