UK immigration fees
UK visa fees and charges have increased significantly since the 2000s. The revenue helps fund the Home Office and NHS but there are complaints that rates are too high.
People who want a visa, permission to stay or citizenship in the UK usually have to pay for it. Fees have risen significantly above inflation over the past 20 years. For example, applications to stay in the UK indefinitely used to be free but cost over £3,000 at time of writing. The government charges more than the cost of processing applications to help fund the wider borders and immigration system.
All figures in this briefing are correct at time of writing: see the Home Office website if looking to confirm the exact current rates.
The application fee and health surcharge often cost thousands of poundsAs well as headline application fees, an immigration health surcharge of £1,035 per year is levied on visas and extensions. There is also an employer levy of up to £1,320 a year on work visas. All in, sponsoring a five-year work visa can cost around £10,000 (for a small business), while a two-and-a-half-year spouse or partner visa costs £5,000.
There are some exemptions from fees and surcharge for certain groups, in particular applications for asylum or under the EU Settlement Scheme. People who cannot afford to pay for family routes or child citizenship can also apply for a fee waiver.
The Home Office generates a surplus on visa fees to cross-subsidise border securitySuccessive governments have taken the view that the people who benefit most from the immigration system (migrants themselves) should contribute to its costs. The Home Office wants migration and borders operations to be largely self-funding. Its UK Visas and Immigration arm, which processes applications, aims to recover more than twice as much in fees as it spends.
But generating income is not the only relevant consideration. The Immigration Act 2014 permits the Home Secretary to take account of economic growth in setting fees, along with costs, benefits to migrants and a few other factors. The government says it tries to strike a balance between growth and properly funding the immigration system.
Fees have increased significantly above inflation since the 2000sUntil 2003, the UK charged nothing at all for visa extensions, work permits and settlement. Fees for initial visas and citizenship were relatively modest. A student visa cost £36.
The Blair government began charging above the processing cost in order to fund wider immigration activities. Later governments continued that process and added the health surcharge (2015) and employer levy (2017). Government income from immigration and nationality fees rose from £184 million in 2003 to £3,000 million in 2024, not including another £2,600 million in health surcharge and £600 million in employer levies.
However, in the 2020s many fees – such as those for settlement and citizenship – have remained fairly stable after accounting for inflation.
The Labour government has increased the fees paid by employers but left others aloneThe last major round of fee increases took place under the Sunak government. In October 2023, it increased work and visit visa fees by 15%, family visas, settlement and citizenship by 20%, and student visas by 35%. The health surcharge rose by 66% to £1,035 a year in February 2024.
The Starmer government has not made major changes to most immigration fees, but has increased the costs that fall on employers. In 2025, the immigration skills charge rose 32% and individual certificates of sponsorship by 120%. The Home Office is also preparing to put up some other fees, including for naturalisation, by 6.5% later in 2026.
Other developed countries charge lessUK immigration costs are much higher than those in many other countries, including Canada, Germany, France and the USA, according to a 2025 report by the Royal Society. This is not a strict like-for-like comparison because of the health surcharge being paid up front, whereas other countries charge ongoing health insurance premiums. But even without the surcharge, UK Skilled Worker visa costs were still considerably higher than most other nations studied.