ILR Requirements

The English Language Requirement for ILR: B1, B2 & How to Prove It

The language half of the settlement test. The current B1 standard, the rise to B2 from 26 March 2027, the ways to prove it, and who is exempt.

For most ILR routes you currently need to show English at CEFR B1 in speaking and listening — but this rises to B2 for applications made on or after 26 March 2027. You can prove it with an approved Secure English Language Test, a UK degree, an overseas degree taught in English, or by being a national of a majority English-speaking country. It is the language half of the Knowledge of Language and Life requirement, separate from the Life in the UK test.

What the English requirement is

The English language requirement is one of the two limbs of the Knowledge of Language and Life (KoLL) requirement for settlement, alongside the Life in the UK test. At the ILR stage it currently asks for CEFR B1 — an intermediate level — in speaking and listening. B1 applies across a wide range of routes, including work routes such as Skilled Worker, Health and Care Worker and Global Talent, and family routes under Appendix FM. The settlement test is normally a speaking and listening SELT, not a four-skills exam, unless a route specifies otherwise.

The rise to B2 — and the change people confuse it with

There are two separate B2 changes in 2026 and 2027, and mixing them up is a common and costly error. One affects the entry stage of certain work visas; the other affects the settlement stage broadly.

English language thresholds by stage and date
Stage / route Required level
First-time Skilled Worker, Scale-up, High Potential Individual (main applicant, entry)B2 since 8 Jan 2026 (was B1)
ILR / settlement — most routes (before 26 Mar 2027)B1 speaking & listening
ILR / settlement — most routes (on/after 26 Mar 2027)B2 speaking & listening
Spouse / partner (Appendix FM)A1 entry → A2 extension → B1 settlement (B2 from 26 Mar 2027)
British citizenship (naturalisation)B1, met through KoLL

Source: Statement of Changes HC 1691 (5 March 2026) and Appendix English Language. Settlement applications are assessed under the rules in force on the date of application, so your application date decides whether B1 or B2 applies.

The key dividing line. The 8 January 2026 B2 change applies only to first-time main applicants on three work routes, at the entry stage — it did not change settlement. The settlement B2 requirement is the separate 26 March 2027 change. If you already hold a visa, the level that matters for your ILR is the one in force on the day you apply for settlement.

How to prove the English requirement

There is no single way to meet it — most applicants qualify through one of these routes.

Ways to meet the ILR English requirement
Method What you provide
Approved SELT (speaking & listening)A pass at the required level from an approved provider; verified by your unique reference number
UK degreeYour UK bachelor’s, master’s or PhD certificate
Overseas degree taught in EnglishAn Ecctis (formerly UK NARIC) confirmation of level and that it was taught in English
Majority English-speaking nationalityYour passport — no test needed
Exemption (age / medical)Evidence of age or a qualifying long-term condition

Source: GOV.UK — Prove your knowledge of English for a visa. A SELT must be taken with a Home Office-approved provider (such as IELTS, Trinity College London, LanguageCert or Pearson) at an approved centre; a certificate from a non-approved school is rejected.

Who is exempt

You do not need to take a test if you fall into one of these groups:

  • Under 18 or aged 65 or over at the date of application.
  • A long-term physical or mental condition that prevents you meeting the requirement, supported by medical evidence — assessed case by case and never automatic.
  • A national of a majority English-speaking country — including the USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, Malta and several Caribbean nations.
  • Already met it through a qualifying degree or an accepted earlier application (see below).

Reusing previous English evidence

Many applicants have already met the English requirement earlier in their route and do not need a fresh test. If you passed an approved SELT at the required level, or relied on a qualifying degree, for an earlier visa that the Home Office accepted, you can normally reuse it for ILR — even though SELT certificates are only valid for two years from the test date, because the reuse rule looks at whether it was accepted at the time. With the B2 change approaching, however, check carefully: a B1 pass reused for an application on or after 26 March 2027 may no longer meet the higher settlement level.

English vs the Life in the UK test

These two requirements are frequently confused because they are both part of KoLL and both often sat close together. They are different tests with different content: the English requirement measures language ability in speaking and listening, while the Life in the UK test checks knowledge of British history, institutions and civic life. You must satisfy both for most ILR applications, and being exempt from one does not exempt you from the other.

A timing trap to avoid

The B2 settlement change interacts with the proposed extension of ILR qualifying periods. If reforms push your qualifying date past 26 March 2027, you could find yourself needing B2 rather than B1 — even though you were planning around the lower level.

Plan your English early. If there is any chance your ILR application will fall on or after 26 March 2027, prepare to meet B2 rather than B1. Reaching B2 can take months of preparation, and qualifying-period reforms expected later in 2026 could move some applicants’ settlement dates. Confirm your eligibility window with the eligibility calculator and follow our earned settlement tracker.
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Unsure whether B1 or B2 applies to you?

The level depends on your exact route and application date. For a binding view on your evidence and timing, speak to an adviser regulated by the IAA or a solicitor.

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ILR English requirement: frequently asked questions

What English level do I need for ILR?
For most routes, CEFR B1 in speaking and listening at the settlement stage, including Skilled Worker, Health and Care Worker, Global Talent and family routes under Appendix FM. B1 is an intermediate level. The settlement test is normally a speaking and listening SELT at B1, not a four-skills test, unless your route specifies otherwise.
Is the ILR English requirement changing to B2?
Yes, from 26 March 2027. The March 2026 Statement of Changes raises the settlement English requirement from B1 to B2 in speaking and listening for applications made on or after that date. Applications made before 26 March 2027 are still assessed at B1. This is separate from the B2 entry requirement that began on 8 January 2026 for first-time Skilled Worker, Scale-up and High Potential Individual applicants.
How do I prove the English requirement for ILR?
In one of several ways: by passing an approved Secure English Language Test (SELT) in speaking and listening at the required level; with a UK degree; with an overseas degree taught in English confirmed by Ecctis; or by being a national of a majority English-speaking country. A SELT is verified by the Home Office using the unique reference number from an approved provider.
Do I need to retake my English test for ILR if I passed it for my visa?
Usually not. If you met the English requirement at the required level for a previous visa that the Home Office accepted, you can normally reuse that evidence for ILR, even if the SELT certificate’s two-year validity has since expired. Check the position before booking a new test, especially with the B2 change approaching.
Who is exempt from the English requirement?
You are exempt if you are under 18, aged 65 or over, or have a long-term physical or mental condition that prevents you meeting it, supported by evidence. Nationals of majority English-speaking countries do not need a test, and a qualifying degree taught in English also satisfies the requirement. Exemptions are evidence-driven and must match the rules in force on your application date.
Is the English requirement the same as the Life in the UK test?
No. They are the two separate limbs of the Knowledge of Language and Life requirement. The English requirement tests language ability in speaking and listening; the Life in the UK test checks knowledge of British history and civic life. You must meet both, unless exempt, and an exemption from one does not carry across to the other.
How this page is produced

Our editorial and accuracy standards

ILR Calculator UK is an independent, free settlement-planning resource. The levels, dates and evidence rules on this page are taken directly from Appendix English Language, the March 2026 Statement of Changes and GOV.UK, with the primary source linked at the point it is used. We review the content after each Statement of Changes and record the review date at the top of the page.

This site provides general information, not regulated immigration advice. Which level applies, and which evidence the Home Office will accept, depend on your exact route and application date. For a binding assessment of your own case, contact an adviser regulated by the Immigration Advice Authority (IAA) or a solicitor listed on the Law Society’s Find a Solicitor register.