ILR by Visa Route

Private Life ILR: The 5 and 10-Year Settlement Routes

How people who have built their lives in the UK settle on private life grounds — who qualifies, how long each route to ILR takes, and the requirements that apply.

The private life route leads to settlement based on the life someone has built in the UK — over either a 5-year or a 10-year qualifying period, depending on their age and circumstances. Children with 7 years’ residence and young adults who have spent half their life here are on the 5-year route; adults with 20 years’ residence are on the 10-year route; and a child born in the UK with 7 years’ residence can apply for ILR directly. It is a human-rights route, so fee waivers are available.

The private life route to ILR

The private life route, set out in Appendix Private Life (which replaced the old paragraph 276ADE rules on 20 June 2022), is based on Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights — the right to respect for private and family life. It is for people whose ties to the UK, built through years of residence, education, relationships and community, make it disproportionate to expect them to leave. Unlike the work and family routes, eligibility turns on length of residence and integration rather than sponsorship or income. It sits alongside, but is distinct from, the 10-year long residence route, which is based on lawful residence.

Who qualifies, and how long to ILR

Appendix Private Life sets several categories, each with its own residence requirement and its own route to settlement.

Private life categories and the route to ILR
Category Residence requirement Route to ILR
Child (under 18)7 years’ continuous residence; unreasonable to expect them to leave5 years
Child born in the UK7 years’ continuous residence since birthImmediate ILR
Young adult (18–24)At least half their life lived continuously in the UK5 years
Adult (18+)20 years’ continuous residence (lawful or not)10 years
Adult (18+)Very significant obstacles to integration abroad10 years

Source: UK Immigration Rules, Appendix Private Life. From 29 July 2025, more children and young adults granted leave before 20 June 2022 (under Appendix FM or outside the rules) also qualify for the 5-year route rather than the 10-year route.

The 5-year and 10-year routes explained

The headline difference is how settlement is reached. On the 5-year route, children and young adults are usually granted a single 5-year (60-month) period of leave, then apply for ILR at the end without needing extensions. On the 10-year route, adults are granted leave in 30-month (2.5-year) blocks and must renew several times — at least four grants in total — before they reach the 10-year point and can apply for settlement.

A faster route for long-resident children. The July 2025 changes deliberately brought the child and young-adult settlement period into line with the standard 5 years elsewhere in the rules, giving young people who have spent most of their lives in the UK earlier certainty. A child born in the UK who has lived here continuously for 7 years can be granted ILR directly, without ever having held limited leave.

Continuous residence and absences

Settlement on the private life route is assessed under Appendix Continuous Residence, so the 180-day rolling absence rule applies across the qualifying period — no more than 180 days outside the UK in any 12-month window. This is an important change: the old private life rules did not consider absences at all, so travel during the qualifying years now counts. Map yours with the absence calculator.

English, Life in the UK and exemptions

The Knowledge of Language and Life requirement applies, but with broad exemptions on this route:

  • Children under 18 are fully exempt from both the English requirement and the Life in the UK test.
  • Adults aged 18 to 64 normally need English at B1 and a Life in the UK test pass, unless exempt.
  • Those aged 65 or over, and people with a qualifying long-term physical or mental condition, are also exempt.

Suitability also matters: settlement can be refused on criminality grounds, with specific thresholds — for example a custodial sentence of 12 months or more is normally a bar, while shorter sentences may be overcome only after long further periods of residence.

Private life ILR requirements at a glance

What you must meet for private life settlement (2026)
Requirement Detail
Qualifying period5 years (child / young adult) or 10 years (adult)
Absences≤ 180 days in any rolling 12 months
EnglishB1 for adults 18–64; children & over-65s exempt
Life in the UKRequired for adults 18–64; children exempt
SuitabilityPart 9 and private-life criminality thresholds
Fee£3,226 (no IHS on settlement); fee waivers available

Source: Appendix Private Life and Appendix Continuous Residence. Limited leave on this route is applied for on form FLR(FP); settlement is applied for online.

Fees and fee waivers

The ILR fee is £3,226, and there is no Immigration Health Surcharge on settlement. Because private life is a human-rights route, fee waivers are available for applicants who cannot afford the cost — including the application fee and, at the limited-leave stage, the Immigration Health Surcharge. You must apply for the waiver and show you would be left destitute, cannot meet the fee, or face exceptional financial circumstances. For applicants and families supported by local authorities, councils can signpost access to immigration advice.

After ILR comes citizenship. Once settled, you can usually apply to naturalise as a British citizen 12 months later, subject to the residence and good-character rules. Work out your date with the naturalisation calculator.
Reform watch: the qualifying periods above are those currently in force. The Government’s earned-settlement proposals could change settlement timelines across the system, but the consultation closed on 12 February 2026 and nothing has yet taken effect. Follow our earned settlement tracker for updates.
Free, independent settlement tools

Private life cases are fact-sensitive

Reasonableness, very significant obstacles and criminality thresholds turn on the detail. For a binding view on your own case, speak to an adviser regulated by the IAA or a solicitor — and ask about legal aid if eligible.

Find a regulated adviser GOV.UK IAA register • free to search

Private life ILR: frequently asked questions

Who qualifies for ILR on the private life route?
People settled in the UK through their private life under Appendix Private Life: a child with at least 7 years’ continuous residence where it is unreasonable to expect them to leave; a child born in the UK with 7 years’ residence; a young adult aged 18 to 24 who has spent at least half their life here; an adult with at least 20 years’ continuous residence; or an adult with very significant obstacles to integrating in the country they would return to.
How long until settlement on the private life route?
It depends on the category. Children with 7 years’ residence and young adults aged 18 to 24 with a half-life in the UK are on a 5-year route to ILR. Adults qualifying on 20 years’ residence or very significant obstacles are on a 10-year route, granted 30 months at a time. A child born in the UK with 7 years’ residence can apply directly for ILR.
Does time in the UK without status count for the private life route?
For the adult 20-year route, yes — periods of unlawful residence can count towards the 20 years, which is unusual among UK settlement routes. You must still evidence the residence and meet the other requirements. The shorter child and young-adult routes turn on continuous residence and integration rather than lawful status alone.
Do children need to pass the Life in the UK test and English for private life ILR?
No. Applicants under 18 are exempt from both the English language requirement and the Life in the UK test. Adults aged 18 to 64 must normally meet English at B1 and pass the Life in the UK test, while those aged 65 or over, and people with a qualifying long-term condition, are also exempt.
Does the 180-day absence rule apply to private life ILR?
Yes. Settlement on the private life route is now assessed under Appendix Continuous Residence, so the 180-day rolling absence rule applies across the qualifying period. This is a change from the old private life rules, which did not consider absences, so travel during the qualifying years now matters.
Can I get a fee waiver for a private life application?
Often, yes. Because the private life route is a human-rights route, fee waivers are available for applicants who cannot afford the application fee and, where relevant, the Immigration Health Surcharge. You must apply for the waiver and evidence that you cannot meet the cost, that you are destitute, or that there are exceptional financial circumstances.
How this page is produced

Our editorial and accuracy standards

ILR Calculator UK is an independent, free settlement-planning resource. The categories, qualifying periods and requirements on this page are taken directly from Appendix Private Life and the Home Office private life guidance, 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. Private life cases are highly fact-sensitive — reasonableness, very significant obstacles and suitability all turn on individual circumstances. 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, and ask whether legal aid is available.