UK Ancestry Visa ILR: The 5-Year Settlement Route
How Commonwealth citizens with a UK-born grandparent settle in the UK — the grandparent rule, the work requirement at settlement, and the clean path on to British citizenship.
Check your Ancestry settlement dates
Free tools that apply the 5-year settlement rules to your dates.
UK Ancestry visa holders can apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain after 5 years of continuous residence — with no sponsor, no salary threshold and no English test to enter, but a distinctive requirement to show you have worked and intend to keep working. The route is open to Commonwealth citizens aged 17 or over with a UK-born grandparent, and offers one of the cleanest paths from arrival to British citizenship.
The UK Ancestry route to ILR
The UK Ancestry visa, under Appendix UK Ancestry, lets Commonwealth citizens with a UK-born grandparent live and work in the UK for 5 years, then settle. Unlike the Skilled Worker route, there is no sponsor, no job offer and no minimum salary — you can work in any job, be self-employed or run a business. The trade-off is two route-specific tests at settlement: you must prove your ancestral link with an unbroken document chain, and show you have been economically active. The first Ancestry visa must be applied for from outside the UK; extensions and the ILR application are made in-country. Check your timing with the ILR eligibility calculator.
The grandparent rule — who qualifies
This is where most Ancestry applications succeed or fail. The qualifying ancestor must be a grandparent, and that grandparent must have been born in a qualifying place. The rule is applied strictly.
| Connection | Qualifies? |
|---|---|
| Grandparent born in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man | Yes |
| Grandparent born in Ireland before 31 March 1922 | Yes |
| Grandparent born on a UK-registered ship or aircraft | Yes |
| Legally adopted grandparent in the chain | Yes |
| Grandparent born in Ireland after 31 March 1922 | No |
| Grandparent born in a former colony | No |
| Great-grandparent born in the UK | No |
| Step-grandparent or foster grandparent | No |
Source: UK Immigration Rules, Appendix UK Ancestry. You evidence the link with a full chain of birth certificates from you to the UK-born grandparent, plus marriage or change-of-name certificates where a surname changed. A single missing certificate breaks the chain.
The work requirement at settlement
This is the requirement unique to the Ancestry route, and a common reason ILR is refused. At settlement you must show that across your 5 years you have been in employment, self-employment, or actively seeking work, and that you intend to continue working. The work does not need to have been continuous or with the same employer, and any job at any salary counts — but you must evidence a genuine, consistent commitment to economic activity.
UK Ancestry ILR requirements at a glance
| Requirement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Qualifying period | 5 years’ continuous residence on the Ancestry visa |
| Work | Employed, self-employed or seeking work + intend to continue |
| Absences | ≤ 180 days in any rolling 12 months |
| Finances | Maintain yourself without public funds (no set threshold) |
| English | B1 at ILR (no test to enter); exemptions apply |
| Life in the UK | Test pass required |
| Form & fee | SET(O), £3,226 (no IHS on settlement) |
Source: Appendix UK Ancestry and Appendix Continuous Residence. Financial evidence must follow Appendix Finance and be dated no more than 31 days before the application.
Continuous residence and absences
Like other routes, the Ancestry visa is assessed against the 180-day rolling absence rule: no more than 180 days outside the UK in any 12-month period during your qualifying years. There is one route-specific quirk worth knowing — for UK Ancestry settlement, the continuous residence can also be measured from the date of your last grant of permission, an extra option not available on most routes. Test your travel with the absence calculator and read the full 180-day rule guide.
English, Life in the UK and finances
Three further requirements apply at settlement:
- English at B1 — there is no English test to enter on the Ancestry visa, but you must meet English at B1 at ILR unless exempt. Nationals of majority English-speaking Commonwealth countries, and applicants aged 65 or over, are among those exempt.
- Life in the UK test — a pass is required before you apply, for applicants aged 18 to 64.
- Financial independence — you must be able to maintain and accommodate yourself and any dependants without public funds. There is no fixed income or savings threshold, and you can rely on credible third-party support such as from a relative.
The route to British citizenship
The Ancestry route offers one of the cleanest pipelines to a British passport. After ILR, you can usually apply to naturalise 12 months later, subject to the residence, absence and good-character rules under the British Nationality Act. If you are married to a British citizen and meet the requirements, the 12-month wait after ILR is waived. Map the timing with the naturalisation calculator.
UK Ancestry ILR: frequently asked questions
Who qualifies for a UK Ancestry visa?
Can I qualify through a great-grandparent?
What is the work requirement for UK Ancestry ILR?
Do I need to prove English for UK Ancestry ILR?
How long until ILR and citizenship on the Ancestry route?
Can I apply for the Ancestry visa from inside the UK?
Our editorial and accuracy standards
ILR Calculator UK is an independent, free settlement-planning resource. The eligibility, work and residence rules on this page are taken directly from Appendix UK Ancestry and the Home Office caseworker 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. The grandparent chain and the work requirement are fact-sensitive and a common cause of refusal. 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.
