Are Initial Leave to Enter/FLR/ILR getting easier?
#1
Thread Starter
Forum Regular



Joined: Jul 2016
Posts: 229











I have followed this forum for 10 years now and found it of huge help when my wife was going through all the formalities leading up to Indefinite Leave to Remain, which she acquired five years ago.
I have noticed that recently (certainly starting last year, if not before) there seems to have been a huge decrease in posts and questions about the whole process of bringing a spouse or partner to the UK, with a corresponding increase in the volume of discussion about citizenship by descent and related matters.
I am just wondering out of curiosity if this indicates that the spouse procedures are becoming more user friendly and streamlined, it seems curious that there are so few questions on the subject these days.
I have noticed that recently (certainly starting last year, if not before) there seems to have been a huge decrease in posts and questions about the whole process of bringing a spouse or partner to the UK, with a corresponding increase in the volume of discussion about citizenship by descent and related matters.
I am just wondering out of curiosity if this indicates that the spouse procedures are becoming more user friendly and streamlined, it seems curious that there are so few questions on the subject these days.
Last edited by DernierVirage; Mar 31st 2026 at 4:27 am. Reason: typo corrected
#2
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: May 2010
Posts: 10,146
From: San Diego, California











I think that immigration and sponsoring of spouses, families has become more difficult over the years, hence the drop off in applications.
Financial requirements have gone up (from 18,600GBP to a minimum of 29,000 for the sponsor) and also fees have increased.
There is now the push to extend getting ILR from 5 years to 10 years with more interim visa fees to pay.
Overall there is the desire to reduce immigration to the UK as much as possible - the low economic forecast for the UK does not help.
Financial requirements have gone up (from 18,600GBP to a minimum of 29,000 for the sponsor) and also fees have increased.
There is now the push to extend getting ILR from 5 years to 10 years with more interim visa fees to pay.
Overall there is the desire to reduce immigration to the UK as much as possible - the low economic forecast for the UK does not help.
#3
Thread Starter
Forum Regular



Joined: Jul 2016
Posts: 229











I think that immigration and sponsoring of spouses, families has become more difficult over the years, hence the drop off in applications.
Financial requirements have gone up (from 18,600GBP to a minimum of 29,000 for the sponsor) and also fees have increased.
There is now the push to extend getting ILR from 5 years to 10 years with more interim visa fees to pay.
Overall there is the desire to reduce immigration to the UK as much as possible - the low economic forecast for the UK does not help.
Financial requirements have gone up (from 18,600GBP to a minimum of 29,000 for the sponsor) and also fees have increased.
There is now the push to extend getting ILR from 5 years to 10 years with more interim visa fees to pay.
Overall there is the desire to reduce immigration to the UK as much as possible - the low economic forecast for the UK does not help.
#4
Forum Regular


Joined: Oct 2022
Posts: 77

Here's my experience....My OH first applied for a spousal visa back in 1992. The application (paper one back then) was very basic. Filled it in and sent it off with copies of my British passport. No Biometrics, no interview and no NHS contribution. We only had to prove we had £3000 in a bank account. That visa was for one year and after that he got Indefinite Leave to Remain. However circumstances changed and we returned to NZ.
Fast forward to 2023, and we did it all over again. Boy...lots more info required and plenty of ££. Have recently to renewed his visa, so even more ££ 😃
Fast forward to 2023, and we did it all over again. Boy...lots more info required and plenty of ££. Have recently to renewed his visa, so even more ££ 😃
#5
Home and Happy










Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 94,305
From: Keep true friends and puppets close, trust no-one else...











I think its largely just indicative of the way the internet has changed.
Every country forum on BE is much quieter now, with fewer questions about visa applications. I can't think of any country that has made their immigration system easier or quicker, I'm afraid.
Visas are more expensive. Making the actual move is more expensive. Posters have moved to the likes of facebk groups.
Every country forum on BE is much quieter now, with fewer questions about visa applications. I can't think of any country that has made their immigration system easier or quicker, I'm afraid.
Visas are more expensive. Making the actual move is more expensive. Posters have moved to the likes of facebk groups.
#6
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: May 2010
Posts: 10,146
From: San Diego, California











I think its largely just indicative of the way the internet has changed.
Every country forum on BE is much quieter now, with fewer questions about visa applications. I can't think of any country that has made their immigration system easier or quicker, I'm afraid.
Visas are more expensive. Making the actual move is more expensive. Posters have moved to the likes of facebk groups.
Every country forum on BE is much quieter now, with fewer questions about visa applications. I can't think of any country that has made their immigration system easier or quicker, I'm afraid.
Visas are more expensive. Making the actual move is more expensive. Posters have moved to the likes of facebk groups.
#7
#8
Home and Happy










Joined: Dec 2002
Posts: 94,305
From: Keep true friends and puppets close, trust no-one else...











A bit OT, but I'm a member of a couple aimed at immigration to Australia. I find a lot of the content concerning, based on my years on BE. As you'll be aware, on here when people post answers which are misleading, or plain wrong, they are quickly corrected, along with official sources being quoted. The biggest issue I have with a lot of facebk groups is the lack of official links, and frequent posting of blatantly wrong info - which can have serious consequences for people I try and post the official stuff when I can, but many groups don't even allow the posting of links. And often people go with whatever answer gets posted the most - even when its wrong. Not like the good old days on here, at all.
#9
Lost in BE Cyberspace










Joined: May 2010
Posts: 10,146
From: San Diego, California











A bit OT, but I'm a member of a couple aimed at immigration to Australia. I find a lot of the content concerning, based on my years on BE. As you'll be aware, on here when people post answers which are misleading, or plain wrong, they are quickly corrected, along with official sources being quoted. The biggest issue I have with a lot of facebk groups is the lack of official links, and frequent posting of blatantly wrong info - which can have serious consequences for people I try and post the official stuff when I can, but many groups don't even allow the posting of links. And often people go with whatever answer gets posted the most - even when its wrong. Not like the good old days on here, at all.




