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The UK Visa Fee Estimator calculates the total cost of applying for a United Kingdom visa, combining the base application fee, the Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS), optional priority or super-priority processing fees, and dependent application costs. UK immigration costs have increased dramatically in recent years, with the government using fee policy as both a revenue mechanism and a demand management tool. As of October 2023, the IHS alone costs £1,035 per year for most adult applicants — a charge that must be paid in full upfront for the entire visa duration before the application can be submitted. The UK operates a points-based immigration system introduced in its current form in December 2020, following Britain's exit from the European Union. The system replaced the previous Tier-based structure with named visa routes: Skilled Worker (formerly Tier 2), Student (formerly Tier 4), Global Talent, Innovator Founder, Graduate Route, Family visas, and various temporary routes. Each visa category carries its own application fee schedule, which is reviewed and typically increased annually by the Home Office. Beyond the headline application fee, the true cost of UK immigration is significantly higher than many applicants expect. The IHS provides access to the National Health Service during the visa holder's stay, but it is a separate and substantial charge on top of the visa fee. Priority processing (typically 5 working days) and super-priority processing (next working day, where available) carry premium fees that can add hundreds or thousands of pounds. For families, each dependent — spouse and each child — must pay their own application fee and IHS, which can multiply the total cost by three, four, or five times the individual amount. Understanding the full cost breakdown is essential for financial planning, particularly for applicants from developing countries where UK visa costs may represent several months of local salary. Employers sponsoring Skilled Worker visa holders also bear significant costs, including the Immigration Skills Charge (£364-£1,000 per year depending on company size), Certificate of Sponsorship fees, and potentially the applicant's visa fees as part of relocation packages.
Total Cost = Application Fee + (IHS Annual Rate x Visa Duration in Years) + Priority Fee (optional) + (Dependent Application Fee + Dependent IHS) x Number of Dependents
- 1Step 1 — Select Visa Category: Choose from the available UK visa routes — Skilled Worker, Health and Care Worker, Student, Graduate, Global Talent, Innovator Founder, Family (spouse/partner/parent), Standard Visitor, Youth Mobility Scheme, or other specialized routes. Each category has a distinct fee structure, and some categories (such as Health and Care Worker) have reduced fees as a government incentive for critical occupations.
- 2Step 2 — Determine Visa Duration: Enter the length of visa you are applying for. Most work visas are issued for up to 5 years, student visas match the course duration plus a short buffer period, and visitor visas are typically 6 months. The duration directly affects the IHS calculation, which is charged per year (or part-year). A 3-year Skilled Worker visa requires 3 full years of IHS payment upfront, totaling £3,105 for the surcharge alone.
- 3Step 3 — Check for Fee Reductions or Exemptions: Certain applicants qualify for reduced fees or IHS exemptions. Health and Care Worker visa applicants and their dependents are exempt from the IHS. Applicants from countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements may have reduced IHS obligations. Some visa categories have lower application fees for applicants whose occupations appear on the Immigration Salary List (formerly the Shortage Occupation List), which reduces the fee from £1,423 to £625 for a visa over 3 years.
- 4Step 4 — Add Priority Processing if Desired: Standard processing times vary from 3 weeks (outside UK) to 8 weeks (inside UK) depending on the visa type and processing center workload. Priority processing reduces this to approximately 5 working days for an additional £500 from most countries. Super-priority processing (inside UK only) provides a next-working-day decision for £1,000. Not all visa categories or application centers offer expedited processing.
- 5Step 5 — Calculate Dependent Costs: For each dependent (spouse, partner, or child under 18), add their individual application fee plus their IHS. Dependent application fees are generally the same as the main applicant's fee. Dependent IHS rates match the main applicant's rate, except children under 18 pay the discounted student rate (£776/year). A family of four applying for a 5-year Skilled Worker visa could face IHS charges alone of £20,700.
- 6Step 6 — Sum All Components: The calculator aggregates the main applicant's application fee, their total IHS payment (annual rate multiplied by visa duration in years, rounded up), any priority processing fee, plus the same breakdown for each dependent. The result is the total upfront cost that must be available before the visa application can be submitted.
- 7Step 7 — Consider Additional Employer and Ancillary Costs: While not part of the visa fee itself, applicants should budget for related costs: the English language test fee (£150-£200 for IELTS), tuberculosis test certificate (£65-£150 depending on country), document translation and notarization, biometric enrollment fees at visa application centers (£55-£100), and courier/return passport delivery. Employers must also pay the Immigration Skills Charge (£364/year for small businesses, £1,000/year for large businesses) and the Certificate of Sponsorship fee (£239 per worker).
Standard cost for a single skilled worker without expedited processing
The base Skilled Worker visa fee for applications up to 3 years from outside the UK is £719 (as of 2024). The IHS is calculated at £1,035 per year for 3 years, totaling £3,105. This must be paid in full before the application is submitted. At current exchange rates, this represents approximately $4,800 USD — a significant upfront cost that does not include the employer's Immigration Skills Charge or Certificate of Sponsorship fee.
Students pay a reduced IHS rate of £776/year
Student visa applicants benefit from a reduced IHS rate of £776 per year (compared to £1,035 for most other categories). The application fee of £490 applies to all student visa applications from outside the UK. Including the IELTS test fee (~£185), tuberculosis test (~£65 in India), and visa application center fees, the total immigration cost for a student approaches £2,400. This does not include tuition or living costs.
Family applications multiply costs dramatically; Immigration Salary List reduces the base fee
This scenario illustrates how family visa costs escalate rapidly. Even with the reduced application fee for Immigration Salary List occupations (£625 vs £1,423 for over-3-year visas), the total approaches £23,000. Children under 18 pay the student IHS rate (£776/year). Priority processing adds £500 per applicant. Many employers cover the main applicant's costs as part of relocation packages, but dependent costs are often borne by the applicant.
Two-stage process with separate endorsement and visa application fees
The Global Talent visa has a unique two-stage fee structure. First, the applicant pays £524 for endorsement assessment by the relevant endorsing body (Tech Nation for digital technology, UKRI for academia/research, Arts Council England for arts/culture). If endorsed, they then pay £192 for the visa application itself — one of the lowest visa application fees in the UK system. However, the IHS still applies at the standard £1,035/year rate. Global Talent visa holders are not subject to the Immigration Skills Charge and can work for any employer or be self-employed.
Budgeting the total upfront immigration cost before accepting a job offer in the UK
Comparing the financial impact of different visa routes (Skilled Worker vs Global Talent vs Innovator Founder)
Calculating the full cost for a family relocation including all dependents' fees and IHS
Employer HR departments estimating the total sponsorship cost per international hire
Immigration advisors providing accurate cost breakdowns to clients considering UK migration
| Visa Type | Application Fee | IHS Rate/Year | Typical Duration | Total (Single, Full Duration) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skilled Worker | £625-£1,423 | £1,035 | 3-5 years | £3,824-£6,598 |
| Health & Care Worker | £284-£551 | Exempt | 3-5 years | £284-£551 |
| Student | £490 | £776 | 1-4 years | £1,266-£3,594 |
| Global Talent | £524 + £192 | £1,035 | 5 years | £5,891 |
| Family (Spouse/Partner) | £1,846 | £1,035 | 2.5 + 2.5 years | £4,434 (first stage) |
| Standard Visitor | £115 | Not required | 6 months | £115 |
What is the Immigration Health Surcharge and why is it so expensive?
The Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) is a mandatory fee paid by most visa applicants that provides access to the UK's National Health Service (NHS) during their stay. It was introduced in April 2015 at £200 per year, increased to £400 in 2019, to £624 in 2020, and to £1,035 in February 2024. The surcharge must be paid upfront for the entire visa duration before the application is submitted. The government argues the IHS ensures visa holders contribute to the cost of NHS services, but critics point out that visa holders also pay income tax and National Insurance, which fund the NHS for UK residents.
Are there any exemptions from the IHS?
Yes, several categories are exempt from the IHS or pay a reduced rate. Health and Care Worker visa holders and their dependents are fully exempt from the IHS as a government incentive to attract healthcare professionals. Applicants from countries with reciprocal healthcare agreements (such as Australia and New Zealand) may receive IHS refunds. Students, Youth Mobility Scheme participants, and applicants under 18 pay a reduced rate of £776 per year. EU Settlement Scheme applicants were also exempt. Asylum seekers, victims of human trafficking, and certain diplomatic applicants are exempt.
Can I get a refund if my visa is refused?
If your visa application is refused, the IHS payment is automatically refunded to the card used for payment, typically within 6-8 weeks. However, the visa application fee itself is non-refundable in most cases, regardless of the outcome. Priority and super-priority processing fees are also non-refundable. If you are granted a shorter visa duration than you applied for, the excess IHS payment for the unused period should be refunded automatically. If you leave the UK before your visa expires and cancel your visa, you can apply for a partial IHS refund for complete unused years.
What is the difference between applying inside vs outside the UK?
Visa fees differ depending on whether you apply from outside the UK (entry clearance) or from inside the UK (leave to remain/switching). Generally, application fees are the same or very similar for both routes, but processing times and available services differ. Inside-UK applicants can access super-priority processing (next working day, £1,000) at certain Service and Support Centres, which is not available outside the UK. Outside-UK applicants typically use visa application centers operated by VFS Global or TLS Contact, which charge additional service fees (£55-£100) for biometric enrollment and document handling.
Do employers have to pay any immigration costs?
Yes, employers sponsoring Skilled Worker visa holders bear several costs. The Certificate of Sponsorship (CoS) costs £239 per worker. The Immigration Skills Charge is £364 per year for small businesses (fewer than 50 employees) or £1,000 per year for medium and large businesses, paid upfront for the full sponsorship period. Some employers also choose to cover the employee's visa application fee, IHS, and relocation costs as part of their recruitment package. Health and Care Worker visa sponsors are exempt from the Immigration Skills Charge. Total employer costs for sponsoring a single Skilled Worker for 5 years can exceed £5,000-£7,500 before any relocation assistance.
How much does Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) cost after the initial visa?
After typically 5 years on a qualifying visa (such as Skilled Worker), applicants can apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain (settlement). The ILR application fee is currently £2,885 per person. There is no IHS payment for ILR, as it is a permanent status. Applicants must also pass the Life in the UK test (£50 fee) and meet the English language requirement at B1 level or above. After holding ILR for 12 months, applicants can apply for British citizenship (naturalisation) at a fee of £1,580. The total cost from initial visa through to citizenship can easily exceed £15,000-£20,000 per person over the full pathway.
Are UK visa fees higher than other countries?
UK visa fees are among the highest in the world, particularly when the IHS is included. A 5-year Skilled Worker visa with IHS costs approximately £6,600 for a single applicant — significantly more than Canada's permanent residency application (~CAD $1,365 / £850), Australia's skilled migration visa (~AUD $4,640 / £2,400), or the US H-1B visa (~$2,460 / £1,960). The UK is unique in charging a mandatory health surcharge on top of the visa fee; most other countries either include healthcare access in the visa fee or require private health insurance. The combination of high fees, IHS, and employer charges makes UK immigration one of the most expensive systems globally.
Pro Tip
If your occupation is eligible for the Health and Care Worker visa, always apply under that route rather than the standard Skilled Worker visa — you will be exempt from the IHS entirely, saving over £5,000 per person for a 5-year visa. For families, this exemption extends to all dependents, potentially saving £15,000-£20,000. Also, check whether your employer will cover visa costs as part of your employment package, as many NHS trusts and healthcare organizations offer full visa fee sponsorship.
Did you know?
The UK Immigration Health Surcharge was introduced in April 2015 at £200 per year and was intended as a modest contribution to NHS costs. By February 2024, it had increased to £1,035 per year — a 5.175x increase in under a decade, making it one of the fastest-rising immigration costs globally. The IHS generates approximately £1.9 billion per year in revenue for the NHS. Despite the surcharge, research by the Migration Observatory at the University of Oxford has shown that working-age migrants are net contributors to the UK fiscal system, paying more in taxes than they consume in public services.