Since 2010, the Global Law Experts annual awards have been celebrating excellence, innovation and performance across the legal communities from around the world.
posted 1 hour ago
Last updated: 4 July 2026
Meeting the UK spouse visa financial requirement is the single biggest hurdle most couples face when applying for a partner visa under Appendix FM of the Immigration Rules. Since 11 April 2024, the minimum income threshold for new partner‑route applications has been £29,000 gross per year, a significant increase from the previous £18,600 floor that had been in place since 2012. This guide sets out the operative rules in 2026, explains exactly how cash savings, self‑employed income and combined sources are calculated, and walks through five worked examples so you can assess your own position before you apply. It also covers key exemptions, common refusal reasons and practical steps every sponsor should take to build a strong evidence package.
This article is general guidance only. Immigration rules are complex and change frequently, always seek case‑specific advice from a qualified immigration lawyer before submitting an application.
If you are sponsoring a partner (spouse, fiancé(e) or unmarried partner) for entry clearance or leave to remain in the UK, you must demonstrate a gross annual income of at least £29,000. Alternatively, you can rely entirely on cash savings of £88,500, or use a combination of income and savings to bridge any shortfall. Sponsors who receive certain disability‑related or carer benefits are exempt from the minimum income threshold and instead face an adequate maintenance test. The threshold rises further when dependent children are included in the application.
The £29,000 minimum income requirement under the Appendix FM financial requirement applies to all new partner‑route applications, whether the applicant is applying for entry clearance from abroad or switching to the partner route inside the UK. For entry clearance applications, it is generally only the UK‑based sponsor’s income that counts. Where the applicant is already in the UK with permission to work, their income may also be included under certain categories.
Applicants who were granted initial leave on the partner route before 11 April 2024 may still benefit from the previous £18,600 threshold when they apply for an extension of that same period of leave. The House of Commons Library briefing SN06724 confirms that transitional provisions were introduced to protect existing route holders from the higher threshold mid‑journey. Once those applicants move to a fresh application, for example, an initial grant after that date, the £29,000 figure applies. All figures refer to gross income (before tax), not net or take‑home pay.
Sponsors who receive one or more of the following benefits are exempt from the minimum income threshold:
Where the exemption applies, the sponsor must instead show that the couple can adequately maintain themselves without recourse to public funds, a lower and more flexible evidential standard. The full list of qualifying benefits is set out on the GOV.UK proof‑of‑income page.
The Appendix FM financial requirement divides permissible income into several categories (often referred to as Categories A through G). Understanding which category applies to your situation determines which documents you need to provide and how income is calculated.
If the sponsor has been in salaried employment with the same employer for at least six months at the date of application, Category A typically applies. The applicant must show that the sponsor’s gross annual salary is at least £29,000. Key documents include:
Where the sponsor has changed employer within the past six months, alternative categories (B or other) may apply, requiring up to 12 months of evidence. The GOV.UK evidence page sets out the precise document requirements for each category.
Self‑employed sponsors must produce a more detailed evidence package to satisfy the self‑employed spouse visa requirements under Appendix FM. The following documents are generally expected:
Where the sponsor is a company director receiving a salary and dividends, both sources may be combined, but each element requires separate supporting evidence. Industry observers note that self‑employment evidence receives particularly close scrutiny, and incomplete packages remain one of the most common causes of refusal.
Non‑employment income such as rental income, share dividends, and pension income can also count. Evidence typically includes tenancy agreements, dividend vouchers, pension statements and corresponding bank statements showing receipt. These income sources can be combined with employment or self‑employment earnings to reach the £29,000 threshold.
| Income type | Key documents required |
|---|---|
| Salaried employment | 6 months payslips, bank statements, employer letter, P60 |
| Self‑employment | SA302, tax year overview, accounts, business bank statements, accountant letter |
| Rental income | Tenancy agreement, bank statements showing rent, mortgage statement |
| Dividends | Dividend vouchers, company accounts, bank statements |
| Pension | Pension statement, bank statements showing pension credits |
Cash savings can be used to meet the UK spouse visa financial requirement in full or to bridge a shortfall between actual income and the £29,000 threshold. The rules work as follows:
Permitted account types include bank current accounts, savings accounts, and certain investment accounts that can be liquidated quickly. Stocks, shares and pension pots that cannot be readily converted to cash do not qualify.
| Scenario | Qualifying income | Income shortfall | Required savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| No qualifying income, no children | £0 | £29,000 | £88,500 (£16,000 + 2.5 × £29,000) |
| Sponsor earns £20,000, no children | £20,000 | £9,000 | £38,500 (£16,000 + 2.5 × £9,000) |
| Sponsor earns £25,000, 1 child | £25,000 | £7,800 * | £35,500 (£16,000 + 2.5 × £7,800) |
* The additional threshold per relevant child increases the total required income. See the children section below for full figures.
Many applicants use a combination of income and savings to satisfy the UK spouse visa financial requirement. Here is the step‑by‑step method, effectively a UK spouse visa financial requirement calculator you can apply yourself:
A sponsor earns £20,000 gross per year, with no dependent children. The shortfall is £9,000. Required savings: £16,000 + (2.5 × £9,000) = £38,500. If the couple has £40,000 held jointly in a savings account for at least 6 months, the combined requirement is met.
When a partner‑route application includes dependent children, the income threshold rises above £29,000. The additional amount per child is specified in the Appendix FM financial requirement guidance.
| Number of children | Approximate income threshold | Savings if no income |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | £29,000 | £88,500 |
| 1 | £32,800 | £98,000 |
| 2 | £36,600 | £107,500 |
| 3 | £40,400 | £117,000 |
The per‑child increment is approximately £3,800 per child. Exact figures should be confirmed against the current Appendix FM guidance at the time of application.
Only relevant children, those who will be applying as dependants on the same application or who are already in the UK and dependent on the sponsor, trigger the additional threshold. Children who are settled British citizens and do not require leave to remain may not count as relevant children for threshold purposes, though this is a fact‑sensitive assessment. Industry observers expect this distinction to continue generating casework queries, so applicants with complex family compositions should seek professional advice.
| Method | When it applies | Key figures / evidence |
|---|---|---|
| Income only | Sponsor (and, where eligible, applicant) earns ≥ £29,000 gross p.a. | Payslips, P60, employer letter, SA302 for self‑employed, bank statements, covering 6 or 12 months |
| Savings only | No qualifying income; couple holds ≥ £88,500 in cash savings | Bank/savings account statements for full 6‑month period; funds held continuously above £16,000 baseline |
| Combined income + savings | Income below £29,000; savings bridge the shortfall | Income evidence plus savings statements; savings ≥ £16,000 + (2.5 × shortfall); 6‑month holding rule applies |
Refusals on financial grounds remain among the most frequent outcomes for spouse visa applications. The following issues appear repeatedly in casework:
A well‑structured cover letter or statement of case is not strictly required, but it significantly helps the caseworker navigate your evidence. The letter should cross‑reference each document to the specific Appendix FM category, explain any irregularities (such as a change of employer or an unusual savings deposit), and include a simple summary table showing how the threshold is met. Experienced immigration practitioners routinely recommend this approach to minimise the risk of misinterpretation.
Self‑employed sponsors face a higher evidential burden than salaried employees. The Appendix FM financial requirement guidance requires at least one full financial year of trading evidence, and in practice two years of SA302s and accounts strengthen the application considerably. Where the business is newly established, a statutory declaration confirming the nature and duration of trading activity, supported by management accounts, may be accepted, though early indications suggest that applications with less than 12 months of HMRC‑verified trading history face greater scrutiny.
Sponsors who earn income overseas can include that income only where it falls into a permissible category and is evidenced with equivalent documentation (for example, overseas tax returns and translated employer letters). Currency conversion should use the OANDA rate on the date of application.
Sponsors who have recently started a new job, or who have gaps in their PAYE record, may need to rely on Category B (which considers both current employment and the previous 12 months’ total income) or on savings to bridge the gap. If the sponsor’s current annual salary meets the threshold but they have been in post for fewer than six months, Category B evidence covering the full 12‑month period is the standard route. Applicants comparing partner visa routes across jurisdictions may find our guide to the Australian partner visa helpful for context.
Before submitting a spouse visa application, sponsors should take several preparatory steps:
Further details on the application process and document formats are available on the GOV.UK family visa evidence page. For those interested in how the partner route interacts with indefinite leave to remain, see our guide to UK ILR and citizenship changes in 2026.
Applicants who cannot meet the threshold through income, savings, or a combination of both may consider an Article 8 ECHR argument, asserting that refusal would breach their right to family life. Article 8 claims are highly fact‑sensitive and require compelling evidence of insurmountable obstacles to family life continuing outside the UK. The likely practical effect of relying solely on Article 8 without meeting the financial requirement is a more complex, lengthier process with no guaranteed outcome. Professional legal advice is essential in these circumstances.
The UK spouse visa financial requirement in 2026 centres on a gross annual income threshold of £29,000, with £88,500 needed if relying entirely on cash savings. Understanding the Appendix FM categories, gathering the correct documentary evidence, and ensuring savings meet the 6‑month holding rule are the three pillars of a successful financial evidence package. Self‑employed sponsors and applicants with children face additional complexity that warrants careful preparation, and, in many cases, professional guidance. Whether you are compiling payslips for a straightforward salaried case or assembling SA302s and trading accounts for a self‑employed application, a methodical, well‑documented approach is the most reliable path to approval.
For readers exploring other UK visa routes, our guides to applying for the UK Global Talent visa and preparing a letter of invitation for a UK visa may also be useful.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Jan Nwokoro at Jan Manuel Solicitors, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
Member
No results available
posted 22 minutes ago
posted 1 hour ago
posted 5 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest advisor briefings and news within Global Advisory Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Advisory Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional advisory services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced advisors, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.