How frequently can I come to the UK as a visitor and how does the 180-day rule work?
You will find conflicting information on the internet as there is no hard and fast rule. However, if you have asked this question, here is information that may be helpful before you look further.
Visa nationals
For visa nationals, a visit visa to the UK is normally granted for six months, 2 years, 5 years or 10 years. As a rule, you are expected to make the applications incrementally – for the first visit you will make an application for 6 months. After that, you can apply for a longer period.
In the visa application you will indicate how long you intend to stay. Independently to the answer to this question, the visa will normally be granted for 6 months. Although technically it means you can stay for the full 6-month period, in practice it doesn’t work like this. Next time you apply for a visit visa it will be noted that although you indicated on the form you would stay for, say, 3 weeks, you actually stayed for longer – thus last time you gave false information on the form and this can be a reason for refusal of the next application.
Thus, I would recommend that you try to be as accurate as possible on the proposed dates and don’t stay longer than you initially intended.
A visitor visa with 6-month duration may be single entry or multiple entry. Multiple entry visa will allow you to come again. And since you are not asked about any follow-up visits in the application form, you have much more flexibility in your second or third visit – provided you do not overstay the expiry date of the visa.
Visitors are not allowed to stay for more than 180 days on the same visit – unless it is a medical or academic visit.
If your visit has been for less than 180 days but your visit visa comes to an end, you are allowed to apply for extension. In practice, extending the visitor visa in the UK is not a good idea. The cost of the application for a visitor visa extension is £1000 and you can only extend your visa to bring your overall stay to 180 days. You may also have to pay for a priority service to get the application decided in time. Wherever possible, it is much less stressful to leave before the expiry of your visa and apply for a new visa from your country of residence.
All long-term visit visas – 2-year, 5-year or 10-year – are, of course, multiple entry. Again, you will have to indicate in the application form the proposed duration of your first visit. All subsequent visits should also not exceed 180 days.
Here comes the complex part – I have spent six months in the UK as a visitor, how soon can I return? How frequently can I visit?
How soon can I return after a 6-months visit
Generally, it’s good practice not to visit for more than 6 months in any 12-months period but there is no strict rule to this effect. The reason for this is that in special circumstances you may wish, or need, to come to the UK again in less than six months on completion of your 6-month long visit. It is left to the immigration officer at the port of entry to decide whether to allow you to enter or not. You may be asked to explain why you are spending these long periods in the UK. As long as you are not engaged in any unlawful activity, such as working without permission, not using the NHS and have sufficient funds for your visit, I would expect that at least on your first return you will not be denied entry. However, if the immigration officer decides that the circumstances demanding the frequency of your visits are not of temporary nature, they may come to conclusion that you are living in the UK and refuse entry on this basis.
Frequency of visits
There is no legal instrument stating that a visitor cannot spend in the UK more than 180 days out of 360. However, if your visits are so frequent that the immigration officer has reasons to believe that you are living the UK and only visiting the country of your “habitual residence” the visa may be revoked. In practice, 180 days out of 360 is the point beyond which the immigration officer may suspect that you spend more time in the UK than in your country of residence.
A few days in excess of 180 do not necessarily command termination of your visa. But it may give the officer reasons to look at the information provided in your visa application form to see if there have been any material changes in your circumstances. For example, if you stated that you are in full time employment visiting the UK during your annual leave but actually spend prolonged periods not consistent with your initial application, it can be a reason to cancel the visa. Normally, less than 180 days a year spent in the UK will not trigger an enquiry, but longer periods may well invite an immigration officer to question your circumstances.
Non-visa nationals
Non-visa nationals do not need a visa and thus a visit up to 180-days is normally routinely allowed without further questions.
Frequent visits, for example to visit a family member or partner, may invite questions. Again, there is no hard and fast rule that you cannot spend in the UK more than 180 days in any 12 months, but questions may be asked at the border to establish that you are not living in the UK.
What is the difference between living in the country and visiting?
Generally, you are expected to spend more time at home than on a visit. But sometimes, and for a limited period of time, it may be the other way round. Here the key phrase is “for a limited period of time”. You may have to explain the reasons for this situation and when, you expect, it will be resolved. For example, if you have a child at school in the UK and you frequently come to visit, or a close relative or friend needs your support due to health issues, bereavement or anything else.
If you are coming to the UK to help with a newly born baby or to help out a working mum, be careful not to make it the primary purpose of your visit so that the immigration officer does not assume that you will “work” for the family. Family visits are perfectly legitimate and, of course, routine help with domestic chores is not a problem, as long as this help is not the main reason for your visit. I know, it sounds unfair, but this is tip from an immigration lawyer and you may find it helpful.
15 responses
Hi Helena, I’m Canadian. I will stay with my partner in the UK starting this September for his last year of university (he’s an international student from the US and will leave when he finishes). I intend to leave the UK for about a month to either travel or go home around Christmas and re-enter the country for another four months after that … However, I have already stayed in the UK for 82 days at the beginning of the year as part of a student exchange with my home university in Canada. Will these repeated entries be a problem? Again, I am not planning to live there, but only be with my partner for his last academic year – and not having to do long distance.
Thanks for your help in advance
Hi Helena – Thank you for publishing. May I ask if the 180 day clock (which as I understand is more of a guideline than a hard and fast rule) is reset 1st Jan or whether it is perpetually running based on the start of a trip. If coming to the UK for frequent visits to a partner, but genuinely not intending on settling here, would there be any documents you would recommend (e.g. lease in another country / evidence that you are enrolled in uni there etc).
An entertainer was given 180 days visa for a performance in the UK. He left after spending 10 days. Can he re enter to perform withing the 180 days.
I am inclined to think that as long as the activity falls within the scope of permitted engagements for visitors you do not need a new visa. However, I would recommend that you book a consultation to receive proper legal advice as the answer will depend on multiple factors and I may need to check the published policy guidance if the immigration rules do not provide a definitive answer. You can boom a zoom consultation using this link: https://calendly.com/kadmosimmigration/immigration-advice-call
Hi Helena,
I am planning on studying in the UK (Edinburgh) flying in to the UK 16/07/2024 and flying out 12/01/2024. To my understanding if I am studying for less than 6 months I don’t need a visa. My question is, what counts as 6 months, 180 days or 6 months in a calendar year?
Thanks
Hi Lilli, it is generally the duration of the course and accreditation of the institution which is offering the course that determines your eligibility to study as a visitor. In other words, you may intend to study for less than six months but if the course is designed for a longer period you will be in breach of the immigration rules. Six months is six calendar months.
Hello,
I am a Canadian citizen, age 60.
I bought a flat in London about 9 years ago and I am a frequent visitor. As I have recently retired, I would like to stay for over 6 months in the UK.
Please advise if this is possible to do through the Home Office.
Thanks and all the best,
Majd
Unfortunately, there is no separate visa for property owners or investors. Visitors are not permitted to stay beyond six months under the immigration rules.
Attorney Helena, l am an American passport holder, l’ ve been in uk for 4 months to visit my British partner and I am going to France for 12 days visiting, and then come back to uk, for two months and return back to USA. Is this an over stay or will be count as two different entrance. I don’t want to overstay. Thanks
The 180-day clock is reset every time you enter the UK via an official port of entry – at the airport or at the passport control point at the rail station. Just make sure that your passport is properly scanned. If you travel by car and just waive your passport at an immigration officer your entry will not get properly recorded in the system, and then you may have a problem if two visits are rolled into one. You will need to ask the immigration officer to stamp your passport – although biometric passports are normally not stamped now.
hello
Thanks for all the vital information.
Currently, I am an international student at University of Birmingham who came to Birmingham, UK on a standard visitor visa. My visa end date is 1st August, 2024.
I have a few questions about standard visitor visa (upto 6 month). PLease respond to it as it is highly essential for me to know.
Ques 1: I have a conference to attend at University of Nottingham but the date is August 7,2024. Is it possible to go to my country by this date even if my visa end date is 1st August 2024.
Ques 2: ( This question is for my friend)
Whether everyone get a six-month visitor visa if the person has to attend a conference for 4 days only. And how to get multiple entries(two entries in my case), if required to attend two conference in UK.
Hoping for your answer.
Thanks
Amrita
sharma.65@iitj.ac.in
You shouldn’t overstay your visa if it expires on 1 August as it may affect your future applications for leave to enter. It is better to leave before the expiry date of your visa and apply for entry clearance to attend the conference in August. Usually, a visitor visa is granted for multiple entry, even if it is only for six months. But it will say on the vignette whether it is a single entry or multiple entry.
I am married to a Myanmar lady. I am now back in the UK after the military coup. I worked in Myanmar for 4 years as a school Principal. Can I bring her to the UK taking into account that Myanmar is now wracked by a civil war?
I apologise for a much belated response, as you should have found the answer to your questions by now. You can sponsor your wife to the UK and I hope you have already done so and the application has been successful.
Hi,
Me and my wife were on student visa, my wife as dependent. However she doesn’t live with me because of her own career back home. She does visit me and stayed for few month in last year.
Now I have applied for my PSW visa which is 2 years visa, and since my wife wouldn’t be able to stay for whole 2 years we were thinking if visitor visa would be a better options for us because of the cost of PSW.
What are the risk of not applying for psw but applying for visitor visa? Is there any ground for rejection?
Thank you