What Is the UK Skilled Worker Visa?
The Skilled Worker visa replaced the older Tier 2 (General) visa in December 2020 and is now the main legal route for non-UK workers to take up skilled employment in the United Kingdom. It lets you live and work in the UK for up to five years at a time, brings family reunification rights, and offers a clear pathway to Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR), UK permanent residency, after five years.
For international tech professionals, healthcare workers, engineers, finance professionals, and academics targeting roles in London, Manchester, Edinburgh, or Cambridge, the Skilled Worker visa is almost always the relevant route. Over 350,000 Skilled Worker visas were granted in 2024 alone, making the UK one of the largest destinations for skilled labour migration globally. The headline cost, on the other hand, is also one of the highest. Budget honestly before signing.
Related reading: How to Get a Job in the UK in 2026: The Complete Guide · London Tech Salary Guide 2026: Software Engineering, Data, and Product Pay Bands · UK CV vs American Resume: Key Differences Every Job Seeker Must Know.
UK Skilled Worker Visa: 2026 Salary Thresholds
The UK government raised the salary thresholds significantly in April 2024 and they remain in effect for 2026. You must meet whichever of the following is highest for your specific role:
- General threshold: £38,700 per year
- The "going rate" for your specific occupation code (SOC code) — published by the Home Office
- £15.88 per hour for hourly-rated roles
Reduced thresholds apply to specific groups:
- New entrants (under 26, recent graduates, or in postdoctoral positions): £30,960 minimum
- Health and care workers: £25,000 minimum (separate Health and Care Worker visa)
- Shortage occupations on the Immigration Salary List: 20% discount on the going rate (but not below £30,960)
Are You Eligible for the UK Skilled Worker Visa?
To qualify, you must meet all of the following:
- Sponsorship — a job offer from a UK employer holding a valid Skilled Worker sponsor licence
- Skill level — the role must be at RQF Level 3 or above (broadly equivalent to A-levels and above)
- Salary — meets the relevant threshold (see above)
- English language — proven to at least CEFR B1 level (typically via IELTS, an English-taught degree, or being from a majority English-speaking country)
- Genuine vacancy — the role must be a real, ongoing position with the sponsoring employer
UK Visa Costs: What to Budget
The total cost of a UK Skilled Worker visa is significant — often the highest among major economies:
- Visa application fee: £719 (up to 3 years) or £1,420 (3+ years), with reductions for shortage occupations
- Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS): £1,035/year per applicant — pre-paid for the full visa duration
- Certificate of Sponsorship fee (paid by employer): £525
- Immigration Skills Charge (paid by employer): £1,000/year for medium/large employers, £364/year for small employers
- Biometric appointment, document translations, priority processing if needed
For a 5-year Skilled Worker visa with a family of four, total costs can exceed £15,000 between you and the employer. Some employers cover all costs as part of relocation packages. Negotiate this explicitly before signing. I've seen Indian engineers turn down London offers from FAANG specifically because the company refused to cover IHS for dependants and the upfront hit was over £8,000. Always make this a contract clause, not a verbal promise.
UK Shortage Occupations: Where Demand Is Highest in 2026
The Immigration Salary List (formerly Shortage Occupation List) gives priority to roles where the UK has demonstrated skills shortages. As of 2026, key shortage roles include:
- Software engineers, programmers, and data analysts (SOC 2134, 2135, 2136)
- Cyber security professionals
- Civil, mechanical, and electrical engineers
- Healthcare professionals (nurses, doctors, paramedics, social workers)
- Teachers in mathematics, physics, computer science, modern languages
- Veterinarians, dentists, pharmacists
- Skilled construction trades
The UK Skilled Worker Visa Application Process
- Receive a job offer from a UK sponsor — only employers with a Home Office sponsor licence can sponsor you. Verify this on the Home Office Register of Licensed Sponsors before applying.
- Receive a Certificate of Sponsorship (CoS) — your employer assigns this; it's a unique reference number, not a physical document.
- Apply online via gov.uk — within 3 months of CoS issue. Pay all fees including IHS up front.
- Provide biometrics at your local visa application centre.
- Decision typically within 3 weeks from outside the UK, 8 weeks from within. Priority service options available for £500–£1,000 extra.
- Travel to the UK on the visa, collect your Biometric Residence Permit within 10 days of arrival.
Family Members: Bringing Spouse and Children
The Skilled Worker visa allows you to bring "dependants":
- Spouse or unmarried partner (must demonstrate cohabiting relationship of 2+ years if not married)
- Children under 18 at time of application
- Each dependant pays their own visa fee (~£719) and IHS (~£1,035/year per person)
- Spouse has full work rights in any role, no separate work permit needed
- Children attend UK state schools free, NHS access for all family members
Path to Permanent Residency (ILR)
After 5 years on the Skilled Worker visa, you can apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain. Requirements:
- 5 continuous years on the Skilled Worker (or eligible) visa
- Pass the Life in the UK Test
- English language at B1 (already met when applying for the visa)
- Salary still meeting the relevant threshold at the time of ILR application
- Limited absences (no more than 180 days outside UK in any 12-month period)
After ILR, you can apply for British citizenship 12 months later (subject to additional residency rules).
Mistakes That Cause UK Visa Rejections
- Salary marginally below threshold — even £100 short of the going rate is grounds for refusal
- Sponsor not holding a current licence — verify before accepting any offer
- Insufficient English evidence — IELTS results must be from approved test providers (Trinity, IELTS for UKVI, etc.)
- Inconsistent employment history — gaps and inconsistencies must be explained, especially for in-country switches
- Missed IHS payment — applications without IHS paid in full are not processed
Skilled Worker Visa vs Other UK Routes
| Route | Job offer required | Salary threshold | Path to ILR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skilled Worker | Yes | £38,700+ | 5 years |
| Health and Care Worker | Yes (NHS/care) | £25,000+ | 5 years |
| Global Talent | No | None | 3–5 years |
| High Potential Individual | No | None | Convert to other visa |
| Innovator Founder | No (running business) | None | 3 years |
Compared to the Irish CSEP (2 years to Stamp 4) or the German Blue Card (21 months to Niederlassungserlaubnis with B1), the UK route asks more money and more time. For senior tech roles in London, the FAANG-equivalent compensation often justifies the friction. For mid-career engineers paying out-of-pocket, Ireland or Germany usually wins on the math. Decide on the math, not the postcode.