The consultation on extending the period people in certain immigration routes will need to wait before being able to apply for settlement (also referred to as indefinite leave to remain) has been opened.
The consultation document is called “A Fairer Pathway to Settlement: A statement and accompanying consultation on earned settlement”. The consultation is open until 11.59pm on 12 February 2026.
People unaffected by the proposals
1. This includes parents, spouses and dependants of British citizens and those in the Hong Kong (BNO) route:
Separately, and not subject to consultation, settlement will be quicker for those who have a uniquely strong attachment to this country, including the spouses and dependants of British citizens and British Nationals (Overseas) (BN(O)s) from Hong Kong
Note that this quote does not mention parents of British citizens. Table 2 below indicates that parents in the five year route will be unaffected, but those in the ten year route will be caught by these changes, see below for more.
2. Those with leave under the EU Settlement Scheme are also unaffected:
In line with the UK’s obligations under the Withdrawal Agreement, settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) is out of scope for both this consultation and the planned reforms. Grants of settlement related to the Windrush Scheme are also out of scope for both this consultation and the planned reforms. There will be no changes implemented for either scheme in relation to the settlement reforms.
3. HM Armed forces:
The consultation will seek views on the treatment of armed forces members under the earned settlement system, but we are not proposing that HM Armed Forces and their family members should have a different pathway to settlement than they do today.
4. People who are already settled or hold indefinite leave to remain will also be unaffected.
People who will be affected by the proposed changes
The consultation asks about the the need for transitional arrangements for those who are already in the UK. This is key and everyone affected should respond.
Without transitional provisions, anyone who is currently here in other immigration routes not mentioned above, and has not yet reached settlement would be affected by the new ten year baseline period (although do note, for example, the seven year reductions available for those in Global Talent and Innovator Founder routes):
those routes (for example, the Skilled Worker route) that currently lead to settlement after 5 years continuous stay will cease to do so and will default to a qualifying period of 10 years, except where an earned reduction on the basis of contribution or integration applies.
Dependants will be treated separately from the main applicant:
We expect it to become the position that the qualifying period for settlement for a person granted entry and stay as the adult dependants of an economic migrant will be separately determined according to their own attributes and circumstances. This will mean that a person admitted as the dependant of an economic migrant will not necessarily enjoy the same qualifying period for settlement as their partner. It may be shorter or longer, according to their particular circumstances.
There are also proposals to change how dependant children are treated:
The Home Office considers that the system should continue to provide a window during which those who were originally given a permission as a dependent child when they are under 18 can be granted settlement (or a limited permission to extend their stay) at the same time as their parents, even if they are over 18 at that point. The Home Office will, however, develop proposals under which a cut-off point, linked to age, may operate, and at which point such a person will transition to an immigration pathway under which they progress to settled status in their own right. This could, for example, involve specifying an age limit below which some mandatory requirements (i.e. the requirement to have paid NICs in the 3 years prior to applying) are waived.
Do note that this consultation also includes the ten year path to settlement for resettled refugees. The effect on the “core protection” route is unclear. The paper says:
a starting point of a 20-year qualifying period of settlement for those recognised as refugees. Those who move from core protection onto the new core protection-work and study routes will be able to earn reductions
The proposals
The long residence route, through which people can apply for settlement once they have accrued ten years of lawful residence across different routes, is to be scrapped.
A consequence of the proposed system is that there will no longer be a separate long residence route. The purpose of the existing long residence route will be superseded by arrangements in which the baseline qualifying period is adjustable for considerations relating to contribution and integration
a) increasing the baseline qualifying period for settlement to 10 years
The following is not under consultation, these changes will be made and will be mandatory requirements for settlement. The exception is “contribution”, where they are consulting on how long a person should have to meet the annual earnings threshold (somewhere between three to five years).











