Skip to content
Study in UK
Go back

British Citizenship: The Final Step to Settlement

British citizenship is the final step in your immigration journey. After holding Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) for one year, you can apply for citizenship and become a British national. You receive a British passport, full political and civil rights (including voting), and can never be deported. This is the pinnacle of UK settlement for international migrants.

The Citizenship Pathway: From Student to Citizen

For most international students, the journey follows this trajectory:

  1. Student Route: 1–4 years (or more for PhDs)
  2. Graduate Route: 2–3 years (post-study work)
  3. Skilled Worker visa: 2–5 years (work-based settlement)
  4. Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR): Granted after 5 continuous years of eligible visa time
  5. British citizenship: Eligible after 1 year of ILR
  6. Total time: Typically 8–13 years from first Student visa to citizenship

Alternatively, via Family visa route:

  1. Family/Partner visa: 2–5 year initial grant
  2. ILR: After 5 years continuous residence
  3. Citizenship: After 1 year of ILR

This is a long journey, but for many international graduates, it is the pathway to a permanent home and belonging in the UK.

Eligibility for British Citizenship

You can apply for citizenship if:

  1. You hold ILR status: Indefinite Leave to Remain granted and currently valid
  2. You have held ILR for 1+ year: Continuous 12-month residence with ILR status
  3. You meet the Good Character requirement: No serious criminal convictions, no immigration breaches
  4. You pass the Life in the UK test: 75% pass rate (if not already passed for ILR)
  5. You demonstrate English language: B2 level (upper-intermediate) or above, or exemption
  6. You intend to reside in the UK: You are building your life here (assessed via your residential history)

Exceptions to the 1-year ILR requirement:

The Life in the UK Test (Again)

If you did not already pass the Life in the UK test for ILR, you must pass it for citizenship. If you passed it for ILR, you do not need to retake it.

The test is identical:

If you already passed for ILR, simply provide your certificate with your citizenship application.

English Language Requirement for Citizenship

You must demonstrate CEFR B2 level (upper-intermediate English) or above:

Exemptions (no test required if):

If you need to prove B2:

Your English test must be from an SELT provider and dated within 2 years of your citizenship application.

Good Character Assessment

UKVI assesses your Good Character:

You may face refusal if you have:

You may be acceptable if you have:

Minor traffic offences or cautions do not typically prevent citizenship.

If you have any concerns about your character assessment, consult a legal adviser before applying.

The Naturalisation Application

The formal application for citizenship is called naturalisation. The process:

Step 1: Prepare your documents:

Step 2: Apply via UK Immigration Online or paper form:

Step 3: Pay the citizenship fee:

ComponentCost (GBP)
Citizenship application£1,038
Oath ceremony fee£80
Life in the UK test (if retaking)£50
Total£1,168

Fees are non-refundable even if your application is refused.

Step 4: UKVI processes your application (4–6 months typical).

Step 5: If approved, you are invited to a citizenship ceremony to take the Oath of Allegiance.

The Citizenship Oath and Ceremony

Upon approval, you attend a formal citizenship ceremony (usually at your local local authority or court). You:

  1. Take the Oath of Allegiance: Swear loyalty to the Crown and the UK
  2. Receive your citizenship certificate: Official proof of citizenship
  3. Receive your British passport: Applied for after the ceremony

The oath is brief and formal. You can request a secular affirmation if you prefer not to reference the Crown on religious grounds.

British Passport and Rights

Once you are a British citizen, you:

Dual Nationality and Renunciation

The UK permits dual nationality. You can hold British citizenship and your country-of-origin citizenship simultaneously—the UK does not require you to renounce your original nationality.

However, some countries do not allow dual citizenship and may require you to renounce your original nationality to become British. Check your country’s rules.

If you wish to renounce your original nationality, do so through your country’s embassy or consulate (separate process from UK citizenship).

Processing Timeline and Waiting

After submitting your citizenship application:

PhaseDuration
Application assessment4–6 weeks
Background checks4–8 weeks (can extend)
Decision2–4 weeks
Ceremony invitation2–4 weeks after approval
Total12–22 weeks

Delays occur if UKVI requests additional information (past employment, criminal record clarification, etc.). Respond promptly to avoid further delays.

If Your Application Is Refused

Citizenship refusal is rare but can occur if:

If refused, you have a limited right of appeal. Most appeals succeed only if you can prove UKVI made a clear factual error. Consider legal advice if your application is refused.

Bringing Family Members: Sponsorship After Citizenship

Once you are a British citizen, you can sponsor:

As a British citizen, sponsoring family is simpler than as a visa holder—you do not need to meet financial thresholds for some categories, though you must prove you can support them.

Travelling Abroad as a British Citizen

With a British passport, you gain visa-free or visa-on-arrival access to most countries. However:

You cannot lose British citizenship by living abroad, unlike some visa statuses.

The Full Journey: Timeline and Costs

From first Student visa to British citizen:

MilestoneVisa TypeDurationVisa FeeIHS (Total)
UndergraduateStudent Route3 years£2,157 (3 × £719)£3,105
Graduate workGraduate Route2 years£1,438 (2 × £719)£2,070
Professional workSkilled Worker2 years£1,438 (2 × £719)£2,070
SettlementILR1 year£719£1,035
CitizenshipNaturalisation£1,038
Total8 years£6,790£8,280

Total immigration costs: Approximately £15,000–17,000 over 8 years.

Why Citizenship Matters

British citizenship offers:

For many international students, citizenship represents the culmination of years of study, work, and integration—a genuine home in the UK.


This article is for general information only and is not immigration advice. Consult a regulated OISC/IAA adviser for your case.

Sources

Last updated: 2025-10.


Share this article:

Scan with WeChat to share this page

Current page QR code

Link copied

Related Q&A


Back
Clearing Process for International Students: How to Use the UK's Backup Admissions System
Next
Study Pod vs. Studio Apartment: Costs, Space, and What You're Getting