Accredited official statistics

Why do people come to the UK? For family reasons

Published 25 November 2021

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Data relate to the year ending September 2021 and all comparisons are with the year ending September 2020, unless indicated otherwise.

On 11 March 2020, the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the COVID-19 outbreak as a global pandemic. A range of restrictions were implemented in many parts of the world, and the first UK lockdown measures were announced on 23 March 2020. The COVID-19 pandemic has had a significant impact on the UK immigration system, both in terms of restricting migrant movements to and from the UK and the impact on operational capacity.

Year ending comparisons that follow will reflect the restrictions in place during this period of the pandemic.

This section contains data on:

  • Family-related Entry clearance visas
  • Dependants on other types of visas
  • European Economic Area (EEA) family permits
  • EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) family permits

1. Immigration for family reasons

There were 263,415 visas and permits granted for family reasons in the year ending September 2021, 79% more than the year ending September 2020, a period affected by the global pandemic, and 47% more than the year ending September 2019, largely due to increases in dependants of people coming on work or study visas, and the dependants of the newly introduced British Nationals (Overseas) route. A sharp fall in grants was seen in April to June 2020 due to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic. However, the number of grants of visas and permits has begun to recover to pre-pandemic levels.

The year ending September 2021 total included:

  • 46,250 family-related visas, 8% more than the previous year, and 11% less than the year ending September 2019; almost three quarters (71%) of family-related visas granted in the year ending September 2021 were to partners, with the remainder comprising children or other dependants
  • 144,944 dependants of people coming to the UK on other types of visas, up 127% in the last year and up 87% since September 2019; there were particularly large increases in grants to dependants of Sponsored study visa holders (29,540 last year to 44,605 this year), and dependants of Skilled workers (up 24,481 to 60,385). This also includes 23,880 dependants of main applicants on the BN(O) route
  • 13,691 EEA family permits, down 42% in the last year, and down 71% compared with the year ending September 2019
  • 58,530 EUSS family permits were issued to non-EEA qualified family members of people from the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein (up 238% since year end September 2020 and 2113% since September 2019); this increase is likely to be linked to publicisation of the EU Settlement Scheme deadline of 30 June 2021 for EEA citizens and their family members resident in the UK before the end of the transition period at 11pm on 31 December 2020

Table 1: Family visas and permits granted, by visa type, years ending September 2019, September 2020, and September 2021

Visa type Year ending September 2019 Year ending September 2020 Year ending September 2021 Percentage change 2019/2021 Percentage change 2020/2021
Family-related visas 52,043 42,807 46,250 -11% +8%
of which:          
Partners 38,264 30,829 32,870 -14% +7%
Children 7,045 5,697 6,396 -9% +12%
Other dependants 6,734 6,281 6,984 +4% +11%
Dependants on other visas1 77,331 63,928 144,944 +87% +127%
Total family visas 129,374 106,735 191,194 +48% +79%
EEA family permits 46,737 23,416 13,691 -71% -42%
EU Settlement Scheme family permits2 2,645 17,341 58,530 +2,113% +238%
Total family permits 49,382 40,757 72,221 +46% +77%
Total family visas and permits 178,756 147,492 263,415 +47% +79%

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes: Vis_D02
Notes:

  1. This figure now includes dependants of main applicants on the BN(O) entry clearance route. The BN(O) route was launched on 31 January 2021 and accounts for 23,880 dependants in the year ending September 2021.
  2. The EU Settlement Scheme family permit is an entry clearance route that launched on 30 March 2019 for non-EU members of an EU family. It is not an application to the EU Settlement Scheme. A successful applicant can, if they wish, make a further application to the EU Settlement Scheme once in the UK.

Figure 1 shows that all family related visa and permit routes had been steadily increasing for a number of years prior to the pandemic, before falling sharply in 2020, with the exception being EUSS family permits, which continued to increase with 58,530 grants in the year ending September 2021. In Q3 2021, grants for all family-related visas and permits increased, with the number of grants for dependants on other visas increasing significantly above pre-pandemic levels to 144,944. This was caused by three factors. Primarily, a large spike well above pre-pandemic levels of dependants connected to sponsored study visas, dependants on skilled work visa routes which saw a return to pre-pandemic levels and growth above what was seen in 2019, and finally the addition of the BN(O) route. Family related visas only rose by (8%) to 46,250.

Figure 1: Family-related visas and permits granted, by visa type, years ending September 2012 to September 2021

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes: Vis_D02
Notes:

  1. Several changes to the Immigration Rules came into effect on 9 July 2012. Further details on the rule changes can be found in the user guide and in the additional analysis provided in ‘Immigration statistics, July to September 2014’.
  2. The EU Settlement Scheme family permit is an entry clearance route that launched on 30 March 2019. It is not an application to the EU Settlement Scheme. A successful applicant can, if they wish, make a further application to the EU Settlement Scheme once in the UK.

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, all visa application centres were closed at the end of March 2020 and only gradually reopened from June 2020. As a result, visa grant numbers were much lower than usual in April to June 2020, but significantly recovered in the second half of the year. Figure 2 shows that the recovery continued in Q1 2021 (January to March) and Q2 2021 (April to June) with monthly numbers of visas granted reaching higher than pre-pandemic levels, a trend which continues through Q3 (July to September) where visa grants have increased well beyond pre-pandemic levels.

Figure 2: Number of family visas and permits granted, by month, 2019, 2020, and 2021

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes: Vis_D02 and underlying data

There was an 8% overall increase in family-related visa grants in the year ending September 2021 compared with a year earlier, but an 11% drop in comparison to the year ending September 2019. The top nationality, Pakistan, increased by 32% compared with the previous year, however dropped slightly by 5% compared with the year ending September 2019.

Pakistani nationals were granted the highest number of family-related visas in the year ending September 2021, accounting for nearly one fifth (19%) of the total. In the year ending September 2021, the top five nationalities together accounted for two fifths (40%) of all family-related visas granted.

Table 2: Top five nationalities granted family-related visas, years ending September 2019, September 2020, and September 2021

Nationality Year ending September 2019 Year ending September 2020 Year ending September 2021 Percentage change 2019/2021 Percentage change 2020/2021
Pakistan 9,250 6,662 8,821 -5% +32%
India 4,126 3,348 3,098 -25% -7%
United States 2,604 1,950 2,668 +2% +37%
Bangladesh 2,559 2,155 2,100 -18% -3%
Iran 1,716 1,526 2,000 +17% +31%
All other nationalities 31,788 27,166 27,563 -13% +1%
Total 52,043 42,807 46,250 -11% +8%

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes: Vis_D02

Hong Kong nationals saw a rise in grants in the year ending September 2021 to 731 (up 109 or 18%). For information on the new British National Overseas (BN(O)) visa route please see the “How many people come to the UK each year” topic.

1.2 Dependants on other visas

In addition to family-related visas, other dependants can be granted visas to join or accompany migrants with visas for other purposes, such as work and study.

In the year ending September 2021, there were 144,944 visas granted to dependants on other visas, 127% higher than the previous year, and 87% higher than the year ending September 2019. This was largely due to an increase of 29,540 grants to dependants of those on sponsored study visas, almost tripling the number of dependants on these visas from the year ending September 2020, with a similar increase when compared to the year ending 2019, where sponsored study dependants more than tripled. An increase to dependants of those on skilled worker visas has also contributed to this increase, which is across both the year ending September 2019 and 2020. Another source of this increase is the introduction of the BN(O) route, the dependants of which account for 23,880 visas in the year ending September 2021, and accounts for most of the increase in visas granted to dependants in the Other Visa category in Table 3.

Table 3: Visas granted to dependants on other visas1, years ending September 2019, September 2020, and September 2021

Visa category Year ending September 2019 Year ending September 2020 Year ending September 2021 Percentage change 2019/2021 Percentage change 2020/2021
Sponsored Study 14,839 15,065 44,605 +201% +196%
Skilled Work 48,669 35,904 60,385 +24% +68%
Other Work Visas 5,665 3,902 6,263 +11% +61%
Other Visas 8,158 9,057 33,691 +313% +272%
Total 77,331 63,928 144,944 +87% +127%

Source: Entry clearance visa applications and outcomes: Vis_D02
Notes:

  1. Not all visas have a dedicated dependant visa, dependants on those routes are instead granted a general joining or accompanying visa which are contained in this category.

The change in the number of visas granted to dependants of migrants on work and student visas reflects the overall change in those routes – for more information, see the “Why do people come to the UK? To work” and the “Why do people come to the UK? To study” sections.

1.3 Family permits

EUSS family permits and EEA family permits allow eligible family members of people from the EU, Switzerland, Norway, Iceland or Liechtenstein and Swiss nationals to travel to the UK. After 30 June 2021 applications for EEA Family Permits were no longer accepted. There was a total of 72,221 family permits granted in the year ending September 2021, 77% more than the previous year. When split by route, there were 13,691 EEA family permits granted in the year ending September 2021, a decrease of 42%, following a downward trend since Q3 2019. A further 58,530 EUSS family permits were granted in the year ending September 2021, up from 17,341 a year earlier. This increase is likely to be due to the EU Settlement Scheme deadline of the 30 June 2021.

2. About these statistics

The statistics in this section provide an indication of the number of people who had an intention to enter the UK for family reasons.

Before 2021, due to the application to the UK of European Union (EU) free movement law, the majority of UK immigration control related to non-European Economic Area (EEA) nationals. From 2021, unless otherwise stated, data in this release relate to both EEA and non-EEA nationals.

Entry clearance visas allow an individual to enter and stay in the UK within the period for which the visa is valid. From 2021, EEA nationals require a visa to enter the UK for family reasons, unless they are eligible for the EU Settlement Scheme or a free EU Settlement Scheme family permit.

Data in this section refer to the number of Entry clearance visas granted for family reasons (including those issued to dependants of those travelling on other types of visas), EEA family permits and EU Settlement Scheme family permits granted, within the period. If an individual was granted a visa more than once in a given period, this has been counted as multiple grants in the statistics. If an individual entered the UK multiple times within the period for which a visa was valid, this has been counted as one grant in the visa statistics.

The data do not show whether, or when, an individual arrived in the UK, what they did on arrival to the UK, or how long they stayed in the UK.

Year-on-year comparisons of the number of decisions can be affected by quarterly fluctuations in the data. These fluctuations can be examined in the quarterly data in the published tables.

Additional analysis on family visas was included in the ‘Immigration statistics, July to September 2014’ release to assist users in understanding the trends in family data before and after the changes to the Immigration Rules in July 2012 (updated in the ‘Immigration statistics, April to June 2015’ release).

For figures on family-related grants of settlement as well as residence documentation issued to EEA nationals and their family members, see ‘How many people continue their stay in the UK?’. Data on the Family reunion visa category can be found in the ‘How many people do we grant asylum or protection to?’.

Prior to 1 July 2021, the EU Settlement Scheme family permit operated alongside the EEA family permit, which continued to provide a separate entry clearance route for those who qualified for it. The EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS) family permit facilitates entry into the UK of an eligible family member in order to join, or accompany, an EEA or Swiss citizen who has been granted settled status or pre-settled status under the EUSS. This is a separate entry clearance route from those applying directly to the EU Settlement Scheme. EU Settlement Scheme statistics are published by the Home Office on a monthly basis. More detailed breakdowns are provided on a quarterly basis.

2.1 Other sources

Until 2020, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) published long-term international migration (LTIM) estimates in its ‘Migration Statistics Quarterly Report’ (latest data available is for the year ending March 2020). The ONS are currently reviewing their methods for measuring population and migration; see their blog post for more information on the latest developments to ONS population and migration data.

3. Data tables

Data on family immigration can be found in the following tables:

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