Bringing Your Family Abroad: What Partner and Child Visas Really Require

Olena had the job offer. What kept her up at night was whether her husband and two children could come too, and on what terms. That worry is the real story behind most moves, and it is why family and partner visa routes deserve as much planning as the work permit itself. As of 2026, nearly every major destination lets you bring a spouse and dependent children, but the income tests, work rights, and paperwork differ sharply by country. Get the family side wrong and the whole plan stalls.

By the Travel Explore editorial desk. Last updated 4 July 2026.

What’s inside

How family and partner visa routes usually work

Most systems treat dependants as an extension of the main applicant. You qualify first, then add a partner and children to the case or file linked applications. Three tests appear again and again. You must prove a genuine relationship, show enough money to support the family without relying on public funds, and meet health and character checks. Some countries layer on language or age conditions for children. The permits are usually tied to the main visa, so if yours is renewed or lost, the family’s status tracks it. That link cuts both ways, which is why families should read the fine print before anyone books a flight.

Four destinations, four sets of rules

The differences are real. The UK attaches a minimum income requirement to partner routes and expects strong relationship evidence. Australia lets you include a partner and children on skilled routes such as the subclass 482 and 186, on the same application. The Netherlands grants family reunification to knowledge migrants, and family members generally gain broad work rights once resident. Germany is the standout for spouses of EU Blue Card holders, who “do not need to prove German language skills” and can work without restriction once the permit is issued. For the German picture, see our guide to the EU Blue Card salary requirements, since the main applicant’s salary underpins the whole family case.

Planning a move with partner and kids? Map every requirement in one place at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Gather relationship proof early. Marriage or civil partnership certificates, shared finances, and a history of living together carry weight. For children, prepare birth certificates and, where relevant, consent letters from a second parent. Show funds in the main applicant’s name, in the format the destination accepts, and keep statements clean for the required months. Translate and, where needed, legalise documents ahead of time. File the family applications together with the main visa where the system allows it, to avoid a gap in status.

The essentials

  • Almost all major routes allow a spouse and dependent children.
  • Expect relationship proof, a funds test, and health and character checks.
  • Work rights for partners vary widely by country.
  • Dependant status is usually tied to the main applicant’s visa.

Family visa questions, answered plainly

Can my partner and children come with me on a work visa?

In most major destinations, yes. Skilled work and study routes usually allow you to add a spouse or partner and dependent children, provided you meet the relationship, funding, and documentation rules.

Do partner visas have an income requirement?

Often. The UK applies a minimum income requirement for partner routes, and several countries expect the main applicant to show enough income or savings to support dependants without public funds.

Can my spouse work once we arrive?

It varies. Spouses of EU Blue Card holders in Germany and knowledge migrants in the Netherlands generally get broad work rights, while some other routes attach conditions or require a separate permit.

What documents prove our relationship?

Marriage or civil partnership certificates, evidence of a genuine relationship such as shared finances or communication history, and birth certificates for children are the common starting points.

Related reads

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  • LinkedIn: Bringing family abroad is often harder than the work visa itself. Here is how partner and child routes differ across four destinations.
  • Twitter: Family and partner visa routes in 2026: UK income tests, easy Blue Card spouse work rights, and what dependants must prove.
  • Facebook: Moving abroad with your partner and kids? Read this before you file, because the family rules differ by country.

Move as a family, not as an afterthought

The strongest applications treat dependants as part of the plan from day one: proof, funds, and timing sorted together. Do that, and the family arrives with you, not months later. Start building your checklist at https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

Sources

  • GOV.UK, Family visas: apply, extend or switch [T0 official]: https://www.gov.uk/uk-family-visa
  • European Commission, EU Blue Card in Germany, Migration and Home Affairs [T0 official]: https://home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/migration-and-asylum/eu-immigration-portal/eu-blue-card/eu-blue-card-germany_en




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