Tag Archives: Nigerian Families UK

UK Spouse Visa 2026: The £29,000 Income Rule, the Paused £38,700 Hike and What Nigerian Families Must Know

The UK spouse visa minimum income 2026 is still £29,000 per year — not the £38,700 figure that has been circulating online. The planned step-up to £34,500 and then £38,700 was paused in 2024 after backlash from immigration groups, lawyers and affected families. For Nigerian and African couples sponsoring a partner to join them in the UK, that pause is the single most important fact of 2026.

What is the current UK spouse visa financial requirement?

You must show a gross annual income of at least £29,000 from one or more permitted sources, or hold equivalent cash savings, or combine the two. The threshold rose from £18,600 in April 2024 and has not been increased since. The Migration Advisory Committee delivered its review of the financial requirement in June 2025, but the Home Office has not yet published a decision — expect clarity later in 2026.

Who is affected?

Anyone applying for entry clearance or leave to remain as a partner of a British citizen, settled person or refugee, including spouses, civil partners, unmarried partners (cohabiting for two years), and fiancé(e)s. Children of the partner are also covered, with higher income requirements per child unless those children are themselves British or settled.

How the £29,000 threshold is met

You can meet the rule through five permitted categories: paid employment of the UK sponsor (Category A or B), self-employment (Category F or G), cash savings of at least £88,500 held for six months (Category D), non-employment income such as rental property (Category C), or pension income (Category E). The most common combination for Nigerian couples is the sponsor’s salaried UK job plus joint savings, but the rules on which categories you can mix are strict — for example, employment income from the applicant cannot count if applying from outside the UK.

Why it matters for Nigerians and Africans

Many Nigerian families assumed the £38,700 threshold had already taken effect — it has not. Couples that were holding off applying because they thought they were priced out should reassess in 2026. The MAC’s recommendations could change the rules later this year, so the safer move is to apply now under the current £29,000 framework if you already qualify, rather than wait and risk a higher bar. Save evidence rigorously: six months of payslips, bank statements showing the salary deposits, employer letters and (if combining savings) statements showing the funds have been held in your name for six months.

Key Takeaways

  • The UK spouse visa minimum income for 2026 is £29,000, not £38,700.
  • Planned increases to £34,500 and £38,700 have been paused while the Home Office reviews MAC recommendations.
  • Cash savings alternative is £88,500 held for at least six months in your or your partner’s name.
  • You can combine income categories but not all combinations are allowed — check Appendix FM-SE rules.
  • Apply under the current rules if you qualify — the threshold could rise later in 2026.

Need Help With a UK Spouse Visa Application?

The financial requirement is where most Nigerian and African applicants stumble. Travel Expore helps families pull together payslips, savings statements and the right combination of categories so the Home Office accepts the income evidence first time. Book a consult via https://linktr.ee/travelexpore.

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