One trustworthy place that explains the 2026 spouse/partner visa for Thai–British couples end to end: the £29,000 income rule, the A1 English test, the TB test at IOM Bangkok, the certified Thai translation chain, the real all-in cost in pounds and indicative baht, the ~12-week timeline and the VFS Bangkok / Chiang Mai / Phuket steps. Every figure is from gov.uk. This is general information to help you prepare your documents — not immigration advice and not an eligibility assessment.
A UK spouse visa (officially the partner route under the family Immigration Rules) lets the husband, wife or civil partner of a British citizen or settled person come to live in the UK. A Thai national needs a full visa for this — never an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA). The headline facts for 2026: the UK sponsor must show £29,000 a year, the entry visa lasts 2.5 years on a 5-year route to settlement, and a standard application from Thailand takes around 12 weeks. This guide walks through every rule, document and cost in pounds and indicative baht. For the full route summary, see our spouse visa hub page; for the income rule on its own, the £29,000 income rule explained.
The spouse visa is one branch of the partner route. Which branch you use depends on whether you are married, engaged, or living together unmarried — and whether you intend to settle. The table below sets out the differences in plain language.
| Route | Married? | Can you settle / work? | Initial length | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spouse / Partner | Yes (married/civil partner) | Yes — settle & work | 2.5 years | Already married, moving to the UK |
| Fiancé(e) | No — marry in the UK | Settle later (switch after marrying); no work yet | 6 months | Engaged, will marry in the UK |
| Unmarried partner | No (2+ years living together) | Yes — settle & work | 2.5 years | Long-term partners, not married |
| Marriage Visitor | No — marry & leave | NOT settlement; no work | 6 months | Wedding in the UK, then return |
Route differences from the gov.uk family-visa and visit-visa guidance. The Marriage Visitor visa is a short visit, NOT a route to settlement. Last reviewed June 2026.
Thailand is a 'visa national' country, so a Thai passport holder cannot use the £20 Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) — and the partner route is a settlement application, far beyond what an ETA covers anyway. Whether you are coming to settle or just to visit, you apply for a full visa. (For the short-visit myth, see our visitor visa page — it is not an ETA, and the Thai 'marriage visa' is a different country's scheme.)
The visa you apply for from Thailand is the entry-clearance step. It is granted for 2.5 years (a 33-month visa). You then extend in the UK with an FLR(M) application, and after 5 years on the partner route you can apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) — settlement. The financial and English requirements are re-tested at each stage. This guide covers the entry step from Thailand.
In short, the rules ask three things: that both of you meet the relationship conditions, that the UK sponsor is eligible and can support you, and that neither of you falls foul of the suitability (good-character) rules. These are the published rules — whether they are met in a particular case is for the applicant and, where needed, a regulated adviser.
Both partners must be 18 or over; be in a genuine and subsisting relationship; intend to live together permanently in the UK; have met in person; and both be free to marry or form a civil partnership (any previous marriage legally ended).
The UK-based partner (the sponsor) must be a British citizen or settled in the UK (for example with Indefinite Leave to Remain or EU settled status), meet the financial requirement, and be able to provide adequate accommodation. Their UK income is the anchor for the £29,000 rule.
Immigration history (overstays, previous breaches), deception or false documents in any application, and certain criminal convictions can affect an application under the suitability rules. These are the published rules; whether your particular history affects an application is a judgement for a regulated adviser, not something we assess.
The short answer: the UK sponsor must show £29,000 gross (before tax) a year. You can also meet it with cash savings of £88,500, or by combining income and savings. The planned rise to £38,700 is PAUSED while the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) reviews it — its 10 June 2025 report advised against the £38,700 alignment and recommended a lower range (around £23,000–£28,000), and as of June 2026 nothing has changed. Plan around £29,000. Source: gov.uk.
For an application from Thailand (entry clearance), it is generally the UK sponsor's UK income that counts. The Thai applicant's overseas earnings usually do NOT count toward £29,000 before arrival (there are narrow exceptions, such as when the applicant is already in the UK and switching). This is why, for most Thai–British couples, it is the sponsor's payslips and bank statements you gather.
Income is assessed by category: salaried employment (Category A for 6+ months with the same employer; Category B for under 6 months or variable income), non-salaried employment, self-employment and company directors (Category F for the latest financial year, Category G for the average of the last two), pension income, and certain specified benefits. The category decides exactly which payslips, statements and letters you need.
You can meet the requirement on savings alone with £88,500, worked out as £16,000 (which never counts) plus £29,000 × 2.5. To top up a salary, the income credit is (savings − £16,000) ÷ 2.5 per year. The funds must be held for at least 6 months and must not dip below the required level. Savings in baht are converted to pounds at the published exchange rate.
Worked example: a sponsor earning £20,000 has a £9,000 shortfall against £29,000. They would need £16,000 + (£9,000 × 2.5) = £38,500 in savings, held for 6 months. Savings alone with no income needs the full £88,500. These are the published formulas — not a verdict on any one case.
You can combine employment income with cash savings (and with pension or non-employment income) to reach £29,000. One important limit: cash savings cannot be combined with self-employment income (Category F/G). The income article goes through every category in detail.
In each of these, remember the Thai partner usually cannot add UK income yet — the figures rest on the UK sponsor.
| Sponsor's situation | Category | Meets £29,000? / how |
|---|---|---|
| Salaried £30,000, same job 1 year | A | Yes — salary alone clears £29,000 |
| Self-employed sole trader, £31,000 net | F / G | Yes — by net profit; cannot add savings |
| No income, relying on savings | — | Yes — £88,500 held 6 months |
| Salary £25,000 + savings top-up | A + savings | Yes — £16,000 + (£4,000 × 2.5) = £26,000 savings |
Illustrative only, using the gov.uk income rules and the savings formula £16,000 + (shortfall × 2.5). These show how the rule works; they are not a decision on any real application. Source: gov.uk family-visa income page.
The specified-evidence rules are strict — correct dates, the right number of payslips and bank statements, an employer letter, and online or original statements that match. Use the neutral checker below to compare your situation against the published evidence types; it shows options, not a pass or fail. The £29,000 income rule explained goes deeper on each category.
For a first spouse/partner application the requirement is CEFR A1 — basic English — in speaking and listening, taken at an approved Secure English Language Test (SELT) provider. The certificate is valid 2 years; higher levels are needed at the later settlement stage.
Approved SELT providers include IELTS for UKVI, Trinity, Pearson PTE, LanguageCert and PSI. In Thailand you can sit an A1 test in Bangkok and Chiang Mai (British Council and IDP run centres in several cities). The basic test costs about ฿5,800. In plain terms, this is a short 'basic English — speaking and listening' test, not an academic exam.
Some applicants are exempt from the test: nationals of certain majority-English-speaking countries, holders of a degree taught in English (assessed by ECCTIS, formerly UK NARIC), people aged 65 or over, and those with a long-term physical or mental condition that prevents it. This is an informational list — for the higher tests used by other routes, see our student visa page.
Anyone living in Thailand applying to stay in the UK for more than 6 months must get a tuberculosis (TB) certificate from an approved clinic BEFORE applying. A missing or late certificate causes refusal — and although the IHS is refunded on refusal, you re-pay the application fee to reapply.
Only a Home Office-approved clinic is accepted. In Thailand the approved clinics are IOM Bangkok and BNH Hospital Bangkok. The test is a chest X-ray (with a sputum test if indicated); you book an appointment and bring your passport. The certificate is valid 6 months. Always use the gov.uk approved-clinic finder — a certificate from a non-approved clinic is rejected.
The TB test costs about ฿2,350–4,000 (IOM Bangkok is about ฿3,800 for ages 11+ and ฿2,350 under 11; BNH Hospital is around ฿4,000 for adults). Results are usually ready within a few days. Do this early, before you submit, because the certificate must already be in hand.
You must show there is adequate accommodation in the UK that will not be statutorily overcrowded and is owned or legally occupied by you or your sponsor. You do not have to own a home — you can live with family — but you must evidence the arrangement.
| Living arrangement | Documents to show |
|---|---|
| Owned by you/sponsor | Title deeds or a mortgage statement |
| Rented | Tenancy agreement + landlord consent |
| Staying with family | A third-party accommodation letter + property details |
Accommodation evidence types from gov.uk family-visa guidance. A property inspection report may help where overcrowding is a concern. Last reviewed June 2026.
Caseworkers look for a genuine, subsisting relationship — and photos and chat logs alone are not enough. The strongest evidence is spread across the whole length of your relationship rather than crammed into one month.
Evidence that works: your marriage or registration certificate; proof of cohabitation or visits; communication over time (calls and chats, in moderation); flight tickets, boarding passes and passport stamps from visits to each other; joint finances or money transfers and remittances to Thailand; dated photos showing people and places; and supporting letters from family or friends.
| ✓ What helps | ✗ What doesn't |
|---|---|
| A timeline of visits, transfers and shared life across the whole relationship | 300 screenshots all from a single month |
| A handful of dated photos with different people and places | Hundreds of near-identical selfies |
| Boarding passes/stamps proving you really met in person | Chat logs only, with no in-person proof |
This describes what evidence demonstrates a genuine relationship under gov.uk guidance — it is not an assessment of whether your relationship will be accepted. Source: gov.uk family-visa guidance.
A marriage is registered at the Amphur (district office). The key records are the Kor Ror 2 (marriage certificate) and the Kor Ror 3 (marriage registration record); a certificate of single or family status may also be needed. Our amphoe guide explains how to get Thai civil documents in English at the amphoe, and where translation is needed instead.
Some documents are legalised at the Thai Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Legalization Division) so they are accepted abroad. Whether this step is needed depends on the document and how it will be used; it adds several working days and a separate fee (about ฿2,400 per document).
Every non-English document — marriage certificate, birth certificate, house registration (tabian baan), bank documents, name-change deeds — needs a certified English translation. For UKVI, 'certified' means the translation includes the translator's confirmation that it is accurate, the date, the translator's full name and contact details, and a signature. It costs about ฿700–1,000 per A4 page. We provide certified Thai→English translation as part of our document service — get a quote below, or see our marriage-certificate translation guide for that document specifically.
Here is the consolidated checklist for a spouse-visa bundle, grouped by type. Use the builder below to generate your own printable, route-aware list — it is a completeness aid, not legal advice.
| Group | Documents |
|---|---|
| Identity | Passport · biometric photo |
| Relationship | Kor Ror 2/3, photos, communication, visit evidence |
| Financial | Payslips, bank statements, employer letter — or savings / self-employment evidence |
| Accommodation | Title deeds / tenancy agreement / accommodation letter |
| Tests | English A1 certificate · TB certificate |
| Translations & letters | Certified translations of all Thai documents · sponsor & accommodation-provider letters |
The application fee is £2,064 from outside the UK (the 8 April 2026 rate), but that is far from the whole bill. The NHS health fee (IHS) is usually the biggest single cost, and there are 'hidden' extras: the English test, the TB test, certified translation, VFS options and travel to Bangkok. A realistic all-in for one adult is around £5,400–£6,500+, plus the baht-only items.
| Application fee (from outside the UK) | £2,064 ≈ ฿89,800 |
| IHS for the 33-month grant (3 years × £1,035) | ≈ £3,105 ≈ ฿135,100 |
| English test (A1, in baht) | ≈ ฿5,800 |
| TB test (IOM Bangkok, in baht) | ≈ ฿3,800 |
| Certified translation (document set) | ≈ ฿4,000–8,000 |
| All-in at entry (before our service fee) | ≈ £5,169 + ฿~16,000 ≈ ฿240,000 |
The £5,169 (fee + IHS) is about ฿224,900; adding the baht-only tests and translation brings the typical all-in to roughly ฿240,000 for one adult. VFS options and travel to Bangkok are extra; our admin service fee is separate.
The NHS health fee (IHS) is £1,035 a year for an adult, paid up front for the whole grant. A 33-month spouse entry grant rounds up (any part-year over 6 months becomes a full year) to 3 years, so the IHS is 3 × £1,035 = £3,105. It is refunded if your application is refused; the application fee generally is not.
Build your own all-in figure with the live calculator — it adds the fee and IHS and converts to today's baht. Note this is separate from the £29,000 you must SHOW in income; that money stays with your sponsor. For the full route fee breakdown see our fees hub.
A standard spouse visa from Thailand usually takes about 12 weeks (3 months) from your biometrics appointment. A priority service of about £500 (≈ ฿21,750) targets a decision in roughly 30 working days where available; super priority at about £1,000 (≈ ฿43,500) targets the next working day — but super priority is generally an inside-the-UK option and is not always offered for out-of-country settlement, so check availability in Thailand first. This reconciles the 'a few weeks' forum claims with the 'three to four months' VFS figure: the standard service is the longer one.
Use the planner to back-time from your travel or wedding date and work out when to start gathering your 6-month financial evidence and book biometrics.
The Bangkok centre is at The Shoppes at Belle Grand, Rama 9 Road. There is also a Chiang Mai centre and a smaller Phuket enrolment centre, so you can choose the nearest. Premium lounge, prime-time and courier return are optional paid extras. Our VFS step-by-step guide covers booking and the biometrics day in detail.
UK immigration status is now held digitally as an eVisa, accessed through a free UKVI account on gov.uk, which generates a share code to prove your status — entry-clearance applications generally no longer get a passport vignette sticker. On approval you set up your UKVI account; our VFS guide explains the eVisa step.
Most refusals come down to a handful of preparation failures. The table pairs each published rule with the document-preparation step that addresses it.
| Refusal reason | How to prepare for it |
|---|---|
| Financial requirement not met / wrong evidence (#1) | Match the income category exactly; correct dates; statements that reconcile |
| Weak or insufficient relationship evidence (#2) | Spread evidence across the whole relationship; show in-person visits |
| Missing documents or no certified translation | Certified translation of every Thai document; complete the bundle |
| English A1 or TB certificate missing | Book and pass both before you submit |
| Accommodation not evidenced | Deeds, tenancy or a clear accommodation letter |
If you have already been refused, interpreting a refusal letter or running an appeal is regulated advice — speak to an Immigration Advice Authority (IAA)-registered adviser or a solicitor. We do not interpret refusal letters or assess appeal merits. For general information on what tends to go wrong, see why spouse visas get refused.
You can apply yourself, use a document-assistance service like ours, or instruct a regulated immigration adviser. The table shows honestly who each suits and what it can — and cannot legally — do.
| Option | What's included | What it can't do |
|---|---|---|
| Do it yourself | Full control; lowest cost (just the gov.uk fees) | No help if you're unsure which evidence the rules need |
| Document-assistance service (us) | Prepare & complete the application, organise & certify Thai→English translations, book VFS | We do NOT assess eligibility/chances or handle appeals |
| Regulated adviser (IAA / solicitor) | Legal advice on eligibility, complex cases, refusals & appeals | Highest cost (market ฿30,000–100,000+) |
We provide document preparation, certified Thai→English translation and VFS appointment booking — admin work only, at a transparent fee separate from every government charge. This is general information, not legal advice, and we never assess your chances.
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Government fees (visa £2,064, IHS, tests) are paid separately to gov.uk and are not included. Service fees are for admin work only.
Last reviewed: June 2026. This guide is general information based on public gov.uk sources, not regulated immigration advice and not an eligibility assessment. We help prepare, translate and organise documents and book your VFS appointment; for case-specific advice or any appeal, consult an Immigration Advice Authority (IAA)-registered adviser or a solicitor. Government fees, the IHS and exchange rates change — always confirm the current pound figures on gov.uk before you pay. The pound figure is the source of truth; the baht is an approximate conversion at ~฿43.5/£1.
Tell us about your situation and we'll come back with a clear document plan and a price — no obligation. We prepare and translate documents and book your VFS appointment; we don't give regulated immigration advice.
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