UK Visa Changes 2026: Every New Fee, Rule & Deadline (for Thai Applicants)

One dated, gov.uk-sourced guide to everything that changed for UK visas in 2026 — the 8 April fee rise (in pounds and indicative baht), the eVisa that replaced passport stickers, the IHS that stayed the same, the £29,000 partner income held and the £38,700 rise that is paused — plus the one correction nobody gets right: Thai nationals need a full visa, NOT an ETA.

Last updated: 22 June 2026. General information from public gov.uk sources — not regulated immigration advice. Government fees and rules change; confirm the current figures on gov.uk before you apply.

UK visas changed in several ways in 2026, and stale figures are everywhere online. Here is the whole year on one page, dated and gov.uk-sourced, with every fee in pounds and indicative baht. For the full route-by-route fee table see our 2026 UK visa fees hub.

The 2026 changes at a glance

  • 25 Feb 2026 — the eVisa fully replaces passport vignette stickers for visitor applicants; 'no permission, no travel' carrier checks apply.
  • 8 Apr 2026 — visa fees rose about 6–7% (visitor £135, spouse £2,064, student £558, Skilled Worker from £819, ETA £20).
  • Unchanged — IHS £1,035/£776 a year; partner income held at £29,000; priority £500 / super priority £1,000.
  • Paused — the £38,700 partner income rise is NOT in force; £29,000 still applies.
  • ~30 Jun 2026 — UKVI-account deadline (BRP holders only; most brand-new Thai applicants are unaffected).
  • Thai nationals need a full visa, NOT an ETA.
Fees from the gov.uk Home Office fees table (8 April 2026). Baht is indicative at ~฿43.5/£1 and changes daily. Last reviewed June 2026.

The 2026 UK visa changes timeline (at a glance)

Three dates drive 2026. Each node below shows the date, what changed and who it affects; the full detail is in the sections that follow.

Date What changed Who it affects
25 Feb 2026 eVisa fully replaces passport vignette stickers for visitor applicants; airline 'no permission, no travel' checks. All new applicants (digital status).
8 Apr 2026 Visa application fees rose about 6–7% across most routes. Everyone applying on or after this date.
~30 Jun 2026 UKVI-account migration deadline for physical-card (BRP) holders. BRP holders already in the UK — not most new Thai applicants.

Dates from gov.uk (eVisa, fees and UKVI-account guidance). The ~30 June 2026 date is widely cited but should be confirmed on gov.uk. Last reviewed June 2026.

What changed on 8 April 2026: the fee rise

The biggest change is money. From 8 April 2026 most UK visa application fees rose by roughly 6–7%. The table below gives the new fee for each main route, in pounds and indicative baht, and whether the NHS health fee (IHS) is paid on top. Every pound figure is from the gov.uk 8 April 2026 fees table.

Route Validity New fee £ (8 Apr 2026) New fee ฿ (approx) IHS on top?
Standard Visitor 6 months £135 ≈ ฿5,900 No
Standard Visitor 2 / 5 / 10 years £506 / £903 / £1,128 ≈ ฿22,000 / ฿39,300 / ฿49,100 No
Spouse / Partner (entry) 33-month entry £2,064 ≈ ฿89,800 Yes — large
Spouse / Partner (in-country FLR-M) Extension £1,321 ≈ ฿57,500 Yes
Student Course length £558 ≈ ฿24,300 Yes — £776/yr
Short-term study 6–11 months £228 ≈ ฿9,900 No
Skilled Worker Up to 3 yrs / over 3 yrs £819 / £1,618 ≈ ฿35,600 / ฿70,400 Yes — £1,035/yr
Skilled Worker (ISL discount) Up to 3 yrs / over 3 yrs £628 / £1,235 ≈ ฿27,300 / ฿53,700 Yes
Transit / ETA Short / per trip £74.50 / £20 ≈ ฿3,240 / ฿870 No (ETA not for Thais)

All fees from the gov.uk Home Office fees table (8 April 2026), applied for from outside the UK. The Skilled Worker fee is lower (£628 / £1,235) for Immigration Salary List (ISL) jobs. The ETA (£20) is shown for context only — Thai nationals are not eligible for it. Baht is indicative at ~฿43.5/£1. The settlement (ILR) fee is not in our source list — confirm it on gov.uk. Last reviewed June 2026.

What did NOT go up: the IHS is unchanged (£1,035 adult / £776 student-child), the partner income requirement is unchanged (£29,000), and priority (£500) / super priority (£1,000) are unchanged. Don't let the fee rise make you think the health fee or income rule also jumped — they didn't.

Should you apply before or after 8 April 2026?

The fee you are charged is the rate in force on the date you submit and pay — not the date a decision is made. Because 8 April 2026 has now passed, the new rates apply to every current application, so there is nothing to 'beat' by rushing. The practical takeaway is simpler: if a Thai blog quotes a lower figure, it is almost certainly pre-April and out of date. Confirm the live fee on gov.uk, and use the calculator below to convert it to baht.

Why UK fees are this high

UK visa fees are set under powers in the Immigration Act 2014, which lets the Home Office price applications above the administrative cost of processing them. That is why UK fees are several times higher than many peer countries. It is a policy choice, not an error in the figures you see.

The IHS (UK NHS health fee): unchanged, but it multiplies

The Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS) did not change in 2026. It is £1,035 a year for adults and £776 a year for students and under-18s, paid up front for the whole length of the visa and rounded up by 6-month blocks. Visitors and transit applicants are exempt, and the IHS is refunded if the application is refused or withdrawn. What surprises people is not the rate but how it multiplies across the years of a long visa.

IHS at a glance (2026, unchanged)

£1,035
Adult, per year (≈ ฿45,000)
£776
Student / under-18, per year (≈ ฿33,800)
฿0
Visitor & transit visas
Refunded
If refused or withdrawn
IHS rates from the gov.uk healthcare-surcharge page; unchanged in 2026. Paid up front for the whole grant, rounded up by 6-month blocks. Last reviewed June 2026.

Worked example — the spouse route

Spouse entry visa (33-month grant) — government charges only
Application fee (from outside the UK)£2,064 ≈ ฿89,800
IHS — 33 months rounds up to 3 years × £1,035≈ £3,105 ≈ ฿135,100
Government charges alone≈ £5,169 ≈ ฿224,900

That £5,169 is before the TB test, an English test, certified translation and any VFS options. The IHS (£3,105) is bigger than the fee itself — and is refunded if the application is refused. Baht is indicative at ~฿43.5/£1.

For the full all-in totals on every route — fee, IHS, tests and translation in baht — see our complete UK visa cost in baht guide.

The eVisa: passport stickers are gone (from 25 Feb 2026)

UK immigration status is now digital. From 25 February 2026 successful visitor-visa applicants no longer get a vignette sticker in their passport (entry-clearance applications stopped getting one from 15 July 2025). Instead your status is held as an eVisa in a free UKVI account on gov.uk. You prove it with a share code — a 16-character code, valid 90 days — that you give to airlines, employers or landlords. The eVisa replaces both the old vignette and the physical Biometric Residence Permit (BRP). From 25 February 2026, airline 'no permission, no travel' checks rely on this digital record.

First-time Thai applicant vs BRP holder (the part other guides miss)

New Thai applicant (in Thailand) Already in the UK on a BRP
You get a fresh eVisa on your first grant — no sticker, no BRP. You create your UKVI account from the post-decision email. The ~30 June 2026 deadline mostly does NOT apply to you. You must create a UKVI account to move your existing status from the physical card to an eVisa, before the migration deadline below.

eVisa and UKVI-account context from the gov.uk eVisa page. Vignette/BRP dates are medium-confidence — confirm on gov.uk. Last reviewed June 2026.

How to create a UKVI account for your eVisa

The steps are the same digital process for everyone:

  1. Go to gov.uk and start a UKVI account with your email and phone number.
  2. Have your passport and your application (or BRP) number ready.
  3. Use the 'UK Immigration: ID Check' app to scan your document and your face.
  4. Sign in to view your eVisa and generate a share code to prove your status.
Tip: a share code is valid for 90 days, so generate it close to when the airline, employer or landlord needs it — not months in advance.

The ~30 June 2026 UKVI-account deadline — who it really affects

This deadline is aimed at people who hold (or held) a physical BRP card and need to migrate to a digital eVisa. BRP cards can generally be used up to their printed expiry while the migration window runs. A brand-new Thai applicant who has never had a BRP is not racing this deadline — you receive an eVisa from your first grant. Treat the exact date as widely-cited but to be confirmed on gov.uk. The VFS step-by-step guide covers the biometrics and eVisa journey.

The partner income requirement: £29,000 held, £38,700 PAUSED

This is the area with the most misinformation on Thai pages, so here it is plainly. The partner financial requirement is still £29,000 a year (gross) for spouse, fiancé and family-partner routes. For a new applicant — anyone whose first application is on or after 11 April 2024 — the £29,000 figure is flat and does not increase for any children. If you cannot meet it from income, the savings-only route is £88,500. These are gov.uk figures, stated for information, not an assessment of any case.

The 2026 partner income rule

£29,000
Per year, gross (in force)
£88,500
Savings-only route
PAUSED
£38,700 not in force
Outdated
£18,600 (pre-Apr 2024)
Partner income figures from gov.uk (uk-family-visa, proof of income). £29,000 in force; no per-child uplift for new applicants. Last reviewed June 2026.

The £38,700 myth

Rumoured vs in-force: the staged rise £29,000 → £34,500 → £38,700 was paused. The Migration Advisory Committee reported on 10 June 2025 advising against the £38,700 alignment and recommending a lower range (around £23,000–£28,000). As of June 2026 nothing is implemented — £38,700 is NOT in force, and £29,000 still applies.

Stale figures to ignore

The £18,600 figure still circulating on Thai pages is the old base that was replaced by £29,000 on 11 April 2024. It only survives for those whose first successful partner application (with the same partner) was before that date. A Thai applicant applying fresh now is a new applicant under the £29,000 flat rule. The neutral checker below lets you compare your situation against the published evidence types — it shows options, not a pass or fail. For the rule in full, see the £29,000 income requirement explained and the spouse visa hub.

Thai nationals: do you need a visa or the £20 ETA?

฿
A full visa — not an ETA.

Thailand is NOT on the gov.uk ETA-eligible list, so Thai passport holders cannot use the £20 Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA). For a short trip you apply for a full Standard Visitor visa (£135). The ETA is a lighter pre-travel permission for some other nationalities; travel ads and older blogs sometimes blur the two. Always check 'do I need a UK visa' on gov.uk for your own passport.

Does this affect me? Impact by Thai applicant type

Here is what 2026 actually means for the four most common Thai applicant types. Each row links to the route page for the full requirements.

Applicant type What 2026 means for you Route page
Thai visitor Fee now £135; no IHS; eVisa not a sticker; you need a visa, not an ETA. UK Standard Visitor visa (£135)
Thai spouse of a UK sponsor Fee now £2,064; income £29,000 unchanged (£38,700 paused); IHS for the 33-month grant; eVisa. UK spouse visa requirements & cost
Thai student Fee now £558; IHS £776/yr; maintenance £1,529 (London) / £1,171 (outside) a month for up to 9 months. UK student visa cost & documents
Thai worker (Skilled Worker) Fee from £819; salary floor £41,700 (or £33,400 discounted); B2 English from 8 Jan 2026; IHS £1,035/yr. UK Skilled Worker visa fees

Figures from gov.uk (fees table 8 April 2026; student maintenance; Skilled Worker salary & English level). Baht indicative at ~฿43.5/£1. The £33,400 discounted floor and the B2 English level apply to new/switching Skilled Worker applicants. Last reviewed June 2026.

Not sure which route is yours? Our router can point you the right way — it suggests options, never a single verdict.

Official gov.uk source-of-truth links

Every figure on this page traces back to gov.uk. Use these official pages to confirm the current rules before you apply — fees and dates can change after our last review.

Related guides & routes

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Frequently asked questions

Did UK visa fees go up in 2026?
Yes — about 6–7% from 8 April 2026: visitor £135, spouse £2,064, student £558, Skilled Worker from £819. Older Thai pages quoting lower figures are out of date; confirm on gov.uk.
How much is the UK spouse visa in 2026?
The entry fee is £2,064 plus the IHS (about £3,105 for the 33-month grant) — roughly £5,169 in government charges before tests and translation. The baht is indicative.
Is the £38,700 income requirement happening?
No. £29,000 still applies; the £38,700 rise is paused. The MAC reported on 10 June 2025 advising against it (it recommended a lower range). This is gov.uk-sourced information, not an assessment.
Do Thai citizens need an ETA or a visa for the UK?
A full visa. Thailand is not on the ETA-eligible list, so the £20 ETA does not apply — for a short trip you pay the £135 Standard Visitor visa. Confirm on gov.uk.
Do I still get a visa sticker in my passport?
No. From 25 February 2026 successful visitor applicants get a digital eVisa instead. You prove your status with a share code from your free UKVI account.
Do I need a UKVI account, and what's the deadline?
BRP holders should migrate by around 30 June 2026 (confirm on gov.uk). Most brand-new Thai applicants get an eVisa automatically from their first grant and create the account from the decision email — the deadline mostly does not apply to you.
Did the IHS health fee change in 2026?
No. It is £1,035/year (adult) and £776/year (student/under-18), refunded if refused, and visitors are exempt. It is paid up front for the whole grant.
How much is a UK visitor visa from Thailand in 2026?
£135 for 6 months (about ฿5,900). There is no IHS on a visit visa. Longer visitor visas are £506 (2 years), £903 (5 years) and £1,128 (10 years).
What's the old £18,600 figure I keep seeing?
It is the old partner income base, replaced by £29,000 on 11 April 2024. New applicants use £29,000; only those who first applied before that date may remain on £18,600.
Should I apply before or after the 8 April fee rise?
8 April 2026 has passed, so the new rates now apply to all applications — there is nothing to beat. The fee charged is the rate in force on the date you submit and pay.
How much is the UK student visa from Thailand in 2026?
The student application fee is £558 (about ฿24,300), plus the IHS at the student rate of £776 a year for the whole course. You must also show maintenance funds of £1,529 a month (London) or £1,171 a month (outside London) for up to 9 months — money you keep, not a fee. Short-term study of 6 to 11 months is a cheaper route at £228.

Last reviewed: 22 June 2026. This page is general information based on public gov.uk sources, not regulated immigration advice. Government fees, the IHS, dates and exchange rates change — always confirm the current pound figures on gov.uk before you apply or pay. The pound figure is the source of truth; the baht is an approximate conversion at ~฿43.5/£1.

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Sunaree Ko, Founder of UK Visa From Thailand
About the author

Sunaree Ko — Founder

Sunaree founded UK Visa From Thailand and writes and reviews the guides on this site. We're a document-preparation and certified-translation service — not a law firm and not IAA-registered — and every figure here is sourced from GOV.UK. Read Sunaree's full bio →