
UK Earned Settlement Explained: New ILR Rules, 10-Year Route & Key Changes
July 2, 2026
Vishang Shah
Co-Founder of Westend Consultants
Vishang is Co-Founder of Westend Consultants and has been helping clients with UK immigration matters since the firm was established in 2008. With nearly 18 years of experience, he has built his practice around giving clear, honest and practical advice to both businesses and private clients.
When most people hear “self-sponsorship visa,” they picture a quick, standalone route where you simply pay a fee and sponsor yourself into the UK.
In practice, it is nothing of the sort. Self-sponsorship is not a separate visa category at all. It is a Skilled Worker visa where the company sponsoring you happens to be your own UK business.
That single misunderstanding causes more refusals than almost anything else. Because you control both sides of the application, the company and the worker, the Home Office applies extra scrutiny to make sure the arrangement is real and not built purely to secure immigration permission.
The route can work brilliantly. You build a genuine UK business, secure a Skilled Worker sponsor licence, sponsor yourself, and work towards settlement. But the margin for error is thin, and the rules tightened sharply through 2025 and into 2026.
This is exactly the kind of case where West End Consultants earns its keep. As a London immigration firm regulated by the Immigration Advice Authority at the highest level, the team has spent over 15 years steering business owners through the self-sponsorship route, spotting the weak points that get applications refused before they ever reach a caseworker.
In this guide, you will learn the five mistakes that most often sink a self-sponsorship application, why each one trips people up, and the practical steps to avoid them.
Key Takeaways
- Self-sponsorship is not a separate visa. It runs through the Skilled Worker route, so every Skilled Worker rule applies to you, plus extra scrutiny.
- The genuine vacancy test is the biggest single risk. The Home Office must believe your role is real and not created just to get you a visa.
- The general salary threshold is now £41,700 per year or the going rate for your occupation, whichever is higher, with a £17.13 hourly floor for most roles.
- From 8 January 2026, new applicants must meet B2 level English, up from B1, and from 8 April 2026 salary must be met in every pay period, not just averaged.
- A weak or rushed sponsor licence stage causes refusals long before the visa stage. Get the company, documents and key personnel right first.
- Most refusals come from avoidable errors in evidence, salary maths or role definition, not from being ineligible. Preparation is everything.
What “Self-Sponsorship” Actually Means
Before the mistakes, get the structure clear, because the structure is where half the errors start.
There is no application form labelled “self-sponsorship visa.” What you are really doing is a two-stage process. First, your UK business applies for a Skilled Worker sponsor licence. Then, once licensed, the business issues you a Certificate of Sponsorship and you apply for a Skilled Worker visa like any other sponsored worker.
The appeal is real. You can own up to 100% of the shares, the business does not have to be innovative or scalable, and any lawful trading activity can qualify. Partners and children can join you, and partners can work full-time.
But here is the catch. Because you are effectively approving your own job offer, the Home Office cannot rely on the usual arms-length employer relationship to assure it the role is genuine.
So it looks harder. Every mistake below flows from underestimating that scrutiny.
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Speak with a Solicitor →Mistake 1: Treating the “Genuine Vacancy” Test as a Formality
This is the single most common reason self-sponsorship applications fail, and the one that applicants underestimate the most.
The Home Office must be satisfied that the job is a genuine vacancy that genuinely exists, that you will actually do the role, and that the position was not created mainly to get you a visa. When you sponsor yourself, that last point is exactly what a caseworker worries about.
According to the Home Office Skilled Worker caseworker guidance, if a caseworker has reasonable grounds to believe the role does not genuinely exist or was created for immigration purposes, the application is likely to be refused, and the sponsor licence can be suspended or revoked too.
Caseworkers weigh several things:
- Whether the job duties on your Certificate of Sponsorship match the occupation code and job title
- Whether the role makes sense for the size and stage of your business
- Whether your qualifications and experience fit the role
- Whether the salary matches what a settled worker would be paid for equivalent work
How to avoid it
Build evidence that the role is real and commercially justified. That usually means a credible business plan, genuine trading activity, a job description that genuinely matches your occupation code, and a salary that lines up with the market.
A consultancy with no clients claiming to need a £45,000 marketing director will struggle.
A trading business with revenue, contracts and a logical need for your role will not.
Document the commercial story before you apply, not after a caseworker asks.
Mistake 2: Getting the Salary Threshold Wrong
Salary maths sinks more applications than almost any rule, and self-sponsorship gives you no employer to double-check your figures.
For most new Skilled Worker applications from 22 July 2025, the general threshold is £41,700 per year or the going rate for your specific occupation code, whichever is higher. There is also a minimum hourly rate of £17.13 for most roles. You must clear all of these, not just one.
The going rate is the trap. Each occupation code has its own rate published by the Home Office, and for many roles that figure is well above £41,700. If your job’s going rate is £52,000, then £41,700 is irrelevant. You must pay £52,000.
Lower thresholds do exist. Per GOV.UK guidance, you may be paid between 70% and 90% of the going rate, with a salary floor of £33,400, if you qualify as a new entrant, hold a relevant PhD, or fall into specific categories. But these need strict conditions to be met, and self-sponsoring directors often do not qualify.
Two more pitfalls catch self-sponsors:
- The 2026 pay-period rule. From 8 April 2026, your salary must meet the threshold in each individual pay period, not just averaged across the year. You cannot pay yourself a token sum for ten months and a lump sum at the end.
- Only fixed, taxable salary counts. Dividends, projected profit, and loans to the company do not count towards the threshold. Your business must actually pay you a compliant PAYE salary.
How to avoid it
Find your exact occupation code and its current going rate before you commit to a salary. Confirm your business can genuinely afford to pay you that salary through PAYE from day one, in every pay period. If the maths does not work, the application does not work.
Want Your Salary and Occupation Code Checked Before You Assign a Certificate of Sponsorship?
Our experienced immigration solicitors can review your proposed salary, occupation code, and sponsorship arrangements to help minimise compliance risks before you assign a Certificate of Sponsorship.
Book a Free Consultation →Mistake 3: Rushing or Under-Preparing the Sponsor Licence Stage
Many applicants fixate on the visa and treat the sponsor licence as a box-ticking exercise.
But the licence is where a self-sponsorship plan most often collapses, because the licence is granted to the business, and the business is brand new.
To get a Skilled Worker sponsor licence, the Home Office must be satisfied your business is genuine, lawfully operating, and capable of meeting sponsor duties. For a freshly incorporated company with no trading history, that is a high bar. A thin application invites a refusal or a compliance visit.
The mechanics matter too. You must appoint key personnel, an Authorising Officer, a Key Contact and a Level 1 User, and at least one must be UK-based. You need a UK business bank account, an address, and HR systems capable of tracking a sponsored worker. The current Home Office application fee is £611 for small or charitable sponsors and £1,682 for medium and large sponsors, and you cannot recover that cost from the worker.
A common failure is applying with a shell company that has no real substance. Companies House registration alone does not prove a genuine, trading business, and that gap is exactly what triggers refusals and revocations.
How to avoid it
Treat the licence as the foundation, not the formality. Get the company properly set up with a bank account, a credible address and real evidence of activity. Make sure your HR and record-keeping systems exist before you apply.
Westend Consultants helps applicants prepare the sponsor licence application so the business is presented as the genuine, compliant operation the Home Office expects.
Mistake 4: Errors and Mismatches on the Certificate of Sponsorship
The Certificate of Sponsorship is the spine of your visa application, and small errors on it cause big refusals.
The CoS is a digital record containing your job title, occupation code, salary, start date, duties and your sponsor licence number. The Home Office assesses your application against what is recorded there. If the CoS says one thing and your supporting documents say another, the inconsistency alone can sink you.
Self-sponsors are especially prone to three errors:
- Picking the wrong occupation code to access a lower going rate. Misclassifying your role to force down the salary is treated as a serious compliance risk and a refusal ground.
- Job duties that do not match the code. If your CoS lists duties below the skill level of the occupation, the role can fail both the skill requirement and the genuine vacancy test.
- Salary or start dates that contradict your payroll, business plan or bank evidence.
Because you are completing the CoS for your own role, there is no second pair of eyes catching the slip. That is precisely why these errors slip through.
How to avoid it
Choose the occupation code that genuinely reflects the work you will do, not the one with the lowest rate. Make sure every figure and date on the CoS matches your evidence exactly. Cross-check the CoS against your business plan, payroll plan and supporting documents before you assign it.
Mistake 5: Missing the English, Maintenance and Document Requirements
These are the “simple” requirements applicants assume they have covered, then trip over at the final hurdle.
Three areas catch people out:
- English language. From 8 January 2026, new Skilled Worker applicants must show English at CEFR B2 level, up from the previous B1. If you planned around the old standard, you may now fall short. You can prove it through an approved Secure English Language Test, a qualifying degree, or by being a national of a majority English-speaking country.
- Maintenance funds. You generally need £1,270 held for 28 consecutive days before you apply, unless your sponsor certifies maintenance. As a self-sponsor, you will usually need to show the personal funds.
- Supporting documents. A criminal record certificate is required for certain occupations, and a tuberculosis test certificate is needed if you have lived in a listed country. Missing or out-of-date documents cause avoidable refusals.
The Home Office knowledge of English rules and cost details are set out on the official Skilled Worker visa pages, so check the current standard before you book any test.
How to avoid it
Confirm the current English requirement and book your test early. Hold your maintenance funds for the full qualifying period and keep clean bank statements. Gather your supporting documents, and check expiry dates, well before submission rather than scrambling at the end.
Worried a Small Documentation Gap Could Derail Your Application?
Even minor errors or missing documents can lead to delays or refusals. Let our experienced immigration solicitors review your application and supporting documents before submission.
Get Legal Advice →Quick Comparison: Mistake vs Fix
| Common Mistake | Why It Causes Refusal | How to Avoid It |
| Treating genuine vacancy as a formality | Home Office suspects the role was created for a visa | Evidence real trading, a credible plan and a justified role |
| Wrong salary threshold | Pay falls below the higher of £41,700 or the going rate | Confirm occupation code and going rate before setting salary |
| Rushed sponsor licence | New company looks like a shell, not a genuine business | Build real substance, bank account and HR systems first |
| CoS errors and mismatches | Inconsistencies between CoS and evidence | Match every detail and pick the correct occupation code |
| Missing English or documents | Falls short of B2 English or lacks required certificates | Test early, hold funds, check document expiry dates |
Final Note: Why Professional Support Changes the Odds
Self-sponsorship rewards preparation and punishes guesswork.
The route is technical, the rules shifted significantly in 2025 and 2026, and the absence of an arms-length employer means there is no one but you to catch a costly error.
Most refusals are not about being ineligible. They come from avoidable mistakes in evidence, salary calculations or role definition. That is the gap where expert guidance pays for itself, by getting the business, the licence and the visa application right the first time.
Westend Consultants supports business owners through every stage of self-sponsorship, from setting up a compliant UK company to preparing the licence and the Skilled Worker visa application.
If you want your plan checked before you spend money on fees you cannot recover, the team can help you avoid the errors that lead to refusals.
To talk through your situation with a regulated immigration specialist, contact West End Consultants for tailored advice on your self-sponsorship route.
Ready to Plan a Self Sponsorship Application That Holds Up to Home Office Scrutiny?
Build a stronger self sponsorship application with tailored legal advice from experienced immigration solicitors. We will guide you through every stage, from setting up your UK business and obtaining a Sponsor Licence to submitting your Skilled Worker visa application.
Schedule a Consult →Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is the self-sponsorship visa a separate visa category?
No. Self-sponsorship is not a distinct visa. It is a Skilled Worker visa where your own UK company holds the sponsor licence and sponsors you. Every Skilled Worker rule applies, along with extra scrutiny of whether the role and business are genuine.
2. How much do I need to pay myself on a self-sponsorship visa?
You must be paid the higher of the general threshold, £41,700 per year, or the going rate for your occupation code, with a minimum hourly rate of £17.13 for most roles. Some applicants qualify for lower thresholds from £33,400, but only if strict conditions are met. The salary must be a real, taxable PAYE salary.
3. Can I be refused even if my business is real?
Yes. A genuine business can still lead to a refusal if the salary maths is wrong, the occupation code is misapplied, the Certificate of Sponsorship contains errors, or documents are missing. Most refusals come from avoidable preparation errors, not ineligibility.
4. Does my business need a trading history before I apply?
Not always, but the Home Office expects evidence that the business is genuine and capable of meeting sponsor duties. A newly incorporated company with no substance is a common refusal trigger, so credible activity, a bank account and proper systems strengthen your case considerably.
5. What English level do I need in 2026?
From 8 January 2026, new Skilled Worker applicants must demonstrate English at CEFR B2 level, an increase from the previous B1 standard. You can prove this through an approved test, a qualifying degree taught in English, or nationality of a majority English-speaking country.
6. How long does the self-sponsorship route take to settlement?
The Skilled Worker visa is generally granted for up to five years. After five continuous years in the UK meeting the residence and salary requirements, with your business still an approved sponsor and after passing the Life in the UK Test, you may apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain.
7. Can I bring my family on a self-sponsorship visa?
Yes. You can bring your partner and children as dependants. Partners are generally permitted to work full-time in the UK, which is one of the practical advantages of the Skilled Worker route.
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- How to Set Up a UK Company for Self-Sponsorship: Complete Step-by-Step Guide
- Self-Sponsorship vs Innovator Founder Visa: Which Entrepreneur Route Is Right for You?




