Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa

The Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa is a short-term visa that allows you to visit the UK on holiday, or to visit friends and family living in the UK.

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What is the Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa?

Frequently, discussions about UK immigration revolve around living in the UK. However, many people simply have the travel bug, or wish to reunite with family members in the UK. If this applies to you, consider if you meet the requirements for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa.

A subcategory of a Standard Visit Visa, the Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa allows non-British citizens who require a visa to visit the UK for up to 6 months. This can be for a holiday or to visit loved ones in the UK. There are longer-term options available, such as the 2, 5, or 10 year visit visa, but you can stay in the UK for only 6 months at a time. The first step in applying for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa is to ensure you meet the requirements.  

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Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa

OVERVIEW 

What are the requirements for the Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa?

The requirements for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa are as follows:

  • You require a visa to enter the UK.
  • You plan to leave the UK at the end of your visit.
  • You meet the financial requirements.
  • You are a genuine visitor not attempting to live in the UK through repeated visits.
  • Your travel plans include only activities allowed while on the Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa.

Some requirements vary depending on your specific circumstances, so it can be helpful to meet with a solicitor to receive advice for your particular situation.

Do I need a visa to enter the UK?

The Home Office provides a list of countries whose citizens require a Visit Visa to visit the UK. If you are from one of these countries, you are considered a ‘visa national’ and should apply to a Visit Visa before visiting the UK.

If you are, for example, an EU, EEA, Swiss, or American citizen, you do not need a visit visa to visit the UK. However, you must still meet the requirements be able to explain the purpose of your visit and plans for financial support.

What are the financial requirements?

There is no specific income threshold to meet, but you must show you can financially support yourself while in the UK without relying on public funds or working.

If you need financial assistance, it is possible for a third party to sponsor you. For a third party to sponsor you, you need to have a personal or professional relationship with them, and they should be able to show they can fund the entirety of your trip without breaking any immigration rules.

The ‘entirety’ of your trip includes travel, accommodation, and any necessary costs along the way. Only funds held in a legitimate financial institution are considered.

What is a genuine visitor?

A genuine visitor is someone who plans to return home at the end of their visit, rather than overstaying or returning to the UK for consecutive visits. To determine if you are a genuine visitor, the Home Office looks at your immigration history and your personal and financial ties to your country of residence.

You want to show that you have reasons to return to your home country, such as family, friends, and work responsibilities. If you have more ties to the UK than to your country of residence, the Home Office may question your intention to return to your country of residence at the end of your visit.

Providing the right supporting documents can help you convince the Home Office that you are a genuine visitor.

What supporting documents can help my application?

You should provide supporting documents that convince the Home Office you can support yourself while in the UK and that you plan to leave at the end of your visit.

This may include:

  • Your travel document.
  • Your travel history showing you have always returned on time to your country of residence, and that you are not making successive trips to the UK.
  • Evidence of proper accommodation in the UK and your return flight.
  • Proof of income (payslips and bank statements) showing you can support yourself financially and an estimate of the trip’s total cost.
  • Evidence of family ties in your country of residence (marriage or birth certificates for your spouse or children in your country of residence, for example).
  • Evidence of professional ties in your country of residence (letter from your employer or invoices from your business, for example).

How to apply for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa

You can apply for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa online. Each individual planning to visit the UK must complete a separate online form and pay a separate fee. This is true even for family members.

While completing the online application, you will book biometric appointment at a visa application centre. During this appointment, you provide supporting documents and have your fingerprints and picture taken. 

What activities are permitted while on a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa?

You are not allowed to work in the UK while on a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa. However, you can participate in the following activities.

Educational exchange or travel with a state-funded institution

The UK frequently welcomes foreign students who wish to learn about British culture. If you hope to join your classmates on an educational trip to the UK, you may be able to do this on a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa.

The purpose of your educational trip is defined by your educational institution and should be made clear in your application. You can provide clarity by including the programme’s enriching cultural activities planned. If your programme lasts longer than 30 days, check that it is not an official study course from a state-funded institution, as this is not permitted on a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa.

Recreational Study

Maybe you want to take advantage of the coastline with surfing lessons, or live out your British Bake-off dreams making crumpets.  Whatever the case is, as long as you respect the guidelines, you may participate in a short-term recreational course.

The recreational course you choose should not:

  •  Be an English language training course.
  • Last longer than 30 days. However, your course does not have to be 30 consecutive days and can be split across time.
  • Offer any formal qualifications.

Essentially, your course must be purely for leisure or corporate team building purposes. If the course is run by a state-funded institution, runs more than 30 days, or offers a certificate of qualification, you may wish to check with an immigration solicitor before attending.

Volunteering

You may volunteer while in the UK on a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa. With volunteering, there are a couple tricky guidelines to be aware of.

  • There is a difference between volunteer work with a registered charity and volunteering to work for a company. You cannot volunteer to work within a contract, even if you do not earn money.
  • There is also a difference between being a traditional volunteer and assisting a charity with, for example office admin. If your duties assist the organisation rather than the cause, it is worth discussing with an immigration lawyer to see if it is allowed.
  • You should not be paid outside of travel and expenses reimbursement.
  • You should not volunteer more than 30 days, although these 30 days do not need to be consecutive and can be split across many weeks. 

Evidence in support and burden of proof

When gathering documents and submitting your application, remember that it is up to you to convince the Home Office case worker that you meet the requirements as a genuine visitor to the UK.

As a rule of thumb, if you know something to be true (for example, that you plan to return to your home country because your job expects you back), then show it (give evidence of your job and future plans in your home country).

While a case worker may want to believe that you meet the requirements, their job is to find proof in the information you provided in your application. Your application acts as a thorough argument for yourself and your plans as a visitor in the UK. 

Applying for the Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa and providing the proper evidence can be confusing, so it may be helpful to seek the opinion of a UK immigration solicitor. Contact us and receive a response from an immigration solicitor within 24 hours. Rest assured, whatever your enquiry contains remains confidential. 

How Can Our Immigration Lawyers Help You?

 Our team of specialist immigration lawyers can assist you in relation to your Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa application through expert legal advice, guidance, and representation on a fixed fee basis. Our fixed fee covers all the work in relation to your Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa application from initial instructions until a decision is reached on your application by the Home Office. If instructed, your case will be handled by a specialist immigration lawyer whose work will entail the following:

  • Taking detailed instructions to find out all relevant facts;
  • Advising you on the eligibility requirements of your application;
  • Advising you on the suitability requirements of your application;
  • Assessing the strengths and weaknesses of your case in light of your personal circumstances;
  • Where necessary, advising you on the weakness if your case and the steps you may be able to take to mitigate those weaknesses;
  • Presenting you with a comprehensive list of documents to provide in support of your application;
  • Reviewing your documents to ensure they are in line with the requirements of the immigration rules in relation to your application and they are in the right format;
  • Advising you on further documents to be provided where necessary following review of collated documents;
  •  Drafting your application form and presenting you with draft application for your consideration;
  • Advising on the application form details and making amendments where necessary or requested by you;
  •  Drafting detailed letter of representations, demonstrating that all legal requirements relating to your application have been satisfied;
  • Drafting witness statements for you and other relevant witnesses where necessary;
  • Where possible, taking necessary steps to submit your application via Priority service to ensure faster processing time;
  •  Uploading all the necessary documents in support of your application onto the Home Office application portal;
  • Arranging an appointment for you to enrol your biometrics as part of your application process;
  • Liaising with the Home Office, where there has been a request for further information or documents; 

Why Choose Our Specialist Immigration Lawyers For Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa Application?

Our expert immigration lawyers have a wealth of experience in handling all types of immigration applications and have successfully assisted many applicants with their Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa applications. Below is a summary of reasons why we are different and are the right fit for you:

High Quality Advice and Representations

Our team of specialist immigration lawyers handle each case with great care and attention to detail from outset to its conclusion. Our expert immigration lawyers will ensure that your case if progressed in a timely manner and that you receive the highest quality legal advice and representation throughout the life of your retainer. The quality of service provided by our team of specialist immigration lawyers are self-evident from our Google review.

Remote Legal Services

Our team of specialist immigration lawyers can provide you with excellent advice, guidance and legal representations remotely using modern means of communication. Whilst our expert immigration lawyer can meet you face to face in our offices at the heart of London, where a face to face meeting is not possible or convenient, our lawyers can represent you remotely without the need for you to attend our offices. Our expert immigration lawyers have successfully represented clients remotely from all four continents without their needing to attend our offices for a face to face meeting and can also represent you remotely if necessary.

Specialist Advice and Representation

If instructed, your matter will be assigned to a lawyer with specialist knowledge of immigration law who will handle your matter from initial instructions to its conclusion, and where necessary – such as in complex matters – your immigration lawyer will be assisted by other immigration lawyers to ensure the best possible legal advice and representation.

Fixed Fees With Payment Plan

To help you with certainty regarding the costs of your legal representation, we provide services for a reasonable and affordable fixed fee. To further help our clients manage the costs associated with their application, we can offer an instalment plan so that you can pay your fixed fees in instalments. Please do note, however, that all instalments must be completed before you enrol your biometrics.

Open 7 Days A Week

Although our offices are officially open Monday – Friday, if you wish to have your case progressed outside of our normal office hours, we can arrange for one of our immigration lawyers to handle your case on an urgent basis for an additional fee.

Free Immigration Advice Online

Our team of specialist immigration solicitors and lawyers can provide you one-off advice completely free of charge via our online enquiry form.

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FAQ

What is the fee to apply for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa?

The application fee for a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa varies depending on how long you wish to stay in the UK. Currently, for a 6 month visit visa, there is an application fee of $100.

If you apply for a longer-term Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa, the fees increase. For 2 years the fee is $376, for 5 years it is $670 and for 10 years it is $837.

Each applicant must pay the fee.

No, unlike some other UK visas, you do not need to prove your ability to speak English to visit the UK on a Tourism, Leisure and Family Visit Visa.

You may travel to the UK without an adult, but you must provide the following information in addition to your other supporting documents:

  • Written consent and contact details of your parent or guardian.
  • Written consent and details of the person you looking after you in the UK.

If you are under 16 (or under 18 with a disability), and if you are not staying with a close relative for over 28 days, your parent, guardian or school should inform the relevant UK local authority. This may be the case for educational trips, for example. If you are travelling with an adult who is not your parent, you should provide information about them in your application

Keep your refusal letter from the Home Office, which provides you with a reason for your refusal. The letter will also inform you of your rights to submit a fresh application or appeal. It may be helpful to contact an immigration solicitor to help you address the reasons for your refusal

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