The UK Ancestry visa: a UK-born grandparent gets Canadians five years.
Last verified: 3 July 2026In a country with no retirement visa, this is the closest thing to a personal route in — and it's Canadians-only. One grandparent born in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man, a willingness to do some work, and £726 buys a 5-year visa that leads straight to settlement. Americans are excluded: the route requires Commonwealth citizenship.
- £726 application fee (≈ C$1,365)
- £5,175 immigration health surcharge — £1,035/yr × the 5-year visa (≈ C$9,730)
- 5 years in a single grant — live, work, self-employ anywhere in the UK
- Work requirement: you must be able to and intend to work — paid, part-time, voluntary, and self-employment all count
- ILR at 5 years — fee £3,226 (≈ C$6,065)
- ~3 weeks typical decision time from abroad
Who qualifies
Four conditions, all from the official GOV.UK rules (updated 29 April 2026):
- You're a Commonwealth citizen — Canada qualifies; the United States does not.
- You're 17 or older.
- You have a grandparent born in the UK, the Channel Islands or the Isle of Man. (A UK-born parent is a different, better situation — see below.)
- You're able to work and intend to work in the UK.
One structural rule to plan around: you cannot switch into this route from inside the UK. The application is made from abroad — for readers here, from Canada.
Americans: this route is closed to you
Ancestry alone isn't enough — the visa is limited to Commonwealth citizens, and the US isn't one. A British-born grandparent gets an American nothing here. A British-born parent is different: under the British Nationality Act you may already be a citizen automatically, no visa required. Start with our guide to the routes that actually work, which covers citizenship by descent, the partner route, and the work options.
The work requirement is softer than it sounds
This is the clause that makes semi-retired Canadians nervous, and it shouldn't. You must be able to work and genuinely intend to — but paid employment, part-time work, voluntary work, and self-employment all satisfy it. A few days a week of consulting, a market stall, regular volunteering: all count. What the route doesn't accommodate is a plan to do nothing at all. If your intention is pure retirement with no work of any kind, this is the wrong visa — and the honest answer is that the UK has no right one.
Step by step, from Canada
- Confirm the grandparent's birthplace. The qualifying birth must be in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man. Order the birth certificate now — records requests take time.
- Assemble proof of the chain. Expect to document the line from your grandparent to you — typically birth (and, where names changed, marriage) certificates across the generations, alongside your Canadian passport. Follow the current GOV.UK document checklist exactly; it governs.
- Show your work intention. Evidence you plan to work — a job offer isn't required, but a credible plan (self-employment outline, volunteer arrangements, job applications) supports the "intend to work" test.
- Apply online from Canada and pay the £726 fee plus the £5,175 immigration health surcharge upfront.
- Attend biometrics and wait ~3 weeks for a decision from abroad.
- Move. The visa runs 5 years in one grant — no extension paperwork in the middle, unlike the partner route.
ILR at year 5: the conditions carry through
After 5 years you apply for indefinite leave to remain — fee £3,226 (2026). The route-specific conditions still apply at that point: you must still be a Commonwealth citizen, and still able to work and planning to. General settlement rules apply too:
- No more than 180 days a year outside the UK during the qualifying period.
- Life in the UK test, £50 — exempt at 65+.
- English at B1 for ages 18–64 today — rising to B2 from 26 March 2027, including for people already on a pathway.
- ILR lapses if you then spend 2 years outside the UK.
The long game: a British passport
Twelve months after getting ILR you can apply to naturalise (the wait is waived if you're married to a British citizen). Requirements: 5 years' residence, no more than 450 days absent across them and 90 in the final 12 months, English, the Life in the UK test (65+ are exempt from the test), and good character. Fee: £1,839 (2026). Canada and the UK both allow dual citizenship, so you keep your Canadian passport.
| Stage | When | Cost (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Ancestry visa + IHS | Year 0 | £726 + £5,175 |
| ILR + Life in the UK test | Year 5 | £3,226 + £50 test (65+ exempt from the test) |
| Naturalisation | Year 6 | £1,839 |
| Total, one adult | ~£11,016 (≈ C$20,700) |
Europe Unlocked arithmetic from 2026 published fees; at £1 ≈ C$1.88 (1 July 2026) — rates fluctuate. Excludes dependants, biometrics services, and document costs.
Sources
- GOV.UK — UK Ancestry visa (eligibility, £726 fee, work requirement, ~3-week decisions; updated 29 Apr 2026): gov.uk/ancestry-visa
- GOV.UK — Ancestry visa: indefinite leave to remain (5 years, £3,226, conditions): gov.uk
- GOV.UK — immigration health surcharge (£1,035/yr per adult): gov.uk
- GOV.UK — earned settlement consultation (10-year reform status): gov.uk · B2 English from 26 Mar 2027, Statement of Changes HC 1691: explanatory memorandum
- GOV.UK — naturalisation with ILR (£1,839, 12-month rule, absence caps, 65+ test exemption): gov.uk
- British Nationality Act 1981, s.2 (UK-born parent = citizenship by descent): legislation.gov.uk · checker: gov.uk/check-british-citizenship