Online Immigration Status in the UK: eVisa
UK Visas and Immigration are moving UK visas online from 2025. For residents, all BRP visa cards “expire” on 31.12.2024 and will be replaced by eVisa. For visitors, it will be an ETA prior to travel or a Visitor visa, depending on nationality. We can advise on the transition to eVisa and explain how it works.
eVisa and what happens when all BRPs expire on 31.12.2024
From 2025 all UK visas will be as an eVisa. An electronic status in the UK Government system, without a physical card or stamp. All current BRPs “expire” on 31.12.2024, but it does not represent the expiry date of your status. The visa eligibility rules, and requirements towards the evidence, remain the same. If you have a BRP that expires on 31.12.2024, you can transfer to eVisa by creating a new-generation UKVI account here.
If your visa expires before 31.12.2024
You need to make a next visa application as normal, as before eVisa. As a result, you will receive a decision and your new status will be an eVisa. If your application remains pending by 31.12.2024, you’ll be able to create a UKVI account to prove your status accordingly. We call it Section 3C Leave, which is a legal stay during a pending application (or appeal, or admin review) after it was submitted on time, before the previous visa expired.
How to prove your UK status with eVisa
Get a share code and provide it to employers and landlords:
You can generate a share code here, thengive it to an employer or a landlord.
Prove your status to the UK Government authorities:
The UK Government will have the information from the Home Office, so they will have access to your status through the Government database. This includes the NHS, HMRC, DWP etc. The same applies when travelling, the UK Border Control will have your status in their system.
For immigration advice, Book online consultation here. A call over Zoom or WhatsApp costs £150 if you prefer to talk to a lawyer. An email consultation costs only £120 and we provide answers by the next working day. Advice fee counts towards our future services with a visa application, so the final fee is the same, just split into 2 stages.
1st 4Immigration is one of the most experienced UK immigration law companies, OISC – accredited at the highest Level 3. We have been in business for over 15 years, our OISC reference is 200800152, in which 2008 stands for the year accreditation. Office: Tower 42, 25 Old Broad Street, London, EC2N 1HN. Website 1st4immigration.com
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