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## Summary
The UK Skilled Worker visa is the main employer-sponsored work route for people who have a confirmed job offer from a UK employer approved by the Home Office. It is not a job-seeker visa; the employer, role, salary, and applicant must all fit the route before the application can work.
This route can be useful for people in fields such as technology, engineering, finance, healthcare, education, and other skilled occupations, but the job title alone is not enough. The UK checks the role by occupation code and applies salary rules that can vary by occupation and applicant situation.
Irish citizens normally do not need this pathway because of Common Travel Area rights.
## Eligibility
You may be a fit if:
- You are not already a British or Irish citizen with a right to live and work in the UK.
- You have a confirmed job offer, or are close to one, with a UK employer.
- The employer is approved by the UK Home Office as a worker sponsor, or is willing and able to become one.
- The employer can assign a Certificate of Sponsorship. This is the official sponsorship record for the UK role.
- The job is on the Skilled Worker eligible occupations list.
- The salary meets the required rule for that occupation. Under current published rules, this usually means meeting both the general Skilled Worker salary threshold and the occupation's going rate, unless a lower route-specific rule applies. GOV.UK currently lists the standard general salary threshold as GBP 41,700 per year.
- You can meet the English-language requirement, unless an exemption applies.
- You can provide the required application documents, including identity documents, the Certificate of Sponsorship reference number, and any role-specific documents.
- You can meet maintenance, suitability, and background requirements. Some jobs, including certain health, education, and social-care roles, can require extra checks or documents.
For many applicants, the employer's sponsor status and the role's occupation code are the two most important first checks. A strong job offer from an employer that cannot sponsor the route may not be enough.
## What This Route Allows
A Skilled Worker visa lets you live in the UK and work in the sponsored role. It may also allow study, limited additional work, travel in and out of the UK, and dependants if the current rules allow dependants for that role and applicant situation.
This route can also become part of a longer UK plan. After enough lawful residence in the route and continued eligibility, some Skilled Worker holders may be able to apply for indefinite leave to remain, which is the UK's permanent-settlement status.
## What This Route Is Not
- A visa for moving to the UK first and then looking for work.
- A remote-work visa for working in the UK for a non-UK employer.
- A general permission to work for any UK employer.
- A guarantee of permanent residence or citizenship.
- A replacement for routes such as Global Talent, Innovator Founder, UK Ancestry, family visas, student routes, or the Health and Care Worker visa when those are the better fit.
## Next Steps
1. Ask the UK employer whether they already hold a Skilled Worker sponsor licence.
2. Confirm the role's occupation code and check whether that code is eligible.
3. Confirm the proposed salary against the current Skilled Worker salary rules and the occupation's going rate.
4. Ask whether any lower salary rule, health or education rule, immigration salary list rule, or transitional rule applies.
5. Confirm whether you can meet the English-language requirement.
6. Have the employer assign the Certificate of Sponsorship before applying.
7. Prepare the application documents, including any role-specific criminal-record, qualification, or registration evidence.
## Sources
- [GOV.UK — Skilled Worker visa](https://www.gov.uk/skilled-worker-visa)
- [GOV.UK — Skilled Worker visa: your job](https://www.gov.uk/skilled-worker-visa/your-job)
- [GOV.UK — Skilled Worker visa: eligible occupations](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/skilled-worker-visa-eligible-occupations)
- [GOV.UK — Skilled Worker visa: immigration salary list](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/skilled-worker-visa-immigration-salary-list)
- [GOV.UK — Register of licensed sponsors: workers](https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/register-of-licensed-sponsors-workers)
- [GOV.UK — Skilled Worker visa: knowledge of English](https://www.gov.uk/skilled-worker-visa/knowledge-of-english)
- [GOV.UK — Skilled Worker visa: documents you'll need](https://www.gov.uk/skilled-worker-visa/documents-you-must-provide)
- [GOV.UK — Indefinite leave to remain as a Skilled Worker](https://www.gov.uk/indefinite-leave-to-remain-tier-2-t2-skilled-worker-visa)
The main employer-sponsored work route for people who have a confirmed UK job offer in an eligible role. It can allow long-term residence and may lead to settlement if the requirements continue to be met.