The UK is not in the Schengen Area, and settlement here does not turn on whether you feel at home. To stay permanently, the Home Office counts the days you spent away — and it counts them to the day.
Settlement is measured by your absences
Indefinite leave to remain (ILR) — often called settlement — is the status that lets you live in the UK without a time limit. Most residence tests around the world count the days you were present; for ILR the UK does the opposite and counts the days you were absent. The headline limit is easy to state and easy to trip over: you must not spend more than 180 days outside the UK in any 12-month period of your qualifying residence (GOV.UK).
This is a separate clock from the others we write about. It is not the Schengen 90/180 rule — which, since the UK left the EU, it is not part of — and it is not the UK Statutory Residence Test that decides where you pay tax. Settlement has its own window, its own arithmetic, and its own forms.
The qualifying period usually runs five years
Most routes to ILR — the Skilled Worker visa among them — require a continuous qualifying period of five years. A few are shorter; some investor routes can be two or three years. Whatever its length, the 180-day limit applies throughout the period, not merely in the run-up to your application.
"Rolling" is the word that catches people out
Until 11 January 2018, absences were measured in consecutive 12-month blocks counting back from the application date. Since then the Home Office measures them on a rolling basis: it can take any 12-month window inside your qualifying period, and if a single one exceeds 180 days, your continuous residence is treated as broken.
That subtly changes the maths. Two long trips sitting on either side of a calendar-year line used to fall into separate blocks; on a rolling basis they can land inside the same 12 months and add together. Two further points from the same official guidance:
- Whole days only. "You must only include whole days in this calculation. Part day absences, for example, less than 24 hours, are not counted."
- Almost everything counts. Business trips, holidays and family visits all count toward the 180 days unless a specific exception applies.
When a long absence can be excused
The rules leave room for genuine misfortune. Caseworkers may exercise discretion where an excessive absence was for serious or compelling reasons — the guidance names the serious illness of the applicant or a close relative, a conflict, or a natural disaster such as a volcanic eruption or tsunami. You have to prove it, with a letter setting out the reason and supporting documents. It is an exception, not a loophole.
Settlement can still lapse after you have it
ILR is durable, not unconditional. Indefinite leave to remain lapses if you spend two continuous years outside the UK (GOV.UK). Holders of settled status under the EU Settlement Scheme get a longer window — five years, or four for Swiss citizens — but the principle holds: stay away too long in one stretch and the status you earned can fall away, leaving a paid Returning Resident visa application, and proof of strong ongoing ties, as the route back.
Do not confuse settlement with citizenship
ILR is the step before British citizenship, and the two use different absence tests. Naturalisation generally allows no more than 450 days outside the UK across the five years before you apply, and no more than 90 days in the final 12 months. Clearing the ILR test does not automatically clear the citizenship one.
| Indefinite leave to remain | British citizenship | |
|---|---|---|
| What is counted | Days absent | Days absent |
| The limit | ≤ 180 days in any rolling 12 months | ≤ 450 days over 5 years; ≤ 90 in the final 12 |
| The window | A continuous qualifying period (often 5 years) | The 5 years before applying |
| How it is read | Every rolling 12-month window | Totals across the period |
Both tests, and the contrast above, are explored further in why citizenship forms ask for every trip abroad. Thresholds and routes change, so confirm the current numbers on GOV.UK before relying on them.
The count is only as good as your record
Every one of these tests has the same quiet requirement: you must know, and be able to show, the exact dates you left and returned — often reaching back five years or more. The Home Office can check what you declare against entry and exit records, so a generous round number in your favour will not do.
Most people do not keep that record as they travel. They rebuild it near application time from boarding passes, calendars and a passport whose stamps may be faint, missing, or — for trips inside the Common Travel Area — never made at all. That reconstruction is exactly where a borderline case goes wrong, as our guide to counting days abroad without losing the plot explains.
This is the unglamorous job Countly does on your phone. It keeps an exact, private, per-country record of your days and border crossings — automatically, with no account and nothing leaving the device — so that when a settlement form, a caseworker, or a rolling 12-month window asks how many days you were outside the UK, the answer is already written down rather than dredged up from memory.
This article is general information, not legal or immigration advice; UK immigration rules vary by route and change over time, so confirm the current requirements on official GOV.UK sources or with a qualified adviser before you apply.