(UK) EU citizens with status under the EU Settlement Scheme keep a five-year route to settled status in 2026, even as ministers consult on an “earned settlement” model for most other migrants. That exemption also means old Permanent Residence Cards rarely add anything beyond peace of mind, because the Home Office now proves EUSS rights through a digital record. For families, employers, and landlords, the practical task is simpler: check, keep, and when eligible, secure the automatic upgrade to settled status.

2026 rules that matter for EU residents
Brexit ended free movement on January 1, 2021, but it did not erase residence already built in the UK. The EU Settlement Scheme, launched in 2019, remains the main route for EU, EEA, and Swiss citizens who were living in the UK before the cut-off dates. It grants pre-settled status to people with less than five years’ residence and settled status after five years’ continuous residence, which is the EUSS version of indefinite leave to remain.
According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, EU citizens already in the scheme are also exempt from the draft 2026 plan to stretch settlement qualifying periods from five to 10 years. The government’s consultation on “earned settlement” runs until February 12, 2026, with a Statement of Changes expected in March 2026 and a phased start eyed for April 2026. Under that proposal, most non-EUSS migrants would face a 10-year baseline plus tests for earnings and English, while EUSS holders keep their five-year track.
Permanent Residence Cards after Brexit: what they are now
Permanent Residence Cards were a pre-Brexit document that confirmed an EU citizen had completed five years in the UK while exercising treaty rights, such as working or being self-employed. They are still issuable for people who meet the old rules, but they are largely obsolete because EUSS status covers the same right to live and work, with easier digital proof. A PRC application costs £130 and can take about six months, while an EUSS application is free and is often decided quickly, with many cases automated.
If you already hold a PRC, it does not replace the need to hold a valid immigration status record that UK systems can check, especially as physical documents fade out. Biometric Residence Permits are being largely phased out by March 31, 2025.
The EUSS journey from pre-settled to settled status
For most applicants, the journey has three phases: proving identity, proving residence, and then keeping that residence continuous until you qualify for settled status. Continuous residence traditionally allowed absences of up to six months in any 12-month period, or up to 12 months for an important reason such as study.
From July 16, 2025, a major change helps many people on pre-settled status: you now qualify for settled status if you can show 30 months’ residence in the last 60 months. That rule matters for workers posted abroad, carers juggling family needs, and students who had longer breaks, as long as the total residence meets the new test. Another specialist area, “derivative rights”, gets new Home Office guidance in January 2026, affecting some parents and children who rely on case-law routes such as Zambrano.
Step-by-step: applying, upgrading, and proving your status
- Check what you already have by using the Home Office’s online service to view your EUSS record, then confirm the email and phone number attached to it. This is also where employers and landlords can be shown your right to work or rent, because the EUSS system relies on share codes rather than cards.
- Prepare identity evidence: a valid passport, national identity card, or biometric residence card, scanned through the EU Exit: ID Document Check app or entered another way online. Children can apply, and applications can be made without a smartphone, but you still need a clear digital match between you and the document.
- Build a residence timeline using National Insurance records where possible, since automated checks with HMRC and DWP often confirm long stretches without extra paperwork. When automated checks fall short, submit documents that show you were here, aiming for four pieces per year such as P60s, bank statements, tenancy letters, or school records.
- Submit the online application or wait for the upgrade: many eligible pre-settled holders are being moved to settled status automatically from January 31, 2025. If you get an email saying you were upgraded, check the date and keep it with your records, because the settled-status clock also affects citizenship timing.
- Know the decision stage: the Home Office says a standard timeframe is about 28 days, and refusals carry review or appeal options.
Apologies for the over-explanation! Here are just the clean official links:
- View your EUSS record → https://www.gov.uk/view-prove-immigration-status
- EU Exit: ID Document Check app → https://www.gov.uk/guidance/using-the-eu-exit-id-document-check-app
- Evidence of residence guidance → https://www.gov.uk/settled-status-eu-citizens-families/what-youll-need-to-apply
- Apply / upgrade to settled status → https://www.gov.uk/settled-status-eu-citizens-families Automatic upgrade info → https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/eu-settlement-scheme-euss-status-automation/eu-settlement-scheme-euss-status-automation
- After you’ve applied (decisions & appeals) → https://www.gov.uk/settled-status-eu-citizens-families/after-youve-applied
Late EUSS applications and common “reasonable grounds”
Although the main deadline was June 30, 2021, the Home Office still accepts late EUSS applications where a person shows reasonable grounds for missing it. Typical reasons include not realising an application was needed, serious illness, being a child in care, or lacking capacity, and each case is judged on its facts.
When Permanent Residence Cards still come up
Some long-term residents prefer to keep a Permanent Residence Card because it feels tangible, or because an older employer process once asked for it. If you apply, you use Form EEA(PR) and pay £130, and the Home Office has historically taken around six months to decide. The official application page for Form EEA(PR) for a Permanent Residence Card lists the evidence needed and where to send it.
Even then, EUSS settled status usually provides stronger day-to-day proof, especially for renting, new jobs, and travel checks that expect a digital status response.
Travel, absences, and the February 2026 ETA change
Settled and pre-settled status let EU citizens travel in and out, but long absences can still break the link needed to qualify, or later to keep settled status secure. Absences over two years normally end continuity, unless a permitted exception applies, so keep records for any period away tied to COVID-19 disruption, study, or caring duties. From February 25, 2026, the UK plans wider use of an Electronic Travel Authorisation for many visitors, and settled EU residents should expect more routine status checks at borders.
What “earned settlement” would require for others, and why EUSS is different
The consultation model would make settlement something people “earn” through a mix of time, compliance, integration, and contribution, instead of a straight five-year step for most routes. Mandatory parts include a £12,570 annual earnings test over a set period and a higher English level, with B2 English flagged from January 8, 2026. The same plan describes faster routes for high earners, such as £50,270+ for five years or £125,140+ for three years, and longer waits for immigration breaches.
EU Settlement Scheme holders, and family members of British citizens covered by the scheme’s rules, are explicitly carved out, so they keep settled status after five years under Appendix EU.
After you get settled status: work, benefits, and citizenship timing
Settled status gives the right to live in the UK indefinitely, work in any job, study, and access benefits where eligibility rules are met. British citizenship is a separate process, but many people apply after 12 months holding settled status, once they also meet residence rules and pass the Life in the UK test.
One official link worth bookmarking
The Home Office publishes the core rules and application steps on GOV.UK’s EU Settlement Scheme guidance, including how to apply, prove status, and report changes.

I can’t find any instruction for updating my passport renewal, On the 6th of January 2026 I’ve paid for the renewal of my Dutch passport, which has an expiry date of 10 years.
I’ve applied, online, for permanent residence in December 2025, with10 attachments showing all rental contracts of the 5 years I ‘ve lived in the UK.
Between 01-07-2015 and 11-03-2020.
I need to change the passpotnumber in my application, but where can I do that?
The largest part of the gov.uk site resembles a labyrinth, I’ve seldom seen such an amount of eternally repeated morsels of info. A highly inefficient website! (in the eyes of a practical Dutch person).
We updated our article with more details and information. Thank you for pointing it out, we appreaciate it very much and will try to be more detailed in future. Below is some additional information for your specific issue as well, let me know if this helps.
If you need to change the passport number on your December 2025 permanent residence application, you can’t do it online you must contact UKVI directly (I know the gov.uk maze is maddening).
When you contact them, email [email protected] or call +44 (0)300 790 6268 (Mon–Fri 8–8, Sat–Sun 9:30–4:30) and give your full name, date of birth, your Unique Application Number, old and new passport numbers, and attach a scan/photo of the new passport and the rental-contract docs you referenced.
Usually they’ll confirm the update; processing averages around six months.
Quick tip: put “Permanent Residence Application – Passport Update” in the subject and save any replies call if you don’t hear back in a couple of weeks.