Contact us to discuss your UK immigration problem and how it can be resolved properly.

If you need clear advice about a UK visa, immigration status, refusal, appeal, settlement, citizenship or Home Office problem, you are in the right place. Immigration issues are often stressful because one wrong answer, missing document or missed deadline can affect your work, family, studies, business or future in the UK.

UK Immigration Lawyers provides regulated UK immigration advice to individuals, families and businesses. We help clients understand their position, identify the correct legal route, prepare stronger applications, respond to Home Office concerns and deal with refusals or appeal-related problems where legal remedies are available.

If your matter is urgent, time-sensitive or already refused, it is usually safer to obtain advice before submitting further documents, making a repeat application or contacting the Home Office again.

Book a UK immigration consultation or contact us using the details below.

Speak to a UK immigration adviser

You can contact us about most UK immigration law matters, including:

  • spouse visas, partner visas, fiancé(e) visas and family immigration applications;
  • child visas, parent route applications and applications involving children in the UK;
  • Skilled Worker visas, sponsor licence issues and employment-related immigration problems;
  • visitor visas, business visits and previous UK visa refusals;
  • student visas and problems with CAS, previous study or credibility concerns;
  • indefinite leave to remain, long residence and settlement applications;
  • British citizenship and registration as a British citizen;
  • EU Settlement Scheme matters, late applications and status problems;
  • human rights applications, private life claims and complex discretionary cases;
  • administrative review, immigration appeals and refusal strategy;
  • deportation, removal and serious Home Office enforcement concerns.

We do not promise that an application, appeal or request will succeed. We assess the facts, the Immigration Rules, Home Office guidance and the evidence available, then advise you on the legal risks and the most sensible next step.

Contact details

Telephone: 0203 034 0029

Email: [email protected]

Office hours: Monday to Friday, 9:00am to 5:00pm

Address:
Building 2, 1st Floor
Croxley Green Business Park
Watford
WD18 8YA

Regulation: ELSG Ltd is authorised and regulated to provide immigration advice. You can also check official information about immigration advisers on GOV.UK, including the requirement that immigration advisers must be registered with the Immigration Advice Authority or be members of an approved professional body: find an immigration adviser on GOV.UK.

When should you contact us?

You should consider taking advice before making an immigration decision that could affect your status, family life, right to work, ability to travel or future immigration history. This is especially important where:

  • you are unsure which visa route applies to you;
  • you have had a previous UK visa refusal;
  • your immigration history includes overstaying, curtailment, deception allegations or gaps in lawful residence;
  • your family, income, accommodation or relationship evidence may be questioned;
  • you are close to a deadline for appeal, administrative review, further submissions or visa expiry;
  • you have received a Home Office letter you do not fully understand;
  • you are worried about travelling while an application or status issue is unresolved;
  • you are a sponsor, employer or worker facing a compliance problem.

Early advice can help avoid avoidable mistakes. In many cases, the real issue is not simply which form to use, but whether the legal requirements are met, whether the evidence is strong enough and whether the Home Office is likely to raise concerns about credibility, suitability or eligibility.

What should you include in your enquiry?

To help us understand your situation, please include the following information where relevant:

  • your nationality and current location;
  • your current UK immigration status, if any;
  • the date your visa expires, if applicable;
  • the visa, application, appeal or problem you need help with;
  • whether you have received a refusal, curtailment, removal notice or Home Office letter;
  • any important deadlines;
  • a short summary of your family, work, study or residence history if relevant;
  • what outcome you are trying to achieve.

Please do not send original documents by post unless we specifically ask you to do so. If we need documents, we will tell you what is required and how to provide them safely.

Book a consultation

A consultation is usually the best way to obtain clear, tailored advice. During the appointment, we can consider the facts, identify the legal route, explain the evidence required, flag risks and advise on the next practical step.

A consultation may help you understand:

  • whether you appear to meet the relevant requirements;
  • which documents are likely to matter most;
  • what the Home Office may question;
  • whether a refusal can be challenged or whether a fresh application may be better;
  • what should be done before a deadline expires;
  • whether full legal representation is likely to add value.

Book your UK immigration consultation.

How legal advice can strengthen your case

UK immigration applications are document-heavy and rule-based. A case can fail even where the person has a genuine reason to come to or remain in the UK if the application is incomplete, unsupported or legally misframed.

Legal advice can help by:

  • identifying the correct application route before fees are paid;
  • checking validity, eligibility and suitability issues;
  • preparing a focused evidence strategy;
  • addressing previous refusals, immigration history or credibility concerns;
  • explaining the legal test in a structured way;
  • reducing avoidable inconsistencies in the application and supporting documents;
  • advising whether appeal, administrative review, judicial review or a fresh application is appropriate where a decision has already been made.

No lawyer can guarantee a Home Office decision. What careful legal preparation can do is help ensure that the case is presented clearly, lawfully and with the right evidence from the beginning.

If your visa or immigration application has been refused

If you have received a refusal, do not assume that the next step is always to apply again. The right strategy depends on the type of decision, the reasons given by the Home Office, whether there is a right of appeal, whether administrative review is available, whether there is an arguable public law error and whether the missing evidence or legal issue can be corrected.

When contacting us about a refusal, please provide the refusal decision, the date it was received and any deadline shown in the decision. Immigration deadlines can be strict. Delay can reduce your options.

Book urgent advice about a UK visa refusal.

For employers and sponsor licence matters

We also advise businesses on sponsor licence applications, sponsor compliance, Skilled Worker issues, illegal working concerns, civil penalties, sponsor licence suspension and sponsor licence revocation. Employers should seek advice promptly where the Home Office has requested information, raised compliance concerns or taken enforcement action.

Business immigration problems can affect not only one worker, but the whole sponsor licence and future recruitment strategy. A careful and prompt response is often essential.

Frequently asked questions

Can I get advice before I submit my UK visa application?

Yes. It is often better to obtain advice before submitting the application, especially if the case involves previous refusals, complex evidence, relationship issues, financial requirements, long residence, children, criminality, overstaying or Home Office credibility concerns.

Can you guarantee that my UK visa or appeal will succeed?

No. We do not guarantee visas, appeals, settlement, citizenship or Home Office outcomes. We can assess your case, explain the legal requirements, identify risks and help present the strongest lawful case supported by evidence.

What documents should I send before a consultation?

If you have a refusal letter, Home Office notice, previous application, visa expiry date, passport pages, BRP or eVisa information, sponsor documents or key evidence, these may be relevant. We will tell you what is needed depending on the type of case.

Can you help if my UK visa has already been refused?

Yes. We can review the refusal reasons and advise whether the better option may be appeal, administrative review, judicial review, further submissions or a fresh application. The correct option depends on the decision type, legal route, evidence and deadline.

Do I need a lawyer for a UK immigration application?

Not every application needs legal representation. However, legal advice is sensible where the rules are complex, the evidence is weak or disputed, there has been a previous refusal, there are suitability concerns, or the consequences of refusal would be serious.

Can you help clients outside the UK?

Yes. Many UK immigration applications are made from outside the UK. We can advise clients overseas on UK visa applications, evidence, refusal risks and Home Office requirements where the matter falls within our immigration advice services.

Is the information on this page legal advice?

No. This page provides general information about contacting UK Immigration Lawyers. It is not legal advice on your individual facts. Immigration law changes frequently, and advice should be taken on your specific circumstances before action is taken.

Legal disclaimer

This contact page gives general information about how to contact UK Immigration Lawyers and the types of UK immigration matters on which advice may be available. It does not create an adviser-client relationship and should not be relied on as legal advice for any individual application, appeal, refusal, Home Office deadline or immigration problem. UK immigration law, Immigration Rules, Home Office guidance and procedures may change. You should obtain tailored advice before making decisions that may affect your immigration status, right to work, family life, ability to travel or future applications.

Last legally reviewed: 15 June 2026 at 13:32 London time
By: Adam Sierant