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How to Withdraw a UK Visa or Immigration Application (2026) | Whytecroft Ford

How to Withdraw a UK Visa or Immigration Application

If you realise after submitting that your application is missing something, contains an error, or is on the wrong route, you can often withdraw it before a decision is made, avoid a refusal on your record, and recover your fees. This guide explains when and how to withdraw, what you get back, and the risks to check first.

Young woman in a bright modern office pausing at her laptop to reconsider, with a passport and documents on the desk
In this guide

The essentials at a glance

Only while you are waiting
You can withdraw a visa, extension or citizenship application only while it is still awaiting a decision.
A withdrawal is not a refusal
Withdrawing before a decision means you have no refusal on your record — which is often the whole point.
The fee refund is time-critical
Your application fee is only refunded if you withdraw before you give your biometrics. After that, it is usually lost.
The IHS comes back until a decision
The Immigration Health Surcharge is refunded in full if you withdraw before a decision is made.
In the UK, take care
Withdrawing an in-country application can end your permission to stay. Get advice before you do it.
You cannot undo it
Once UKVI receives your withdrawal it cannot be stopped, so be sure before you confirm.

Withdrawing a UK visa or immigration application

Sometimes the right move is to stop an application you have already submitted — most often when you realise, before your biometrics are taken, that something is missing or wrong. Withdrawing (the official term is "cancelling") lets you pull the application back before a decision is made. This guide explains when you can withdraw, the common reasons people do, what you get back, and how to do it, based on the current GOV.UK guidance.

The single most important point: you can only withdraw while you are still waiting for a decision, and a withdrawal is not a refusal. If you have spotted a problem early, acting before your biometrics appointment is usually both the cleanest and the cheapest option.

Practitioner note

Withdrawing is most useful in the short window between submitting online and attending biometrics. That is when the fee is still refundable and nothing has been decided. If you think your application has a problem, look at it the moment you submit, not after the appointment.


Common reasons to withdraw (before biometrics)

Most withdrawals we see happen in the days after submitting, once the applicant reviews what they sent and realises the application is not as strong, or as accurate, as it needs to be. The usual reasons:

  • Missing or incomplete documents. You realise a specified document is not ready, not in the required format, or simply was not uploaded — for example financial evidence, a translation, an English certificate or an Ecctis statement.
  • Incorrect information on the form. A wrong date, a misspelled name, a transposed figure, or an answer that does not match your documents. Inconsistencies between the form and your evidence are a common cause of refusal, so correcting them before a decision matters.
  • Wrong form, route or category. You realise you applied on the wrong route, the wrong sub-category, or from the wrong place (inside versus outside the UK).
  • Something you should have disclosed. You realise you left out something you needed to declare — a previous application or refusal, a caution or conviction, a tax or immigration matter. The right response is a complete, accurate application, not an incomplete one. Withdrawing and reapplying truthfully is far better than letting an inaccurate application be decided.
  • You realise you do not meet the requirements. If, on reflection, you do not yet meet the financial, residence or other eligibility rules, withdrawing before a decision avoids a refusal that you would otherwise have to declare on every future application.
  • Evidence not yet compliant. Bank statements outside the required window, savings not held long enough, or a qualifying period not yet complete. Withdrawing now and reapplying once the evidence is compliant is often the stronger path.
  • A change of circumstances. A job offer withdrawn, a relationship change, or a decision to apply on a different route.
  • You applied too early. Outside the permitted window for your route, for example more than the allowed period before travel.
Important

Never knowingly submit false information, and do not treat withdrawal as a way to hide something. If you realise an application you have already submitted is inaccurate or incomplete, the correct course is to put it right — by withdrawing and reapplying accurately, or by taking regulated advice promptly. A deliberate false statement can lead to refusal and a long re-entry ban.


Timing: what you get back, and when

What you are refunded depends entirely on the stage your application has reached when you withdraw, as set out in the official GOV.UK refund guidance.

What you paidRefunded?When
Application feeRefunded only if you withdraw before you give your biometrics (fingerprints and photo). On the "UK Immigration: ID Check" app route, refunded only if you have not yet selected "confirm and upload" and you withdraw before your upload deadline. Once biometrics are given it is usually not refunded.Within 4 weeks
Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS)Full refund if you withdraw before a decision is made. Paid automatically to the card you used.Within 6 weeks
Priority / super priority feeRefundable if you are eligible, but you must ask — it is not automatic.Within 4 weeks

The application fee and IHS refunds are paid automatically to the account or card you paid with; you do not need to request them. See our guide on what a refusal costs for how this compares with letting an application be refused.

Important note

If your bank details have changed, contact UKVI — but never send new bank or account details unless UKVI has asked for them, and check any request is genuine. If you have asked your bank to reverse the payment (a chargeback), you will not get a refund from UKVI.


How to withdraw your application

How you withdraw depends on how you were told to prove your identity when you applied. Follow the appointment process even if you were later told you did not need an appointment.

If you were told to attend a biometric appointment

  • Applied inside the UK: cancel your application online through the Home Office cancellation service.
  • Applied outside the UK: sign in to your application account using the link from your sign-up email and go to "Section 6: further actions" to cancel. Also cancel any appointment booked at the visa application centre.

If you used the "UK Immigration: ID Check" smartphone app

Sign in to your UKVI account using the link from your sign-up email, go to your dashboard, and select "Withdraw this application" for the application you want to cancel.

If you applied to the EU Settlement Scheme

Use the dedicated online cancellation service to withdraw an EU Settlement Scheme application.

Before you confirm

Once UKVI receives your withdrawal it cannot be stopped. Make sure withdrawing is the right step, and that you have everything you need to reapply, before you confirm.


Risks and alternatives to check first

If you are in the UK, you could lose your permission to stay

This is the most serious risk. If you applied to extend your stay in time and are relying on Section 3C leave while you wait, withdrawing the application can end that protection. If your previous leave has already expired, withdrawing can leave you as an overstayer with no valid status. Do not withdraw an in-country application without understanding the effect on your leave — take regulated advice first.

You may not need to withdraw at all

Not sure whether to withdraw?We can review your situation, the timing, and the effect on your status before you do anything irreversible.
Speak to an adviser

After withdrawing, and reapplying properly

Once you have withdrawn, the application is at an end. If you intend to reapply, use the time to fix what prompted the withdrawal in the first place: complete the missing documents, correct the information, confirm you meet the requirements, and make sure your evidence is in the format the rules require. A withdrawal is not a refusal, but future application forms may still ask whether you have previously applied, so answer truthfully.

For a fresh start done right, see our guides on where to begin, the top tips for a successful application, and the common reasons applications are refused.


Glossary

Withdraw / cancel
Asking UKVI to stop an application before a decision is made. GOV.UK calls this "cancelling"; in practice it is the same as withdrawing.
Biometrics
Your fingerprints and photograph. Giving them is the point after which your application fee is usually no longer refundable.
UK Immigration: ID Check app
The smartphone app some applicants use to verify identity instead of attending an appointment.
Section 3C leave
The protection that continues your conditions if you applied to extend before your leave expired. Withdrawing can end it.
Vary your application
Changing an in-country application to a different route without withdrawing and starting again.
Immigration Health Surcharge (IHS)
A charge paid with most applications for NHS access. Refunded in full if you withdraw before a decision.

Frequently asked questions

Yes, as long as your application is still awaiting a decision. You can withdraw (cancel) a visa, extension or citizenship application online or through your application account. Once a decision has been made, you can no longer withdraw it.
Only if you withdraw before giving your biometrics (fingerprints and photo). On the ID Check app route, only if you have not yet selected "confirm and upload" and you withdraw before your upload deadline. Once biometrics are given, the fee is usually not refunded. The refund is paid automatically within about 4 weeks.
Yes. The IHS is refunded in full if you withdraw before a decision is made, paid automatically to the card you used, usually within about 6 weeks. A priority or super priority service fee may also be refundable, but you have to ask for it.
No. A withdrawal before a decision is not a refusal, so you have no refusal to declare on future applications. That is often the main reason people withdraw when they realise their application has a problem. Future forms may still ask whether you have previously applied, which you should answer truthfully.
Be careful. If you applied to extend your stay in time and rely on Section 3C leave while you wait, withdrawing can end that protection, and if your previous leave has expired you could become an overstayer. Take regulated advice before withdrawing an in-country application.
If you spot a missing or incorrect document before your biometrics, withdrawing and reapplying with a complete, correct application is often the best option, because the fee is still refundable and there is no decision yet. If you only want your documents returned, you may be able to request that without cancelling. Check your position before acting.
No. Once UKVI receives your withdrawal it cannot be stopped. Make sure it is the right decision, and that you are ready to reapply if you intend to, before you confirm.
It depends how you proved your identity. If you were told to attend a biometric appointment: applied inside the UK, cancel online through the Home Office service; applied outside the UK, sign in to your application account and use "Section 6: further actions", and cancel any visa centre appointment. If you used the ID Check app, sign in to your UKVI account and select "Withdraw this application". EU Settlement Scheme applications use a separate online cancellation service.
Speak to Whytecroft Ford

Thinking about withdrawing an application?

Timing is everything, and for in-country applications withdrawing can affect your right to stay. Whytecroft Ford can review your situation before you do anything irreversible, and prepare a complete, accurate reapplication. Every matter runs on a written engagement letter, with a named handler and supervisor.