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10 Jun 2026

Understanding dependant’s passes: A complete guide for families moving abroad

International mobility is a family decision for many households. The United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs (UN DESA) estimates 304 million people lived outside their country of birth in 2024, about 3.7% of the world’s population.1 For professionals on employer-sponsored work visas, the question is whether a spouse and children can stay legally in the same destination. A dependant’s pass is a common route but decisions usually depend on relationship evidence and proof of income, savings and recent bank statements. Planning starts early.

What Is a dependant’s pass?

A dependant’s pass is a practical mechanism in many immigration systems for keeping families together during an international assignment. It typically gives eligible family members the legal right to live in the destination on the back of the primary visa holder’s status, rather than applying for a separate long-term route from scratch.2

Requirements vary by country and visa type, so the examples mentioned are illustrative. Always check the destination authority’s current guidance.

Definition and purpose of a dependant’s pass

In policy terms, a dependant’s pass is permission for certain close family members, most often a spouse and dependent children, to join a sponsor for residence in the host jurisdiction.2 Its core purpose is family reunification, so the sponsor can take up work abroad without leaving immediate family behind. The details vary but immigration authorities generally test two things. First, the relationship must be genuine and properly documented. Second, the sponsor must be able to support the dependant, including accommodation, without creating public burden.2

Who issues dependant's passes

Dependant’s passes are issued and administered by government immigration authorities, sometimes with the employer or an appointed agent acting as the submitting party on behalf of the family.3 Approvals are discretionary and applications are assessed against published eligibility criteria and prevailing policy at the time of decision, so requirements can shift even when a family’s circumstances remain unchanged.2

Duration and validity period

Most dependant permissions are time-limited and linked to the sponsor’s immigration status. For example, the UK Home Office’s guidance for work routes states that dependants granted permission to join a lead applicant should be aligned to the end date of the lead applicant’s permission.4 Some work-pass frameworks state this linkage explicitly, tying a dependant’s duration to the main work pass or to a shorter requested period.3