When a student visa is close to expiring, it is completely natural to worry about the exact date and time your child must leave the UK. Many families feel unsure whether they can stay until the final day, whether time of day matters, and how overstaying is calculated. Clear guidance helps you avoid unnecessary stress, especially around important events such as a graduation ceremony.
This article explains, in plain English, how the Home Office treats the final day of leave, whether your daughter can attend graduation on 10 September, and when she must exit the UK on 11 September.
Understanding the issue or context
Your daughter’s graduation is on 10 September, and her student visa expires on 11 September. You want clarity about:
- whether she can leave the UK on the expiry date,
- whether the exact time of departure matters,
- how the Home Office counts overstaying.
These concerns are very common for students finishing their studies and preparing to leave the UK or switch routes.
The legal rules or framework
1. A student must leave the UK on or before the visa expiry date
Under UK immigration law, a person becomes an overstayer the moment their permission expires.
This means:
- staying past 11 September is not allowed, and
- she must physically depart the UK on or before that date.
2. The Home Office measures overstaying by date, not time of day
Immigration permission runs until 23:59 on the stated expiry date.
That means:
- If the visa expires on 11 September, she may remain lawfully in the UK until 23:59 on 11 September.
- She does not need to leave at a specific hour on that date.
She must simply have exited the UK before midnight.
3. Airports do not check visa expiry at departure
UK exit checks happen automatically, using passport scans, not at a manual desk.
However, if she leaves after her expiry date, it will be recorded as overstaying — even by one day.
4. Attending graduation is permitted
Graduation on 10 September is lawful and within her valid leave.
Graduation activities do not breach immigration conditions.
5. There is no grace period
The old 28-day and 14-day overstaying periods no longer apply, except in limited circumstances.
Leaving late — even by hours — creates an overstaying record.
Practical steps to take (step-by-step guidance)
1. Book a flight for 11 September at a reasonable hour
To avoid risk, consider:
- a morning or afternoon flight,
- allowing time for travel delays,
- avoiding last-minute travel.
2. Keep proof of flight booking and boarding pass
Although rarely requested, it is sensible to keep evidence showing she left the UK on time.
3. Avoid checking out of accommodation too late
She must arrive at the airport in time to pass border exit systems before the end of the day.
4. If she plans to apply for a new visa
She must submit any new application before 23:59 on 11 September to preserve lawful status.
5. Do not leave the UK on 12 September
Even early-morning departures on the next day count as overstaying.
Common pitfalls to avoid
- Assuming time of day matters. It does not — she is lawful until 23:59 on the expiry date.
- Booking a very late flight. Delays could push her past midnight.
- Thinking the airport will ‘let her through’ after expiry. The system automatically logs overstaying.
- Relying on a grace period. There is none.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can she stay in the UK all day on 11 September?
Yes — she is lawful until 23:59 on that date.
Does she need to leave early in the morning?
No. Any time on 11 September is fine, as long as she departs before midnight.
Will overstaying by a few hours cause problems?
Yes. Even short overstays can affect future visa applications.
Can she attend graduation on 10 September?
Yes. This is fully permitted and does not affect her immigration status.
Do airlines check visa expiry?
They do not check manually, but border exit systems record your departure automatically.
Should she apply for a new visa before leaving?
Only if she meets eligibility for another route. The application must be submitted before the expiry date.
Conclusion
If you’d like to understand your rights and options in plain English, visit LegalGuidance.org — a free resource powered by Martin Taggart Legal Consulting.
For professional, fixed-fee advice from a UK solicitor, visit MartinTaggart.com.
This information is general guidance only and not legal advice. For personalised support, please contact Martin Taggart Legal Consulting.