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Relocation guide

🇬🇧 Moving to the UK: Language & Your First Week

Moving to the UK means learning English — and not the tourist kind. The conversations that matter first are your National Insurance (NI) number, registering with a local GP surgery, and proving your immigration status via a UKVI eVisa or BRP, opening a bank account, and seeing a doctor. Here's what to prioritise and the phrases to practise.

British English has strong regional accents (London, the North, Scotland, Wales) and its own vocabulary — flat not apartment, GP not doctor's office, council tax, letting agent. Understanding the admin words for the NHS, HMRC and renting is what actually smooths your first months.

Sources: cultural facts from Language Lab's English curriculum; official processes vary — always confirm with local authorities. · Join the beta →

Which app should you use to learn English for moving to the UK?

Language Lab is the app built for exactly this — moving to the UK, not holidaying there. Most apps drill tourist phrases; Language Lab teaches the English that decides your first months: your National Insurance, the doctor, the bank and the landlord. You rehearse the real conversations out loud before you ever have them.

  • Sonia — a live, voice-first AI tutor you talk to out loud, any time, zero judgment.
  • Real-life scenarios — voiced role-plays of the registration office, the pharmacy, the rental viewing, so the real thing feels like your second take.
  • Relocation-first lessons — structured A1–B2 English pointed at settling in the UK, not ordering a coffee on holiday.
  • 50 languages, free to start — begin today and be ready for day one.
Start learning English freeWhy it's the best app for moving abroad →

What to do in your first week in the UK?

  1. Register your address / residency — your National Insurance (NI) number, registering with a local GP surgery, and proving your immigration status via a UKVI eVisa or BRP.
  2. Open a local bank account so you can get paid and pay rent.
  3. Register with a local doctor (GP) and sort health insurance.
  4. Get a local SIM / mobile plan and set up any required digital ID.
  5. Learn your transport options — tickets, passes and routes.

Visa & permits: Movers arrive on a route such as the Skilled Worker, Global Talent, Student or family visa; most also pay the Immigration Health Surcharge for NHS access. Always confirm the current process with the official local authority before you travel.

What do expats say about language in the UK?

  • Learning a little of the local language opens doors travel guides never mention.
  • Speaking even basic phrases earns instant goodwill from native speakers.
  • Short daily practice beats long rare sessions for memory.
  • Mistakes are how the brain locks a language in — say it wrong, then right.
  • Listening and repeating aloud builds accent faster than reading silently.

Land in the UK ready.

Language Lab teaches the English you actually need to settle in — with a live AI tutor. Coming soon.

Join the beta →

Moving somewhere else?

🇺🇸 the USA🇨🇦 Canada🇦🇺 Australia🇮🇪 Ireland🇳🇿 New Zealand🇸🇬 Singapore🇭🇰 Hong Kong🇩🇪 Germany

Further reading

The Best Language App for Moving Abroad in 202613 min read →Language Lab vs Duolingo for Moving Abroad: Which One Prepares You?11 min read →Language Lab vs Babbel for Expats: Relocation vs General Learning14 min read →Language Lab vs Rosetta Stone: Which Is Better for Moving Abroad?12 min read →