Independent study guide

About Life in the UK Test Practice

Learn how this independent editorial practice website works, how questions are created and how local progress is kept private.

An independent editorial project

Life in the UK Test Practice is an independent preparation website published by the Life in the UK Test Editorial Team. It is not affiliated with the UK Government, the Home Office or the official test booking service.

We do not claim to be a school, government body, immigration adviser or authorised test provider. The public publisher identity is an editorial team, not a fictional individual expert.

Original practice material

Every practice question is written for this website. We do not copy official questions, competitor banks or extended passages from the official handbook. Questions are built from facts checked against reputable public sources and pass structured editorial checks before publication.

Practice material is not the official syllabus. Use the current official Guide for New Residents as your primary study source and GOV.UK for booking and test-day information.

What the website provides

  • Timed 24-question mock tests.
  • Untimed quick and topic quizzes.
  • Mistake, favourite, difficult and daily modes.
  • Flashcards with local review tracking.
  • Explanations and source records.
  • Editorial guides to the current official process.

No account and no profile

The website has no login, database or user profile. Progress is stored in localStorage in your browser. It does not synchronise automatically, and clearing browser storage can remove it. You can export a JSON backup or clear all progress from the privacy page.

We do not ask for or need your name, nationality, immigration status, passport details, test reference or payment information.

Corrections and changes

Current-process pages have review dates and official source links. If you find a factual or accessibility problem, use the corrections process or contact page. We record the nature of material corrections without inventing individual reviewer identities.