Alex Piletska

Alex is a Senior Associate solicitor at Vanessa Ganguin Immigration Law, a specialist UK immigration firm where she has worked since 2025 She undertakes a wide range of immigration work, including all aspects of personal and family immigration and nationality, business immigration applications, appeals and Judicial Review. 

Alex studied English at the University of Cambridge and Cognitive Psychology at the Open University, before completing an MSc in Experimental Psychology at the University of Sussex in 2014. She completed her GDL at the University of Sussex in 2016, and her LPC at the University of Law in 2020, achieving a Distinction. Alex previously worked at Turpin Miller LLP from 2017 to 2025, where she qualified as a solicitor in August 2020. She simultaneously completed her LLM (LPC) with the University of Law, achieving a Distinction (80%). Alex was promoted to Joint Head of the Private Immigration team before leaving to join Vanessa Ganguin Immigration Law working across all UK immigration law matters in September 2025.

She is a contributor to Lexis and serves on the Q&A panel. Alex is a co-founder of the award-winning Ukraine Advice Project UK, a non-profit initiative set up to link qualified lawyer volunteers to Ukrainians affected by the conflict seeking free legal immigration and asylum advice. To date, the pro bono project won multiple awards, signed up more than 600 lawyers and helped more than 4,000 families escaping the conflict.

Alex has a particular interest in complex nationality cases, Adult Dependent Relative applications, Judicial Review and technical procedural issues like validity and variations.

Practice Area

Panels

  • Contributing Author
  • Q&A Panel

Qualified Year

  • 2020

Membership

  • ILPA

1 Contributions by Alex Piletska

Conditions on limited permission to enter or stay in the UK: scope, imposition, breach, and updates (work, study, public funds, ATAS, eGates, reporting, police registration repeal)
PRACTICE NOTES
Conditions on limited permission to enter or stay in the UK: scope, imposition, breach, and updates (work, study, public funds, ATAS, eGates, reporting, police registration repeal)
Individuals allowed to come to, or remain in, the UK for a fixed time often find conditions imposed on their permission. Such terms may limit employment, occupation, study, or access to public funds. This Practice Note sets out the categories of conditions, the circumstances and process for attaching them to a person’s permission, and the consequences of any breach. From 1 December 2020, the Statement of Changes in Immigration Rules HC 813 amended a number of provisions in the Immigration Rules, replacing ‘leave to remain’ and ‘leave to enter’ with ‘permission to stay’ and ‘permission to enter’, respectively. This Practice Note adopts the updated Immigration Rules wording where appropriate, while noting the terms are interchangeable. What are conditions of permission? A condition on permission may curb or bar activities or the use of services in the UK. It can also require a particular action to be carried out...
Immigration
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