IELTS, OET or TOEFL — which test does your target GCC country accept, and how do you pass it? Everything you need in one place.
Before you book your exam, confirm what your target licensing authority officially recognises. Requirements can change — always verify directly with the authority.
| Country / Authority | Accepted Tests | Minimum Score | Exemptions |
|---|---|---|---|
|
UAE |
IELTS Academic OET TOEFL iBT |
IELTS overall 6.5 (no band below 6.0) OET Grade B in all four subtests TOEFL iBT minimum 79 |
Native speakers exempt (UK, USA, Canada, AUS, NZ, Ireland) |
|
UAE |
IELTS Academic OET |
IELTS overall 7.0 (no band below 6.5) OET Grade B in all four subtests |
Native speakers exempt |
|
Saudi Arabia |
IELTS Academic OET |
IELTS overall 6.0 OET Grade B |
Native speakers + some English-medium graduates |
|
Qatar |
IELTS Academic OET |
IELTS overall 6.0 (no individual band below 5.5) OET Grade B |
Native speakers exempt |
|
Kuwait |
IELTS Academic | IELTS overall 6.0 | Verify with MOH directly |
|
Bahrain |
IELTS Academic OET |
IELTS overall 6.0 OET Grade B |
Native speakers |
|
Oman |
IELTS Academic | IELTS overall 6.5 | Verify with OMSB directly |
The International English Language Testing System is the most widely accepted English test across all GCC countries. Here is everything you need to know.
There are two versions of IELTS: IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training. Nurses applying to GCC licensing authorities must take IELTS Academic — General Training is NOT accepted.
IELTS Academic is designed for those entering undergraduate or postgraduate academic study, and for professional registration purposes (including nursing and healthcare). The reading and writing tasks are more complex than General Training and are focused on academic and professional subject matter.
IELTS General Training is for secondary education, work experience, or migration purposes — it is not suitable for healthcare professional registration.
IELTS is scored on a band scale from 0 to 9, in half-band increments. Each component (Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking) receives a band score, and the average gives your Overall Band Score.
For nurses, a realistic target is Band 7.0 overall — this covers you for the strictest authority (HAAD/DOH Abu Dhabi) and gives you headroom on individual band minimums.
Total test time: Approximately 2 hours 45 minutes (Listening 40 min, Reading 60 min, Writing 60 min, Speaking 11–14 min — usually on a different day for paper-based tests).
IELTS is available in two formats: paper-based and computer-delivered. Results for computer-delivered IELTS are typically available within 3–5 days; paper-based results take 13 days.
Test dates are available most months. Check ielts.org or idp.com for availability near you.
IELTS can be registered through three official channels:
The test fee varies by country:
If you need to resit a specific component, IELTS One Skill Retake allows you to retake a single section within 60 days of your original test date, at a reduced cost.
If you do not achieve the required score, you can retake IELTS as many times as you wish. There is no waiting period. However, a strategic approach significantly increases your chances of improvement.
Your Test Report Form shows band scores for each component. Identify which band(s) are dragging down your overall score. Focus 70% of your preparation time on your weakest component.
If only one component is below the required threshold and you sat the test within the last 60 days, you may be eligible to retake just that one skill. Check eligibility at ielts.org.
The Occupational English Test is specifically designed for healthcare professionals. For many nurses, the familiar clinical context makes OET a more natural choice than IELTS.
OET (Occupational English Test) is an English language test specifically designed for healthcare professionals — doctors, nurses, pharmacists, physiotherapists and more. Unlike IELTS, which is generic academic English, every component of OET uses healthcare scenarios.
For nurses who have clinical experience and are comfortable with nursing terminology, OET can feel more intuitive than IELTS because the language and topics are familiar from daily practice.
OET is graded from A (highest) to E (lowest). Most GCC authorities require a minimum of Grade B in all four subtests.
Importantly, OET Grade B is the overall minimum — you must achieve Grade B in each subtest individually, not just as an average. If your Writing is Grade C+ but other sections are A and B, most authorities will not accept the result.
OET is significantly more expensive than IELTS:
How to register: Visit occupationalenglishtest.org — select Nursing as your profession, choose your test format and date, and pay the fee online.
OET@Home is now the most popular format for nurses outside major cities — no travel required, available globally, same validity as test centre.
This is the most common question nurses ask — and the honest answer is: it depends on the individual.
Experienced ward nurses with good written English often find OET Writing easier because patient letter writing is a familiar task. Less experienced nurses or new graduates often find IELTS more straightforward because of the abundance of free study materials and the well-documented format.
If budget allows, try a practice test for both (official practice materials are available for both) and choose based on your diagnostic results.
TOEFL and PTE are accepted by some GCC authorities and offer advantages including faster results and fully digital testing.
Accepted by: UAE (DHA) — minimum score 79+. Some other authorities may accept with prior approval — verify directly.
Format: 4 sections — Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing. Fully internet-based. Duration approximately 3 hours.
Score scale: 0–120. DHA minimum is 79. For context, 79 roughly equates to B2 level (upper intermediate).
Cost: Approximately USD 200–280 depending on country.
Results: Available within 6 days. Scores sent directly to institutions via ETS.
Note: TOEFL is widely accepted for university admissions globally but has limited acceptance for nursing registration specifically in GCC. Do not assume your authority accepts TOEFL without verifying.
Increasingly accepted — always verify with your specific GCC authority before booking.
Format: Fully computer-based and AI-scored. 4 sections — Speaking & Writing (combined), Reading, Listening. Duration approximately 2 hours.
Score scale: 10–90. A score of 65 broadly equates to IELTS 7.0.
Cost: Approximately USD 200–210.
Results: Typically available within 5 business days — the fastest of all major English tests.
Advantages: AI scoring means no examiner subjectivity in Speaking. Flexible test dates (available most days at test centres globally).
Approximate equivalencies — use for guidance only. Official equivalencies may differ by authority.
| CEFR Level | IELTS Band | OET Grade | TOEFL iBT | PTE Academic | Nursing Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C2 | 8.5–9.0 | A | 114–120 | 84–90 | Expert / Near-native |
| C1 | 7.0–8.0 | B | 95–113 | 72–83 | HAAD minimum / most GCC preferred |
| B2+ | 6.5 | B (low) | 87–94 | 65–71 | DHA / Oman minimum |
| B2 | 6.0 | C+ | 72–86 | 58–64 | KSA / Qatar / Kuwait / Bahrain minimum |
| B1+ | 5.5 | C | 60–71 | 50–57 | Below most GCC minimum requirements |
Certain nurses may be exempt from the English language test requirement. Exemptions must always be officially documented and submitted to the relevant authority.
Nurses holding a passport from the following countries are generally considered native English speakers and may be exempt:
Exemption is based on passport nationality — you must hold a passport from the qualifying country.
Some authorities may exempt nurses who completed their entire nursing education in English. This typically requires:
This exemption is NOT automatic. You must apply for it and provide documentation. Not all GCC authorities accept this route — verify case by case.
Each authority applies its own exemption policy:
If you are claiming an exemption, you will typically need to submit:
A structured week-by-week plan to take you from diagnostic test to exam day. Adaptable for IELTS or OET. Assumes 1–2 hours of study per day.
Sit a complete practice IELTS Academic or OET test under timed, exam conditions. Use official practice tests — Cambridge IELTS Book 1–18 (IELTS) or the official OET Practice Test from oet.io. Score each section honestly.
Map your scores to the band/grade you need. The sections where you fall most short get 60–70% of your study time. Make a simple table: Section / Current Score / Target Score / Gap.
Collect your study resources before Week 3 so you do not waste study time searching. Free resources: IELTS.org (free sample tests), British Council LearnEnglish app, E2Language YouTube (free). Paid: Cambridge IELTS practice books 15–18 (most recent).
Block out 60–90 minutes minimum per day. Early morning before a shift or late evening are popular for nurses. Consistency beats marathon sessions — 90 minutes daily is more effective than 6 hours on a day off.
Focus on common grammar points that affect scores: tense consistency (IELTS Writing Task 1 uses present and past tenses depending on chart type), conditionals, relative clauses, passive voice (very important for scientific/clinical writing).
Learn the Academic Word List (AWL) — 570 word families common in academic texts. For OET, build nursing vocabulary: clinical terms, drug names, body systems, procedures, patient-facing language. Use Anki flashcards — 20 new words per day.
British Council Grammar Reference (free online). Oxford Learner's Dictionary (free). IELTS Liz website — grammar notes and vocabulary lists (free). Anki app (free).
Read one academic or medical article per day. Sources: BBC Health, The Lancet (abstracts), New England Journal of Medicine (abstracts), Nursing Standard. Do not just read — time yourself and summarise the main points in 2–3 sentences.
Practise skimming (reading fast for general meaning) and scanning (searching for specific information). Set a timer for 3 minutes and identify the main idea and 3 supporting points of a 600-word passage.
This question type trips up many nurses. Drill the distinction: True = confirmed in text; False = contradicted in text; Not Given = cannot be determined from text. The text is the only reference — do not use outside knowledge.
IELTS.org free reading samples. British Council Reading Practice. NHS website (read clinical guidelines in English). Medscape Nursing news articles (free).
Listen to English every day: BBC World Service, BBC Health, TED Talks (health/science), Nursing Standard podcast, The Lancet Voice. Do active listening — take notes of key points, not passive background listening.
Do one full Listening test per week under exam conditions. After, analyse every error: Was it a spelling mistake? Did I miss it because of distractor language? Did I write the wrong word form?
For OET: practise note-taking from nurse–patient consultation recordings. Use official OET practice recordings. Focus on capturing key clinical information: symptoms, history, medication, advice given.
BBC Sounds app (free). TED.com (free). Elllo.org (graded listening exercises, free). YouTube: IELTS Liz Listening tips (free).
For IELTS: alternate Task 1 (graph/chart description) and Task 2 (essay) tasks each day. For OET: write one referral letter per day using practice case notes. After each piece, self-assess against the official marking criteria before looking at model answers.
Submit your writing for feedback: use a private tutor, the E2Language marking service, or AI writing tools (Grammarly for grammar, ChatGPT for structure feedback). Human examiner feedback is the gold standard but even structured self-feedback helps.
Collect and memorise useful linking phrases, discourse markers, and transition sentences. Examples: "Despite this, ...", "A notable feature is...", "In contrast, the data indicates...", "The patient was advised to...". Using varied, accurate vocabulary improves Lexical Resource scores.
IELTS Liz Writing tips (free). IELTS Simon (free). OET official model answers (free on oet.io). Grammarly free version for grammar checks.
Pair with another nurse who is also preparing. Take turns interviewing each other for IELTS Part 1 and Part 3 questions. For OET, roleplay nurse–patient scenarios using official roleplay cards.
Record every practice session on your phone. Play back and assess: Are you speaking in full sentences? Are there long pauses or filler words ("um", "ah", "like")? Is your response relevant? Are you extending answers?
Book a paid mock speaking test with a certified IELTS examiner or OET speaking assessor. This is the single most valuable investment for the Speaking component — examiner feedback on your specific patterns is invaluable.
Sit complete tests timed exactly as the real exam: no phone, no breaks beyond the allowed time, same start time as your real test. This builds stamina and removes the surprise of time pressure.
Week 12 is consolidation, not new learning. Review your phrase bank, your common error patterns from writing feedback, and the question type strategies you have practised.
Confirm test centre location and travel plan. Prepare valid ID (passport). For computer tests: test your equipment. Plan your meals and sleep schedule for the day before and day of the test. Avoid last-minute cramming the night before.
Test anxiety is real. Remind yourself that you have prepared systematically. The exam is just a performance of skills you have already practised. Breathe slowly before each section. Move forward without dwelling on perceived mistakes during the test.
Curated resources ranked by usefulness. Start with the free ones — they are often just as good as paid options.
The official IELTS website. Free sample test questions, listening audio files, writing task prompts, and the official band score descriptors. Start here before anywhere else.
Comprehensive grammar, vocabulary, reading and listening exercises. The LearnEnglish app is particularly useful for mobile study during commutes or between shifts.
The single best IELTS preparation resource. Published by Cambridge University Press — contains authentic past papers with answer keys and audio CDs. Buy the most recent editions (higher numbers = more recent). Approximately USD 25–30 each.
Official OET preparation materials including full practice tests, scored writing samples, and the official preparation guide. If you are sitting OET, this is non-negotiable. Subscription-based and per-test options available.
Video-based online course with practise questions, essay feedback, and a score predictor. Good for structured learners who prefer video lessons over books. Monthly subscription around USD 19–39.
Extensive YouTube channel with free IELTS and OET tutorials, model answers, and live practice sessions. OET Nursing-specific content is particularly strong. The paid courses offer examiner feedback. Start with the free YouTube content.
One of the most comprehensive free IELTS resources online. Detailed tips for every question type, model answers for Writing Tasks 1 and 2, speaking practice questions, and vocabulary lessons. ieltsliz.com
Search for "OET nursing vocabulary list" and "medical English for nurses" — multiple free downloadable PDFs exist. Focus on: body systems, common conditions, procedures, medications, patient communication phrases, and clinical documentation terms.
Grammar and spelling checker for your writing practice. The free version catches most common errors. Use it to proofread your practice essays and letters. Paid version adds clarity and vocabulary suggestions. Useful as a second check — do not rely on it as your primary feedback tool.
Spaced repetition vocabulary flashcard app. Download the free app and either create your own cards or download existing IELTS vocabulary and medical English decks. 20–30 minutes per day of flashcard review builds vocabulary faster than any other method. ankiweb.net
Key channels: E2Language (IELTS + OET), IELTS Liz, IELTS Ryan, Swoosh English (OET specific), NurseHood (nursing English). Search "OET nursing speaking roleplay" for free scenario practice.
British Council offers IELTS preparation courses in many cities (including Manila, Mumbai, Dubai, Riyadh). Face-to-face or online. Expensive (USD 200–500+) but includes structured tuition and practice tests. Useful if self-study has stalled and you need structured guidance.
Each of these mistakes can cause months of delays or force you to resit the exam. Read carefully and avoid them.
This is the single most common and most devastating mistake. IELTS General Training is never accepted for nursing registration in GCC. Always confirm your booking shows "IELTS Academic" before paying. Your Test Report Form will state the test type — General Training results will be rejected by all GCC authorities.
TOEFL is only accepted by DHA (Dubai) in the GCC — it is NOT accepted by HAAD, SCHS, QCHP, or Oman OMSB. PTE acceptance is limited. Before booking any test, confirm acceptance with your specific authority. Do not assume — verify in writing.
IELTS and OET results are valid for only 2 years from the test date. If your application is still being processed when results expire, most authorities will require you to resit. Plan your exam timing to align with your application timeline — do not take the test too early.
Writing is the hardest section for most non-native English speakers and the most common reason for failing to reach the required band. Nurses often rely on speaking skills in clinical practice but have had little feedback on their formal written English. Allocate the most study time to Writing, not Listening.
Studying speaking by watching YouTube videos is not the same as practising speaking. The IELTS and OET speaking exams require you to produce English under real-time conversational pressure. Find a study partner and practise speaking every day for at least 3–4 weeks before your test.
Some nurses take the test early (e.g., before finishing their degree) and then apply for GCC registration 2–3 years later. By that time, results have expired and a new test is required. Always check the expiry date on your Test Report Form before starting a new application.
A common scenario: a nurse registers for an exam 2 weeks away because a job offer has come through. Without adequate preparation, the result is usually disappointing. A minimum of 8 weeks of dedicated preparation is recommended for most nurses, and 12+ weeks if your current level is significantly below the target.
Some nurses use old IELTS preparation books from 10+ years ago (pre-2015), which feature test formats that have since changed. Always use recent editions: Cambridge IELTS Books 15, 16, 17, and 18 are the most current. For OET, use materials from 2019 onwards as the test format changed significantly in 2018.
Specific, actionable strategies for each of the four language skills. Apply the strategies relevant to your weakest components.
Passing the exam is step one. Getting your results correctly submitted to the relevant licensing authority is equally critical. Here is how to do it right.
Both Dubai Health Authority and Department of Health Abu Dhabi accept official IELTS Test Report Forms and OET Score Reports. You must upload the document through the DHA Connect or HAAD Sheryan online portal. Ensure you upload a high-quality scan of the original Test Report Form — screenshots are not accepted.
For OET, you can grant direct score access to DHA and DOH from your OET candidate portal, which is recommended over manual submission.
The Saudi Commission for Health Specialties requires IELTS or OET results to be submitted via the Mumaris+ portal. Upload a clear copy of your Test Report Form. SCHS may request direct verification from the testing body — ensure your test is registered in your full legal name exactly as it appears on your passport.
Qatar Council for Healthcare Practitioners and Oman Medical Specialty Board both require test results as part of the primary source verification package. Results must be submitted before or alongside your application. For QCHP, upload via the Qatar Prometric online portal. For OMSB, submit via the official OMSB application system.
Yes, you can submit the same test results to multiple GCC authorities at the same time — there is no exclusivity requirement. This is a common strategy for nurses applying to two or three countries simultaneously. Order extra copies of your Test Report Form (IELTS allows multiple copies) or use the direct score send feature available with IELTS and OET.
For IELTS: IELTS allows you to send Test Report Forms directly to institutions via their official system (Additional TRF service). Most GCC authorities also accept self-uploaded copies — check the specific portal instructions. For OET: you can grant electronic access to your results directly from your OET candidate profile, which is more secure and generally preferred.
If your application is still under review when your test results expire (2 years after the test date), most authorities will require you to resit. Some authorities (like DHA) may accept in-process exceptions on a case-by-case basis if the application was submitted before expiry. Contact the authority directly and request an extension in writing before expiry — do not wait until after the expiry date to act.
The name on your Test Report Form must exactly match the name on your passport and all other application documents. If you have a middle name on your passport but omitted it when registering for IELTS, the authority may reject or flag your application. If you spot a discrepancy, contact the test provider (British Council/IDP/OET) immediately to request a correction — this takes time, so address it early.
Keep the original Test Report Form in a safe place. Scan it at high resolution (300 dpi minimum) and store the digital copy in at least two places (cloud storage + email). Test providers charge a fee for replacement certificates — having good digital copies avoids needing to order replacements. For GCC applications processed over 1–2 years, you may need to submit to multiple portals multiple times as processes update.
The questions nurses ask most often about English tests for GCC registration — answered honestly.
Yes — there is nothing stopping you from sitting both IELTS and OET and submitting whichever result meets the required standard. Many nurses do exactly this, especially if they are unsure which test suits them better or if they have already sat one test and received a borderline result.
However, consider the cost: IELTS is approximately USD 200–250 and OET is approximately USD 587. Sitting both is a significant financial commitment. A smarter strategy is to take a diagnostic practice test for both and choose the one where your practice scores are closest to the required standard before committing to the exam fee.
Yes. The standard position of all GCC licensing authorities is that IELTS results are valid for 2 years from the date of the test. This applies to IELTS, OET, TOEFL, and PTE results equally.
The 2-year rule is stated in the IELTS Test Report Form itself. After 2 years, the result is considered expired and will not be accepted by healthcare registration authorities. The only exception is if your application is already formally in process and you contact the authority before the expiry date — even then, exceptions are rare and not guaranteed.
Plan your test timing carefully: if you expect your GCC application to take 12–18 months to complete, take the test no more than 6 months before you plan to submit the application.
It depends on the authority and their specific minimum individual band requirements:
The safest target is no individual band below 6.5 and an overall of 7.0. This covers you for every GCC authority.
The "OET is easier" perception comes from the healthcare-specific content — nurses feel more confident reading about ward procedures than about glaciers or economic theory. However, the grade required (B) is equivalent to IELTS 7.0, which is actually a higher standard than the IELTS 6.0–6.5 minimum required by most GCC authorities.
Put differently: OET B = IELTS 7.0 equivalent. If the authority requires IELTS 6.0, you theoretically need a higher English standard to pass OET at Grade B. So OET may feel more natural but is not a "lower bar".
The practical experience of nurses who have sat both tests suggests that OET Writing (referral letters) and OET Speaking (roleplays) are more accessible for experienced clinical nurses, while IELTS Reading and Listening are more straightforward for those with strong general academic English. The best test for you is the one where your practice results are strongest.
No. A 3-year-old IELTS result has expired. IELTS is valid for only 2 years from the test date. All GCC healthcare licensing authorities follow this rule.
You must resit the test. There is no appeal process or exemption for expired results — the rule is applied universally regardless of when you originally passed or what score you achieved.
If you are planning a GCC application and have an IELTS result approaching 2 years, act immediately. Either submit your application before expiry or book a new test.
Filipino nurses are typically educated in English (most Philippine nursing programmes are conducted in English) and have strong general English proficiency. Based on the experience of thousands of Filipino nurses who have applied to GCC, the most common advice from licensed recruiters is:
The majority of Filipino GCC nurses sit IELTS — not because it is easier, but because it is cheaper, more accessible, and the minimum required scores (6.0–6.5) are achievable with moderate preparation for educated Filipino nurses.
This is not a universal practice, but some GCC hospitals and health systems do conduct their own English language assessment as part of the onboarding or orientation process. This is separate from the licensing authority's requirement.
Specifically:
These are not formal re-tests equivalent to IELTS/OET — they are HR or clinical team assessments. However, if you passed your IELTS with hard preparation and your day-to-day English is significantly weaker, you may struggle during clinical orientation. Maintaining your English standard after passing the exam is important.
Yes — IELTS Academic is accepted by all GCC licensing authorities as of 2026. It is the one test you can use regardless of which GCC country you are applying to, making it the safest choice if you are keeping your options open.
OET is also widely accepted (UAE, KSA, Qatar, Bahrain) but Kuwait's MOH and Oman's OMSB have historically had more limited OET acceptance — verify with them directly before choosing OET as your primary test for those countries.
TOEFL and PTE are only accepted by select authorities and should only be used after confirming acceptance with your specific target authority. Do not assume wider acceptance than has been confirmed.