AHPRA OET English Requirements in 2026
The Australian Health Practitioner Regulation Agency (AHPRA) sets English language standards for the 15 National Boards covering nurses, doctors, pharmacists, dentists, physiotherapists, and other healthcare professionals. This guide covers the OET score required, AHPRA's 12-month score-combining window (more generous than the NMC's), exemption pathways, and the path to Grade B writing for internationally trained candidates.
Key takeaways
- Required score: Grade B (350) in each of the four OET sub-tests.
- Score combining: Up to two sittings within a 12-month window — twice as long as the NMC's 6-month window.
- IELTS alternative: 7.0 overall AND 7.0 in every component (stricter than NMC's 6.5 in Writing).
- Validity: 2 years from test date, applied at AHPRA application.
- Exemptions: 4 pathways. Pathway C (English-medium qualifying healthcare degree in approved country) is the most common.
AHPRA OET Score Requirements
AHPRA's English language registration standard applies across most National Boards. The score requirement below is the universal minimum; individual Boards may set additional requirements.
AHPRA's IELTS requirement (7.0 in every component) is stricter than the NMC's (6.5 in Writing).
AHPRA Score-Combining Rules
AHPRA's score-combining window is 12 months, double the NMC's six-month window. This is the single most important rule difference between the two regulators because it gives candidates considerably more flexibility to retake a single weak sub-test.
Combining requirements
- Maximum of two OET sittings combined
- Sittings must be within 12 months of each other
- Every sub-test must reach Grade B (350) across the combined results
- Sub-tests you keep from the earlier sitting must be at least Grade C+ (300)
For most candidates this means: sit OET once, identify the weak sub-test (almost always Writing), get three to five letters professionally corrected, then retake within 12 months and combine. AHPRA's longer window removes the calendar pressure that often forces NMC candidates into a hurried second sitting.
AHPRA Exemption Pathways
AHPRA recognises four exemption pathways. If any one applies, you may not need to sit OET at all.
Pathway A — Primary education in English-speaking country
Primary school, secondary school, and qualifying tertiary education completed in Australia, Canada, the Republic of Ireland, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, the United States, or South Africa, with English as the medium of instruction throughout.
Pathway B — Secondary + tertiary in English-speaking country
At least two consecutive years of secondary education plus the qualifying tertiary qualification in an approved English-speaking country, all with English as the medium of instruction.
Pathway C — English-medium qualifying tertiary qualification
Qualifying healthcare qualification (e.g. nursing degree, medical degree) completed in an approved English-speaking country with English as the medium of instruction. The most common pathway for healthcare professionals trained in the UK, Australia, NZ, Canada, US, or Ireland.
Pathway D — Recent English-medium clinical practice
Substantial recent practice (typically two years) in a majority-English-speaking country immediately preceding application. Reviewed case-by-case by the relevant National Board.
Related Guides
OET for Australian Nurses
Profession-specific guidance for AHPRA-registered nurses.
How to Get Grade B in OET Writing
Six-criteria breakdown and the patterns that block Grade B for AHPRA candidates.
OET Writing Retake Guide
AHPRA's 12-month combining window in detail, with the 4–8 week recovery plan.
4 Annotated OET Letter Samples
Grade B and Grade C letters with per-criterion scoring.
OET vs IELTS Decision Guide
Includes the AHPRA-specific IELTS comparison (7.0 in every component).
How to Write an OET Letter
Live 45-minute walkthrough from case notes to Grade B letter.