OET Writing Mistakes That Cost You a Grade B

The ten most common OET Writing mistakes that drop scores from Grade B to Grade C under the 2026 stricter scoring. Each mistake is explained with an example.

By Dr Mariam's team 7 min read
OET Writing Mistakes That Cost You a Grade B

The OET Writing sub-test has always been demanding, but the 2026 scoring rubric has made Grade B noticeably harder to reach. Candidates who would have passed comfortably a few years ago are now landing on Grade C+ or even Grade C, often because of mistakes they do not realise they are making. After marking thousands of letters across the rubric change, I see the same ten patterns again and again. This article walks through each one, with a short example, the marking reason, and a practical fix.

Why 2026 scoring is stricter

Before the mistakes, a quick note on what changed. The 2026 OET Writing rubric tightened the Purpose criterion and added more weight to clinical relevance under Content. The examiner is now expected to ask, more sharply than before, whether the letter identifies the right purpose and whether the clinical detail it includes is what the recipient actually needs. Genre and Style is also being marked more carefully for letters that drift between formal referral language and casual handover language. If your score dropped without your writing dropping, this is usually why. For a fuller breakdown, see our OET writing criteria for Grade B guide.

Mistake 1: Burying the Purpose in paragraph two

The Purpose criterion expects the reader to understand why the letter is being written and what is being requested within the first two or three sentences. Many candidates open with a long sentence about the patient’s background and only state the request in paragraph two.

Example, weak opening: “Mrs Khan is a 67-year-old patient who has been under my care for the past three weeks following a fall at home, during which she sustained a fractured neck of femur, and who has now reached the point at which she can be safely discharged into the community.”

The reader has read 45 words and still does not know what is being asked. The fix is to lead with the request and then provide the background.

Better: “I am writing to refer Mrs Khan, a 67-year-old patient recovering from a fractured neck of femur, for ongoing community physiotherapy following discharge.”

The same information, but the Purpose is now visible at sentence one.

Mistake 2: Treating every case note as equally important

The Content criterion under the 2026 rubric weighs clinical relevance heavily. Candidates often copy across detail that the recipient does not need, while leaving out detail that the recipient does need. A community pharmacist receiving a referral does not need the full history of the fall; they need the current medication, the allergies, and the dispensing schedule. A specialist receiving a referral does need the relevant history, but only the relevant history.

The fix is to ask, before you write, who is the recipient and what do they need to know. Our common mistakes guide covers this filter in more detail.

Mistake 3: Copy-paste from case notes

Lifting whole phrases from the case notes is one of the fastest ways to lose Conciseness and Clarity marks. The case notes are written in shorthand, with abbreviations and fragments. The letter must be written in full sentences, with controlled register. Copying directly produces sentences that read like dictation, not communication.

The fix is to paraphrase every line. If a case note says “pt c/o SOB on exertion x 3/52,” the letter version is “Mrs Khan has reported shortness of breath on exertion for the past three weeks.”

Mistake 4: Inconsistent register

Genre and Style marks drop when a letter shifts between formal referral language and informal handover language. Sentences like “Please could you kindly possibly arrange to see Mrs Khan if you would” sit awkwardly next to “She has been fine since.” The reader experiences this as inconsistency.

Pick a register and hold it. For most OET letters, the register is formal, professional, and measured. Our tone and register guide gives example sentences at each level.

Mistake 5: Grammar errors that change meaning

Not all grammar errors carry equal weight. An error that does not change meaning, like “Mrs Khan have been recovering well,” is a small deduction. An error that changes meaning, like “Mrs Khan was prescribed warfarin since two days,” can suggest to the examiner that the writer is not in control. Patterned errors, the same mistake repeated four or five times in the letter, also push the Language band down quickly.

The fix is targeted, not general. Identify your patterned errors and drill them. Our grammar problems guide lists the ten patterns I see most often in healthcare writers.

Mistake 6: Weak cohesion between paragraphs

Cohesion marks drop when paragraphs read like a list of facts rather than a narrative. The reader should feel pulled from one paragraph to the next. Linking phrases like “In addition,” “However,” and “Since then” do this work, but they have to be used purposefully, not sprinkled at the start of every sentence.

The fix is to plan your paragraph order before you write, and to use linking phrases only where the relationship between paragraphs needs to be signposted. Our cohesion guide has a paragraph-planning template.

Mistake 7: Forgetting the closing request

Many letters trail off into pleasantries without restating the request. The reader is left wondering exactly what is being asked. A strong closing restates the request in clear professional language and offers a contact route.

Weak: “Thank you for your time. I look forward to hearing from you soon.”

Better: “I would be grateful if you could arrange a follow-up appointment within the next two weeks. Please do not hesitate to contact me on extension 4421 if you require any further information.”

Mistake 8: Word count drift

The OET Writing word count window is approximately 180 to 200 words. Letters that creep to 250 lose Conciseness marks. Letters that come in under 160 lose Content marks. Many candidates lose track of word count under pressure and only realise at the end. Practise writing to 190 words consistently, so that 190 words feels natural rather than calculated.

Mistake 9: Using formal templates without adapting them

Memorised templates feel safe, but they are easy for an experienced marker to spot. A letter that opens “I am writing to refer the above-named patient” before naming the patient sounds like a template. A letter that opens “I am writing to refer Mrs Khan, a 67-year-old patient” sounds like communication. The fix is to use phrase banks, not full templates. Internalise the openings and closings, but always tailor the middle to the case.

Mistake 10: Submitting without rereading

The single highest-yield five minutes in the OET Writing exam is the final reread. Most candidates skip this because they have just finished writing and feel time pressure. Yet the reread is where you catch the verb tense slip, the missing article, the paragraph that drifted from the Purpose. Plan to finish writing five minutes before the end of the test. Use those minutes to read the letter back as if you were the recipient.

The pattern across all ten

The common thread across these ten mistakes is that they are all visible to the writer once they are pointed out, but invisible to the writer while they are writing. This is why human correction matters. A writer cannot easily see their own patterned errors. A trained marker can. For deeper structural coverage, see our what examiners look for in OET letters guide.

Side-by-side: a letter before and after correction

ElementGrade C+ draftGrade B revision
OpeningLong background sentence before the requestOne-sentence Purpose statement
BodyCopy-pasted case note shorthandParaphrased into full clinical sentences
RegisterFormal mixed with casualConsistently professional
Closing”Thank you, look forward to hearing”Specific request plus contact route
Word count218 words192 words

The Grade B version is not longer. It is shorter, but more precise. Precision is what the 2026 rubric rewards.

What to do next

If you are stuck at Grade C+ and aiming for Grade B, the fastest route forward is to write, get corrected by a marker, and rewrite. Most candidates need between 8 and 15 corrected letters, not just written letters, to move up a band. Our human correction at OET writing services is designed exactly for this loop. You can also start with our free Writing Checker to get a baseline reading of where your letters currently sit, then move to human correction for the targeted work that closes the gap.

The mistakes above are common because they are subtle. None of them feel like big errors while you are writing. They only become visible when somebody else reads the letter. That is the work to do.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions on this topic — full answers below.

Why did my OET Writing score drop from B to C in 2026?
The 2026 rubric tightened the Purpose criterion and increased the weight given to clinical relevance. Letters that would have scored Grade B in 2023 or 2024 now often score C+ or C because the examiner is looking more carefully at whether the writer identified and addressed the right clinical purpose.
Which writing criterion drops scores most often?
Purpose drops scores most often, followed by Conciseness and Clarity. Language is usually the second weakest area, but it tends to push scores from B to C+ rather than from B to C.
Is Grade B harder to achieve in 2026 than in 2024?
Yes. The same letter that scored Grade B two years ago may now score C+ because the examiner is required to weigh Purpose and clinical relevance more strictly. The vocabulary bar is also slightly higher for medical and nursing letters.
Can I still pass with a few small grammar slips?
Yes. Occasional minor errors will not block a Grade B if the rest of the letter is strong. What blocks Grade B is patterned errors, errors that change meaning, or errors that suggest the writer is not in control of the structure.
Should I memorise letter templates?
No. Memorised templates often hurt scores because the examiner can see that the structure is generic and the Purpose section is weak. Use phrase banks instead of full templates, and always rewrite the opening to match the specific case.
How do I know if my letter has a clear Purpose?
Read the first two sentences. If a reader who has not seen the case notes can still understand why the letter is being written and what is being requested, the Purpose is clear. If not, rewrite the opening.
How many practice letters do I need to write to reach Grade B?
Most candidates need between 8 and 15 corrected letters, not just written letters, to move from C+ to Grade B. The corrections matter more than the writing volume, because a writer cannot see their own patterned errors.

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