GPhC OET English Requirements in 2026
The General Pharmaceutical Council (GPhC) regulates pharmacists in Great Britain. This guide covers the exact OET score required, IELTS alternative, score combining rules, and why Writing is the bottleneck sub-test for internationally trained pharmacists.
Key takeaways
- Required score: Grade B (350) in each of the four OET sub-tests.
- Score combining: Allowed across two sittings within a 6-month window.
- IELTS alternative: 7.0 overall with at least 7.0 in each component (stricter than HCPC).
- Validity: 2 years from test date.
- Bottleneck sub-test: Writing — the structural pharmacy-letter inversion catches most candidates.
The Required Scores at a Glance
The GPhC publishes its English language requirements on its official website.
Why Writing Is the Bottleneck for Pharmacists
In over 11,000 letters I have personally marked as lead corrector at WCS, the pharmacy-specific failure mode is consistent: candidates open the letter with the medication list (drug, dose, frequency, indication) before naming why they are writing. The OET Purpose criterion expects the recommendation — adjust dose, switch drug, counsel patient — to come first, with the medication detail as supporting evidence.
Medication-first inversion
Pharmacy education trains medication-first reporting. OET expects action-first reporting. The structural fix is small — flip the opening sentence — but reliably moves Purpose from a 1 to a 2.
Register vs reader
Pharmacy candidates also lose marks writing to patients in prescriber register. Matching register to reader — clinical for prescribers, plain language with drug-name pairing for patients — is the second-highest yield fix.
The most efficient GPhC pathway
- 1. Sit OET once aiming for Grade B in all four sub-tests.
- 2. If Writing falls short — get three pharmacy letters professionally corrected.
- 3. Sit OET again within six months. Retake Writing only. Combine scores.
- 4. Submit to GPhC within two years of your earlier sitting.
Related Guides
OET for Pharmacists
Profession-specific guidance for internationally trained pharmacists.
Pharmacist Purpose Mistakes
The medication-first inversion fix that moves Purpose from 1 to 2.
Pharmacist Content Selection
Choosing what pharmacy readers actually need from the case notes.
Pharmacist Conciseness
Where pharmacy letters get wordy and how to trim without losing meaning.
Pharmacist Advice Letters
Common errors in patient-facing pharmacy advice letters.
How to Reach Grade B
The score-improvement guide most GPhC candidates need before retaking Writing.