Do UK Doctors Need an English Test for Australian Registration?
No. UK medical graduates are exempt from the English language proficiency requirement for AHPRA registration. You do not need OET or IELTS if you completed your primary medical degree at a UK medical school.
Why the exemption exists
The Medical Board of Australia requires all internationally trained doctors to demonstrate English language proficiency before granting registration — unless they trained in an approved English-speaking country. The approved countries list includes the United Kingdom, Ireland, the United States, Canada, and New Zealand.
The exemption is based on where you completed your primary medical qualification (your MBChB, MBBS, or equivalent), not on your nationality or citizenship. A UK national who completed their primary degree overseas would not automatically qualify for the exemption — they would need OET or IELTS results.
What counts as evidence
If you qualify for the exemption, you do not need to submit any language test results. Your GMC registration certificate and primary medical qualification documents serve as sufficient evidence that your training was conducted in English.
The tests required if you are not exempt
For doctors who do not qualify for the exemption, the MBA accepts two tests:
| Test | Minimum scores |
|---|---|
| OET (Occupational English Test) | Grade B in all four components (Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking) |
| IELTS Academic | Overall 7.0 with no individual band below 7.0 |
Test results must be no more than two years old at the time of application. OET is generally preferred by healthcare professionals because it uses medical consultation scenarios rather than general academic content.
One scenario that catches UK doctors out
The exemption applies to your primary medical degree — not to postgraduate qualifications. If you completed your MBBS at a UK medical school but later completed a specialist qualification overseas, AHPRA assesses the primary degree for language purposes. In practice, UK-trained GPs with MRCGP have no issues.
However: if you studied medicine outside the UK and subsequently obtained GMC registration, your GMC registration alone does not guarantee the language exemption. AHPRA looks at where and in what language your primary medical degree was completed, not solely at your current registration status.
Practical implication for your application
When preparing your AHPRA application, UK graduates simply include their primary degree certificate (certified copy) and GMC Certificate of Good Standing. No language test booking, no waiting for results, and no additional fee. This is one of the administrative advantages of the Competent Authority pathway that UK GPs moving to Australia often underestimate.
See also: How long does the CA pathway take? · Is MRCGP recognised in Australia?
Source: MBA — English Language Skills Registration Standard