OET Exam Fees & Eligibility: What You Need to Know
Learn about OET examination fees, who is eligible to take the OET, registration requirements, and what healthcare professionals need to know before booking t...
The Occupational English Test (OET) is a healthcare-specific English language assessment recognized by regulators, employers, and immigration authorities in multiple countries. Before you register and pay, understanding who can take the OET, what it costs, and what the process involves saves you time and unexpected surprises.
Unlike general English tests, the OET is designed specifically for healthcare professionals — doctors, nurses, dentists, pharmacists, physiotherapists, and more. Its scenarios, language, and assessment criteria reflect the actual communication demands of clinical and professional healthcare settings. That specificity is why it's accepted by bodies like AHPRA in Australia, the NMC in the UK, and immigration authorities in Canada and New Zealand as evidence of English proficiency for healthcare workers.
OET Exam Fees
The OET examination fee varies by country and testing format. As of recent published rates, the standard fee is approximately AUD $587 (Australian dollars) for the computer-based OET, though fees in other countries are set in local currencies and may differ. Some countries price the exam in USD, EUR, GBP, or local currency equivalents.
The OET fee covers all four sub-tests: Listening, Reading, Writing, and Speaking. There's no option to register for individual sub-tests only — you must register for the full OET.
Additional costs to be aware of:
- Re-registration fee — If you need to retake after an unsuccessful attempt, you pay the full registration fee again for each sitting.
- Sub-test exemption (OET at Home) — OET offers an at-home format for some sub-tests in specific testing windows. Fees may vary from the test center format.
- Result verification fees — Some regulatory bodies charge their own fees to verify or process OET results sent to them. These are charged by the receiving organization, not by OET.
Fee information changes. Always check the OET website (occupationalenglishtest.com) directly for current pricing in your country before registering. Prices published on third-party sites, including this guide, may not reflect the latest rates.
The fee is generally non-refundable once you've registered and confirmed, though OET has rescheduling policies. If you need to reschedule, check the cancellation and rescheduling deadlines in your confirmation — missing these deadlines typically means forfeiting your fee.
OET Eligibility Requirements
The good news on eligibility: OET doesn't impose strict academic prerequisites for taking the test. In that sense, it's broadly open to healthcare professionals and those in healthcare training. However, there are some practical considerations:
Healthcare background is expected but not formally restricted. OET is designed for professionals in 12 health professions: Dentistry, Dietetics, Medicine, Nursing, Occupational Therapy, Optometry, Pharmacy, Physiotherapy, Podiatry, Radiography, Speech Pathology, and Veterinary Science. You select your profession when you register, and your Writing and Speaking sub-tests are tailored to clinical scenarios relevant to that profession.
You don't have to be a licensed practitioner to register — students and recent graduates taking OET for immigration or registration purposes can sit the exam. The test is about language proficiency in a healthcare context, not about validating your clinical credentials.
Age restriction. Candidates must be at least 18 years old to register for OET.
Identification requirements. You must present the same ID at the test center that you registered with. Acceptable ID is a valid passport. For OET at Home, passport is the accepted form of identification for identity verification.
No limit on attempts. OET doesn't restrict how many times you can take the exam. If you don't achieve the scores you need on the first attempt, you can re-register and try again. Many regulatory bodies do set their own limits on how many times they'll accept results or how recently results must have been obtained, so check those requirements too.
The Four Sub-Tests at a Glance
Understanding what the OET assesses helps you judge your readiness before registering. The exam has four components:
Listening (40 minutes) — Three parts with different audio scenarios: a healthcare consultation, short workplace interactions, and a healthcare-related presentation or lecture. Tests your ability to understand spoken healthcare English in authentic clinical contexts.
Reading (60 minutes) — Three parts with texts of increasing complexity. Includes practical reading tasks (matching, gap-fill) and longer text comprehension. Healthcare and medical texts are used throughout.
Writing (45 minutes) — You write one task: a formal letter based on case notes. The letter is written in your chosen profession's context — a nurse may write a referral letter, a doctor may write a discharge summary letter. Marked on language, communication, and appropriateness for purpose.
Speaking (approximately 20 minutes) — Two role-plays with an interlocutor, each based on a healthcare scenario in your chosen profession. Marked on linguistic criteria and communicative effectiveness.
OET results are reported as grades: A (highest), B, C+, C, D, and E. Most regulatory bodies require Grade B in all four sub-tests. Some have different requirements for different sub-tests — nursing registration bodies, for example, may set different thresholds for Reading vs. Writing.
Test Formats: Test Center vs. OET at Home
OET is available in two formats:
Computer-based test at a test center — The traditional format at an authorized Pearson VUE or OET test center. Speaking is conducted face-to-face or via audio recording at the center, depending on location.
OET at Home — An online, remotely proctored format. Requires a suitable computer, webcam, microphone, and a quiet private space. Not available in all countries or for all sub-tests. ProctorU or similar proctoring software is typically used to monitor the session.
Both formats are scored identically and produce the same OET results. The choice of format is based on availability in your location and your personal preference for test environment.
How to Register for the OET
Registration is done through the OET website. Here's the general process:
- Create an account on the OET candidate portal at occupationalenglishtest.com
- Select your profession — this determines your Writing and Speaking scenarios
- Choose your preferred format — test center or at-home (if available)
- Select a test date and location — test dates are offered multiple times per year; availability varies by location
- Pay the registration fee — payment by credit or debit card
- Receive confirmation — keep your confirmation email and check requirements for test day
Test windows open several weeks or months in advance. Popular dates fill quickly, especially in high-demand markets like Australia, the UK, and India. Register early to secure your preferred date — waiting until a few weeks before the exam risks finding your preferred test center fully booked.
Score Reporting and Validity
OET results are released online through the candidate portal approximately 16 business days after the test date for computer-based tests. Results are reported as a Statement of Results, which most regulatory bodies accept directly when sent electronically by OET.
OET results are valid for a specific period, typically 2 years from the test date, though some regulatory bodies may have different validity requirements. Check the specific requirement of the organization you're submitting results to.
Results can be sent electronically to specified healthcare organizations, regulatory bodies, and immigration authorities through the OET portal. Sending results to an organization typically requires selecting the recipient through the portal and paying any applicable fee charged by OET for the transmission (separate from the exam fee).
Preparing for OET
Given the significant cost and the importance of OET results for professional registration, thorough preparation before sitting the exam is the right investment. Most successful candidates spend several months preparing — longer if English isn't their daily working language.
Effective preparation includes: working through authentic OET practice materials, building medical vocabulary in your profession's context, practicing letter writing in the appropriate format, and doing listening practice with healthcare audio content.
The OET practice tests here and the reading and writing practice materials are designed to build the specific skills the exam tests. Working through multiple practice sets, reviewing your errors, and timing yourself under exam conditions are the core preparation activities that translate to real score improvement. The OET exam tips here can also help you develop strategies for each sub-test format.
Don't schedule your exam until you're consistently achieving your target scores in practice. The fee is non-trivial, and showing up underprepared costs both money and time waiting to retest.
- ✓Confirm your exam appointment and location
- ✓Bring required identification documents
- ✓Arrive 30 minutes early to check in
- ✓Read each question carefully before answering
- ✓Flag difficult questions and return to them later
- ✓Manage your time — don't spend too long on one question
- ✓Review flagged questions before submitting
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.