OET preparation guides
Written from the official criteria — the same knowledge OEZ’s marking engine uses.
Understand the exam
- How OET Speaking is actually marked — all nine criteria, and what band 6 sounds like
- A role-play, walked through — an original card played minute by minute
- OET Writing is a selection test — select, don't copy, and the word budget that works
Practise the exam
- OET Speaking practice — role-plays with an AI patient, marked on the official criteria
- OET Writing practice — timed letters checked fact by fact
The technology
- The AI behind OEZ — how we built an examiner, not a chatbot
- AI role-play English practice — why role-play is the practice that transfers
Where OET takes you
- Where OET is accepted — the verified country-by-country table
- OET for the US Match — the ECFMG Pathways requirement for IMGs
- OET for UK nurses — NMC scores, the Writing C+ rule and clubbing
- OET for UK doctors — the GMC requirement before PLAB
- OET for Australia — Ahpra rules and the April 2026 change
- OET for US nurses — VisaScreen, state boards and the Speaking bar
- OET for Canada — province-by-province acceptance
- OET vs IELTS — the honest comparison
Your profession
OET for doctorsOET for nursesOET for dentistsOET for dietitiansOET for occupational therapistsOET for optometristsOET for pharmacistsOET for physiotherapistsOET for podiatristsOET for radiographersOET for speech pathologistsOET for veterinarians
Practise this on OEZ — start free
Full speaking role-plays with an AI patient, timed writing tasks, and marking modelled on OET’s published criteria. No card needed.