All articlesImmigration

IELTS Requirements for UAE: Golden Visa, University & Employment 2026

The UAE Golden Visa does not require IELTS, but most universities and professional licensing bodies do. Here is the complete guide by profession and emirate.

31 March 2026 3 min read By BandNine Editorial

The UAE — and Dubai in particular — has transformed itself into a global hub for education, business, and talent. Whether you are pursuing a university degree, seeking professional licensing, or exploring the Golden Visa, understanding IELTS requirements in the UAE context will help you navigate the system efficiently.

#Studying in the UAE

The UAE has a rapidly growing higher education sector, with both local institutions and international branch campuses. IELTS requirements vary by institution and programme:

  • United Arab Emirates University (UAEU) — Generally requires IELTS 5.0-6.0 for undergraduate programmes and 6.0-6.5 for postgraduate programmes. Some programmes accept lower scores with conditional admission and additional English courses.
  • American University of Sharjah (AUS) — IELTS 6.0-6.5 for most undergraduate programmes, 6.5 for graduate programmes. AUS follows an American-style curriculum and places strong emphasis on English proficiency.
  • Khalifa University — IELTS 6.0 for undergraduate programmes in engineering and science, 6.5 for postgraduate programmes.
  • University of Sharjah — IELTS 5.0-5.5 for many undergraduate programmes, with a foundation year available for lower scores.
  • NYU Abu Dhabi — Does not specify a minimum IELTS score but expects applicants to demonstrate strong English proficiency. In practice, successful applicants typically score 7.0+.

#International Branch Campuses

The UAE hosts numerous international branch campuses, and their requirements typically mirror the home institution:

  • Heriot-Watt University Dubai — IELTS 6.0-6.5 depending on programme
  • University of Birmingham Dubai — IELTS 6.0-6.5
  • Middlesex University Dubai — IELTS 5.5-6.0 for most programmes

#Dubai vs Abu Dhabi: Key Differences

While the IELTS requirements themselves do not differ by emirate, the institutional landscape does. Abu Dhabi tends to host more research-intensive institutions (UAEU, Khalifa, NYU Abu Dhabi, Sorbonne University Abu Dhabi) with slightly higher requirements. Dubai has a broader range of institutions, including many private and international branch campuses with more flexible entry requirements.

#Professional Licensing

If you are a professional seeking to practise in the UAE, IELTS requirements depend on your field and the relevant regulatory authority:

  • Doctors (DHA in Dubai, HAAD/DOH in Abu Dhabi) — IELTS 7.0 overall is the standard requirement for medical professionals. The Dubai Health Authority and the Department of Health Abu Dhabi both require evidence of English proficiency for licensing.
  • Nurses — IELTS 6.0-7.0 depending on the emirate and the level of nursing. The requirement has been tightening in recent years.
  • Engineers — Requirements vary. The Society of Engineers UAE does not always mandate IELTS, but many employers require it as part of their hiring process.
  • Teachers — International schools in the UAE typically require IELTS 7.0+ or equivalent for non-native English-speaking teachers. The Knowledge and Human Development Authority (KHDA) in Dubai oversees school quality and may review teacher qualifications including language proficiency.
  • Lawyers — For those seeking to practise in DIFC Courts or ADGM, English proficiency is essential. Specific IELTS scores may be required depending on the bar or licensing body.

#The Golden Visa

The UAE Golden Visa is a long-term residence visa (5 or 10 years) available to investors, entrepreneurs, exceptional talents, scientists, and outstanding students. Here is the key distinction: the Golden Visa itself does not require an IELTS score.

However, if you are qualifying through the academic pathway (as an outstanding student or researcher), your university admission — which likely required IELTS — is part of the qualifying evidence. Similarly, professionals qualifying through their field of expertise do not need IELTS for the visa, but may need it for professional licensing.

#Employment Visas

Standard employment visas in the UAE do not require IELTS. Your employer sponsors your visa based on your job offer and qualifications. However, several practical considerations apply:

  • Free zone companies — Some free zones may request evidence of English proficiency for certain roles.
  • Government sector — Positions in UAE government entities may require demonstrated English proficiency, particularly in bilingual (Arabic-English) roles.
  • Salary and seniority — Higher-level positions in multinational companies will expect strong English skills regardless of visa requirements.

#Tips for UAE Applicants

  1. For university: aim for 6.0-6.5 — This covers the majority of programmes. If you are below 5.0, consider a foundation year.
  2. For healthcare: target 7.0 — Both DHA and DOH are strict about this, and exemptions are rare.
  3. For Golden Visa: focus on your qualifying category — IELTS is not the barrier here; your achievements and qualifications are.
  4. Take the test in the UAE if possible — The British Council and IDP operate numerous test centres across Dubai, Abu Dhabi, and Sharjah, with frequent test dates.

The UAE's approach to IELTS is practical rather than bureaucratic. Focus your preparation on the specific requirement for your pathway, and you will be well positioned.

Ready to practise? Try BandNine.ai free — AI-powered IELTS scoring in 30 seconds.

Found this useful?

B9

BandNine Editorial

Written and reviewed by the BandNine team — IELTS practitioners and language-assessment researchers building the AI examiner used by candidates in 60+ countries. Our guidance is grounded in the official public IELTS band descriptors and the actual mistakes we see in 100,000+ scored submissions.

Stop reading about IELTS. Start practising it.

Get AI-powered feedback on your writing and speaking in 30 seconds.

Keep reading

All articles →