IELTS for studying abroad
Biotechnology programmes with a health and medicine focus are academically rigorous and language-intensive: you will read dense research literature, write lab reports and literature reviews, and discuss complex scientific concepts in seminars and clinical settings. IELTS Academic is almost universally required for admission because it tests the exact reading and writing skills you will use daily in a biotech degree. Beyond admission, your student visa authority will also set a minimum, so strong performance across all four skills — not just an overall score — is essential.
A commonly cited requirement is commonly 6.0–7.0 overall, set by each university (often 6.5 for undergraduate, 7.0 for graduate), set by US universities.
IELTS requirements change and vary by route, employer, and institution — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it.
US universities generally accept IELTS Academic but may also accept TOEFL, so confirm IELTS is listed as an accepted test; Canadian universities and colleges widely accept IELTS and it is recognised by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada for study permits. Health and biomedical science programmes at research-intensive Canadian universities often set stricter per-skill floors, and US visa (F-1) English requirements are typically set by the institution rather than federal government, meaning you must check school by school.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because Biotechnology programmes demand precise, evidence-based scientific writing from day one, and the Task 1 data-description and Task 2 argumentation skills map directly onto lab reports, research proposals, and essay-based assessments you will face throughout your degree.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in United States.