IELTS for studying abroad
Electrical Engineering programmes at international universities are taught through technical lectures, laboratory reports, group design projects, and dense academic papers — all in English. IELTS proves you can handle this workload; admissions offices and visa authorities each set their own thresholds, so your score needs to satisfy both simultaneously. Because the reading load (datasheets, standards documents, research papers) and the writing load (lab reports, project proposals) are high, closing any gap in those two skills early will pay dividends throughout your degree.
A commonly cited requirement is typically 6.0–6.5 overall with no band below 6.0 (set per program; affects the study permit), set by Canadian universities / IRCC.
IELTS requirements change and vary by route, employer, and institution — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it.
In the United States, universities do not use a single national standard — each engineering school sets its own requirement, and the graduate (Master's/PhD) threshold is commonly higher than undergraduate. Canadian institutions (particularly in Ontario and British Columbia) are popular for Electrical Engineering and similarly vary by school; Canadian study-permit rules add an immigration-layer requirement managed by IRCC, which you must satisfy alongside the university's own benchmark.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because Electrical Engineering assessments demand precise technical writing — circuit analysis reports, design justifications, and lab write-ups — and weaknesses here directly affect both your IELTS score and your day-one academic performance.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in Canada.