IELTS for studying abroad
English Literature is a discipline where language is the primary medium of study and assessment — you will read dense literary texts, write analytical essays, and engage in seminar discussions from day one. IELTS is especially significant here because admissions teams scrutinise writing and reading sub-scores closely, knowing that literary analysis demands precision, nuance, and a wide vocabulary. Focusing on academic reading strategies and essay-writing coherence will serve both your IELTS preparation and your actual degree work.
A commonly cited requirement is typically 6.0 overall for undergraduate and 6.5 for postgraduate, set by New Zealand 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.
Australian and New Zealand universities are common destinations for English Literature study, and both countries set student visa English-proficiency requirements through their respective immigration departments — these are separate from and sometimes different to what the university's own admissions page states. Both markets also recognise IELTS Academic widely, making it a practical choice, but always cross-check the Department of Home Affairs (Australia) or Immigration New Zealand requirements directly.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because English Literature programmes assess you almost entirely through extended essays and close-reading responses, and the skill of constructing a well-argued, cohesive written argument directly transfers from IELTS Task 2 practice to your university coursework.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in New Zealand.