IELTS for studying abroad
Information Technology programmes abroad are highly competitive, and universities scrutinise your IELTS result carefully because the course involves reading dense technical documentation, writing structured lab reports and project proposals, and collaborating verbally in group engineering projects. Your English proficiency directly affects your ability to follow fast-paced lectures on networking, software architecture, and cybersecurity, as well as to participate in team-based assessments. Focusing on academic vocabulary specific to technology and engineering contexts will give you a measurable advantage from day one.
A commonly cited requirement is typically 6.0–6.5 overall for undergraduate and 6.5–7.0 for postgraduate (student-visa minimum often 5.5–6.0), set by Australian universities / Dept. of Home Affairs.
IELTS requirements change and vary by route, employer, and institution — always confirm the current figure with the official body before you rely on it.
Australia and New Zealand are major IT study destinations with strong graduate employment pathways, and both countries require IELTS scores for university admission and for the student visa separately — the Department of Home Affairs in Australia and Immigration New Zealand each publish their own proficiency conditions. The skills shortage in technology fields in both countries also means that IT graduates may later need to meet language requirements for skilled migration pathways, so building a strong IELTS foundation now is strategically valuable beyond just initial admission.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because IT programmes require constant production of structured technical reports, project documentation, and research summaries — and this is the skill most IT applicants underestimate compared to their strong technical background.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in Australia.