IELTS for studying abroad
Interior Design programmes abroad blend studio critiques, written briefs, client presentations, and research essays — all demanding clear English across multiple skills. IELTS matters both for university admission and for the student visa application, and some institutions set separate minimum scores for individual skill bands, not just an overall score. Because the programme involves visual communication supported by written and spoken explanation, examiners will look closely at your ability to describe, justify, and discuss spatial and aesthetic ideas with precision.
Each Samoa university — often each course — sets its own IELTS minimum. Find your exact target on the course's official admissions page.
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 universities are among the most explicit globally about publishing both overall and per-skill band requirements for each programme on their websites, and Australia's student-visa stream through the Department of Home Affairs sets its own English benchmarks that run parallel to the university's, so Interior Design applicants must satisfy both; New Zealand operates a similar dual-requirement structure through Immigration New Zealand.
Academic Writing — because Interior Design students must produce concept statements, project briefs, and reflective reports, so building the ability to organise an argument, use discipline-specific vocabulary accurately, and meet word-count tasks under time pressure directly maps to what the programme demands from day one.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in Samoa.