IELTS for studying abroad
Physics degrees abroad are lecture-heavy and assessment-driven through written lab reports, research papers, problem-set explanations, and seminar participation — all of which demand precise academic English. IELTS matters both for university admission and for the student visa application to the destination country, and requirements differ between institutions and immigration authorities. Because Physics reading involves dense technical texts and writing tasks require structured scientific argument, these two skills deserve early attention alongside the overall band target set by your chosen university.
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.
In the United States and Canada, Physics departments at research universities set their own English requirements for international undergraduate and graduate applicants, and these often include minimum sub-scores for speaking and writing in addition to an overall band. Canadian student permit applicants must also satisfy Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada's language evidence requirements, which are published separately from any university threshold.
Prioritise Academic Writing, because Physics programmes require you to construct logical, evidence-based arguments and explain complex quantitative reasoning in clear prose — exactly the skills the IELTS Academic Writing tasks test and that your future lab reports and essays will demand.
Going abroad to work instead? See IELTS for professions in United States.