IELTS for working abroad
Architects seeking registration or a skilled-migration visa abroad must demonstrate professional-level English because their work involves reading technical specifications, writing client reports and planning submissions, and communicating precisely with multidisciplinary teams including engineers, contractors, and planning authorities. IELTS is widely accepted by architectural licensing bodies and immigration agencies as evidence of that ability, and performance in all four skills matters — weak writing or listening can create real professional risk on site and in design review meetings. Focus on closing gaps in whichever skill undermines your overall result, but pay particular attention to written and spoken precision, since these mirror daily architectural practice.
There's no single national figure: the body that registers Architects in Morocco (and your visa route) sets the requirement. Find your exact target on that body's official requirements 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.
Across the broader Middle East and North Africa region, requirements vary considerably between countries. Morocco, Egypt, and Jordan have their own engineers' and architects' syndicates with differing language policies; English-language IELTS results are more commonly required for immigration than for local registration, where Arabic-language competence is often the priority. Research the specific country's order of architects and its immigration authority.
Prioritise the Academic Writing module, because architects must produce clear, structured, evidence-based documents — from planning justifications to technical reports — and the Task 2 essay-writing skills you practise there directly build the formal written register that licensing bodies and visa assessors look for.
Planning to study first? See IELTS for studying in Morocco.