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IELTS for working abroad

IELTS for Chefs in Niger (2026)

For a Chef pursuing work abroad through skilled migration or professional registration, IELTS serves as proof that you can communicate safely and effectively in a professional kitchen environment — taking instructions from head chefs, coordinating with front-of-house staff, reading supplier documents, and following health and safety protocols in English. Many skilled-worker visa streams and hospitality licensing bodies list IELTS as an accepted English-language evidence. Your focus should be on practical, everyday English rather than academic language, so the General Training pathway is typically the right choice — but always confirm with the specific visa program or licensing authority.

What score do you need?

There's no single national figure: the body that registers Chefs in Niger (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.

Targeting Sub-Saharan Africa

South Africa, Nigeria, Kenya, and other emerging hospitality markets attract international Chefs but typically do not mandate IELTS at a government level for work permits; requirements are more often set by luxury hotel brands operating under international management standards. Chefs originating from Africa and targeting English-speaking destination countries abroad must meet those destination countries' IELTS requirements.

How AlmiPrep helps you get there

Speaking — because kitchen work is overwhelmingly verbal, and demonstrating clear, confident communication of instructions, ingredient descriptions, and workplace interactions directly mirrors what assessors and employers expect of you.

Frequently asked questions

Should I take IELTS Academic or IELTS General Training as a Chef?
For most skilled-trade and skilled-worker visa routes, IELTS General Training is the required or preferred module since it tests practical English relevant to workplace and everyday settings. However, some employer-sponsored routes or nursing/care-adjacent roles attached to hospitality may specify Academic. Always check the exact requirements on the official immigration authority or licensing body website for the country you are targeting before booking your test.
What band score do I actually need to work as a Chef abroad?
There is no single universal score — requirements vary by country, visa stream, and sometimes by the individual employer or licensing body. For example, a skilled-worker visa in one country may set a different threshold than a restaurant group's internal HR policy in another. To find the exact figure, go directly to the official immigration authority website (e.g., IRCC for Canada, Home Office for the UK, DIBP/Department of Home Affairs for Australia) or the relevant culinary or trades licensing body, and look up the specific visa subclass or occupation code that applies to Chefs.
Which parts of the IELTS test are most important for a Chef's daily work life?
Listening and Speaking reflect the most immediate daily reality — understanding rapid verbal instructions, kitchen terminology called out under pressure, and communicating clearly with multicultural teams. Reading matters for menus, supplier invoices, food-safety compliance documents, and employment contracts. Writing is less central to daily kitchen work but is tested and relevant for tasks like writing incident reports or communicating with management via email. Neglecting any section can lower your overall or component score, so balanced preparation remains important.
I already have several years of professional kitchen experience. Does that reduce how much English I need to prove?
Professional experience strengthens your visa application in terms of skills points or employer sponsorship eligibility, but it does not replace the English-language requirement. Immigration authorities and licensing bodies require a standardised test score as objective evidence of language ability regardless of work history. Your kitchen experience is, however, genuinely useful for IELTS Speaking and Writing practice because you can draw on real scenarios — describing dishes, explaining processes, discussing health and safety — to build authentic, fluent responses.
How long should I plan to prepare before sitting the IELTS test?
Preparation time depends heavily on your current English level. A chef who uses English regularly in a multicultural workplace may need only a few weeks of targeted test-technique practice, while someone whose English is mostly passive or limited to one register may benefit from two to four months of structured study. AlmiPrep's mock tests can give you a realistic baseline quickly so you can make an informed decision about timeline rather than guessing.

Other Skilled Trades roles in Niger

Chef — IELTS in nearby countries

Planning to study first? See IELTS for studying in Niger.