Since 8 January 2026, the UK B2 English test requirement has applied to all new Skilled Worker, High Potential Individual and Scale-up visa applicants — replacing the old B1 standard. B2 is roughly A-Level English, two CEFR rungs above the older threshold, and the change has caught Nigerian engineers, Ghanaian nurses and Kenyan IT specialists off-guard. The pass rate on first attempts is down, but the path through is well-mapped: the right Secure English Language Test, the right prep window, and the right evidence stack still gets approvals through quickly.
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What B2 actually demands on test day
B2 on the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages (CEFR) means you can read complex texts on familiar subjects, write clear connected text on a range of topics, follow extended speech, and hold a discussion with native speakers without strain. For Skilled Worker, HPI and Scale-up routes, the Home Office accepts only Secure English Language Tests (SELT) from approved providers: IELTS for UKVI (Academic or General Training), Pearson PTE Academic UKVI, LanguageCert, PSI Services and Trinity College London ISE. All four skills — listening, reading, writing, speaking — must reach B2 minimum: that means IELTS 5.5 across the board, PTE 59 across the board, LanguageCert SELT B2.
The single most common failure pattern Africans report is one component coming in at 5.0 while the other three are 6.0+. Writing and listening are the usual weak points; targeted prep on these two skills lifts most candidates over the line on the second attempt.
Where to book the test in Africa
IELTS for UKVI is available at official test centres in Lagos, Abuja, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala, Dar es Salaam, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Algiers, Cairo, Casablanca and Dakar. Pearson PTE Academic UKVI is currently more limited on the continent, with test centres in Johannesburg, Cairo, Casablanca and Algiers. Booking lead times in May 2026 are 4–6 weeks in Lagos and Accra; closer to 8 weeks in Nairobi and Kampala. Slots open faster outside of major cities — Aba, Eldoret and Kumasi sometimes have availability within two weeks.
Take Adaeze, a Nigerian electrical engineer with a Skilled Worker job offer in Manchester. She booked the IELTS for UKVI Academic six weeks out at the Lagos British Council, sat the test, scored 6.5 / 6.5 / 6.0 / 7.0, and uploaded the Test Report Form to her visa application three days after sitting.
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Three-week prep plan that actually works
For candidates with strong everyday English, three weeks of focused prep is usually enough. Week one: take a full-length official practice paper from the British Council IELTS site or the Pearson sample tests and score yourself honestly. Identify the weakest component. Week two: drill the weak component for 90 minutes a day, alternating with timed practice in the other three. Week three: two full mock tests under timed conditions, then rest the day before. Most reliable resources: official Cambridge IELTS books 17–18 for Academic; PTE Practice Test Plus 3 for PTE. Skip the YouTube grammar binges — your time is better spent on timed mock papers.
When you can skip the test entirely
You do not need to sit a SELT if your nationality automatically meets the English requirement (the Home Office’s majority English-speaking country list), or if you hold a degree taught in English from a recognised institution. Degrees from universities in Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Cameroon (English-medium institutions), Malawi and Sierra Leone are commonly accepted — but you must apply via UK ENIC (formerly UK NARIC) for a confirmation statement: an Academic Qualification Level Statement plus an English Language Proficiency Statement. The combined ENIC application takes 5–10 working days and costs around £140 in 2026. For applicants holding a Master’s or PhD from these countries, this route is faster and cheaper than re-sitting IELTS.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is IELTS Life Skills accepted for the Skilled Worker visa?
No. IELTS Life Skills is only used for spouse and settlement routes that test at A1, A2 or B1. Skilled Worker, HPI and Scale-up applications need IELTS for UKVI (Academic or General Training) showing B2 across all four skills.
Does my Nigerian university degree count toward English?
Often, yes — but you must obtain a UK ENIC statement confirming both academic level and English-medium instruction. Submit both the Academic Qualification Level Statement and the English Language Proficiency Statement with your visa application.
How long is a SELT valid for visa purposes?
Two years from the test date. If your visa is extended within that window you do not need to retake the test, provided you remain on the same route.
Can I take the test in the UK?
Yes — IELTS for UKVI, PTE Academic UKVI and LanguageCert SELT are all available at UK test centres. This is the common route for applicants switching from a Student visa to a Skilled Worker visa.
What if I just miss B2 on one component?
There is no rounding. A score of 5.0 in writing fails the test even if the other three components are 7.0. You must retake the full exam; partial re-sits are not allowed under SELT rules.
Highlights to remember
- B2 across all four skills is mandatory for new Skilled Worker, HPI and Scale-up applicants from 8 January 2026
- IELTS for UKVI, PTE Academic UKVI and LanguageCert SELT are the most common SELTs in Africa
- Book 4–8 weeks ahead in Lagos, Accra, Nairobi, Kampala and Johannesburg
- A degree taught in English plus a UK ENIC statement can replace the test entirely
- SELT scores stay valid for two years from the test date
Related reads on Travel Explore
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Share this story
- Skilled Worker visa English bar jumped to B2 — how Africans are clearing it
- Skip IELTS legally: when your African degree replaces the test
- Three weeks of the right prep — your B2 IELTS pass plan
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