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The Ultimate OET Study Timeline for 2026: Weekly Guide

OET Study timeline

Preparing for the OET takes focus, structure, and the right resources. If you start now and commit to a consistent plan, you’ll give yourself the best chance of success.  

This article gives you a week-by-week roadmap, combined with tips, an FAQ section and guidance on how to integrate your own time and resources. 

Why this study plan works

  • It breaks the preparation into manageable weekly chunks so you don’t feel overwhelmed. 
  • It covers all four test skills (Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking) plus medical/healthcare context and exam strategies. 
  • It integrates video resources and SLC course offerings so you have a blended approach (self-study + guided). 
  • It allows flexibility: you can accelerate or extend depending on your prior level, time available and target test date. 
  • It includes built-in review and practice weeks so you reinforce rather than simply cover once. 

Overview of SLC’s YouTube resources and course options

YouTube Channel 

  • The SLC YouTube channel contains free OET tips, strategies, question-type walkthroughs, sample tasks and explanations targeted at healthcare professionals. 
  • Use these videos to build your foundation, check your strategy, and supplement your daily/week tasks. 

SLC Course Options 

  • Monthly Subscription: For continuous access to modules, interactive activities, and progress tracking. 
  • 3-Month Package: Intensive preparation with more coaching or touch-points, ideal if you’re committed to finish in that timeframe. 
  • One-to-One Coaching: Personalized feedback and tailored practice (especially valuable for Writing & Speaking). 
  • You can choose the plan that suits your budget, time-commitment and test-schedule. 

16-Week Study Plan

Here’s a sample plan if you are preparing over 4 months (16 weeks). You can adapt longer if needed. Assume you’ll study ~8-10 hours per week (or adjust accordingly). 

Weeks 1-2: Foundations & Benchmarking 

  • Week 1: Introduce the OET format, scoring, and your baseline.  
  • Take a full diagnostic test (all four skills) to find your strengths/weaknesses. 
  • Begin vocabulary building: healthcare terminology, phrasal verbs in medical contexts, common collocations. 
  • Week 2: Focus on Listening Section Part A & B. 
  • Practice short sample tasks: identifying specific information, speaker’s purpose. 
  • Continue vocabulary + key phrases for spoken healthcare communication. 

Weeks 3-4: Reading Focus 

  • Week 3: Reading Part A & B (short texts, multiple choice). Practice speed, skimming & scanning.
  • Week 4: Reading Part C (longer texts). Practice reading for detail, inference, and speed. Review results from practice and note weak areas.

Weeks 5-6: Writing Focus 

  • Week 5: Introduction to Writing: understand the task (typically one letter), audience, purpose, register. 
  • Practice one writing task: plan, write, self-review using SLC checklist (available in course). 
  • Week 6: Focus on coherence/cohesion, grammar, and medical context in writing. Practice another task, compare with sample answers, note errors. 

Weeks 7-8: Speaking Focus 

  • Week 7: Introduction to Speaking sub-test: roleplay scenarios in healthcare. Use SLC videos on speaking strategies, interaction, and role-play simulation. Practice with a partner or record yourself.   
  • Week 8: Focus on fluency, pronunciation, appropriate register and vocabulary. More role-plays, peer or tutor feedback if possible (via SLC 1-to-1). 

Weeks 9-10: Integrated Skills & Review 

  • Week 9: Mixed practice: combine Listening + Reading tasks. Time yourself. Identify weaker question-types. 
  • Week 10: Mixed practice: combine Writing + Speaking tasks. Timed writing, followed by speaking role-plays. Review errors, plan improvement. 

Weeks 11-12: Healthcare-Specific Language & Strategy 

  • Week 11: Focus on medical/healthcare vocabulary, especially in your professional field (nursing/medicine). Watch SLC videos on medical English in hospital settings, international patients, clinical communication. Practice dialogues and writing for that context.   
  • Week 12: Focus on exam strategy: time management, handling tricky question-types, avoiding common pitfalls. Practice full mini-mock (all four skills) under timed conditions. 

Weeks 13-14: Full Mock & Feedback 

  • Week 13: Take a full-length mock test under exam conditions (all four skills). Use SLC’s full-test resources. After completing, analyse results thoroughly: note recurring mistakes, weaker skills. 
  • Week 14: Focus remediation: pick your weakest skill(s) and dedicate extra time. Watch targeted SLC videos based on your weaknesses. Practice with tailored tasks. 

Weeks 15-16: Final Polishing & Exam Readiness 

  • Week 15: Final timed practice: two more full mock tests (preferably on separate days). Review each carefully, refine strategy, reduce anxiety. 
  • Week 16: Light review week: you should reduce study volume slightly to avoid burnout. Focus on review of vocabulary, key strategies, mental preparation, and simulation of day-of-test conditions (timing, exam routine). 
  • At the end of week 16: you should be ready to book and sit your OET (or be within a week of test date). 

Extended 24-Week Option

If you prefer a slower pace (e.g., preparing while working full-time, or want more revision time), you can stretch the plan to 24 weeks. 

  • Weeks 1-4: Foundations & Listening 
  • Weeks 5-8: Reading 
  • Weeks 9-12: Writing 
  • Weeks 13-16: Speaking 
  • Weeks 17-20: Integrated practice + healthcare-specific language 
  • Weeks 21-22: Full Mock + Remediation 
  • Weeks 23-24: Final Polishing & Exam Readiness

This gives you more spaced-out study, additional practice, and extra review time. 

Study Tips & Strategies

  • Schedule regular time: Set 3-5 sessions per week. Consistency beats long intermittent blocks. 
  • Active practice: Don’t just watch or read — do the tasks (gap-fills, multiple choice, writing, role-plays). SLC’s digital course provides interactive activities. 
  • Error log: Keep a notebook or document of your mistakes (in Writing, Speaking, Reading, Listening). Review weekly. 
  • Vocabulary notebook: For medical/healthcare English, keep a list of key terms, collocations, phrasal verbs, and expressions. Review regularly. 
  • Simulate real test conditions: Timing is crucial in OET. Practice under timed conditions, minimal interruptions, quiet space. 
  • Get feedback: Especially for Writing & Speaking, one-to-one coaching via SLC is very helpful—the human feedback helps more than solo practice. 
  • Revise older material: In weeks when you’re doing new material, allocate some time to revisit previous weeks to keep it fresh. 
  • Mental preparation: Practice relaxation and exam-day mindset. The difference between a pass and fail can be your confidence and ability to perform under pressure. 

FAQ

It depends on your availability and starting level. A good target is ~8-10 hours per week if you’re working alongside. If you have more time, you could increase to 12-15. If you have less, extend the timeline (e.g., use the 24-week plan).

  • Monthly: Best if you want continuous access, flexibility, moderate pace. 
  • 3-Month Package: Ideal if you have a test date in ~3 months and want to focus intensively. 
  • One-to-One Coaching: Best if you want personalised feedback, have specific weak-areas, or need tailored support (especially for Writing/Speaking). 
    You can also combine (start with monthly, upgrade to 1-to-1 as you approach your test). 

In the 16-week plan, at the end of week 13 you take a full mock. In the 24-week plan you could do so around week 21. Then again in the final weeks to track improvement and build confidence.

Allocate extra time in the remediation weeks (weeks 14, 15 or their equivalent). Use the error-log, targeted videos, extra practice tasks. Consider one-to-one coaching for that skill.

The YouTube channel is excellent for strategy, tips, and explanations. But the paid SLC course offers interactive tasks, structured progress, personalised feedback and tracking. For many candidates, the combination works best: use the free videos + invest in at least one course option.

  • Set small weekly goals (e.g., “by Friday I’ll finish Writing tasks for week 5”). 
  • Use study buddies or peer-practice for Speaking. 
  • Track progress (e.g., record your Speaking task at week 7 and again at week 14 and compare). 
  • Reward yourself for milestones (e.g., after two months of consistent study, take a small break or treat). 

Conclusion

Preparing for OET is a journey — not a sprint (unless you have an accelerated timeframe). Starting early, using a structured plan, leveraging the SLC YouTube resources and one of the SLC course options will give you a strong advantage. Whether you follow the 16-week plan or the extended 24-week version, the key is consistent practicereview of your errors, and targeted feedback especially for your weaker skills. 
Begin now, commit to the weekly tasks, stay focussed, and you’ll walk into the exam confident and prepared. 
We at SLC look forward to supporting you on your path to success. Good luck! 

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