If you have completed training/assessment in a “competent authority” system, Australia may let you bypass AMC exams. Your job is to prove your assessment history matches the Medical Board of Australia’s competent authority requirements, then complete supervised practice to reach general registration.
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Step 1 — Confirm you are truly eligible
Eligibility is about completed assessment/training in an approved system — not just “I worked there.” Read the Medical Board’s competent authority guidance and match your history exactly.
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Step 2 — Plan English language compliance early
AHPRA English language standard can gate everything. For OET, the standard allows B in Listening/Reading/Speaking and C+ in Writing (or combined results within the permitted window). Don’t assume old rules.
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Step 3 — Prepare an evidence pack
Compile: proof of primary qualification, internship/PGY1 equivalence evidence where relevant, assessment history, registration history, and recent practice evidence (rosters/contracts/logbooks where appropriate).
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Step 4 — Apply for provisional registration
Competent authority candidates generally enter via provisional registration and complete supervised practice (commonly 12 months) in an approved position to reach general registration.
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Step 5 — Choose the job strategically
Pick a role with structured supervision, documented feedback, and a health service familiar with AHPRA reporting. Administrative competence reduces delays in sign-offs.
Don’t confuse pathways
Competent authority is not the same as the Standard Pathway (AMC exams) or Specialist Pathway. If you pick the wrong lane, you can burn a year.
SourceMedical Board of Australia: Competent Authority Pathway (official)
Open Link SourceAHPRA: English language skills registration standard (OET/IELTS rules)
Open Link