The AMC pathway is the primary route for Indian MBBS graduates seeking medical registration in Australia. Since India is not a Competent Authority country, Indian doctors must complete the AMC Standard Pathway, which includes medical qualification verification through EPIC, English proficiency testing, AMC CAT MCQ examination, AMC Clinical Exam or Workplace Based Assessment, and registration with the Medical Board of Australia. The complete journey typically takes 18 months to 3 years and costs approximately ₹22–32 lakh, depending on exam attempts and preparation expenses and salary as a doctor can go up to ₹2 crore+. Learn every step of the AMC process, including eligibility checks, exam formats, fees, timelines, visa pathways, and career opportunities after registration, helping Indian doctors plan their Australian medical career strategically.
Every year, thousands of Indian MBBS graduates start the journey toward Australian medical registration. Most of them make the same costly mistake. They start with the exam instead of the eligibility check. Australian Medical Council says the AMC CAT MCQ pass standard is rising in 2026, and Clinical Exam pass rates have been steep. So it's easy to pass the AMC exam. But only with a structured, sequenced plan, not a guess-and-hope approach.
In this blog, we are breaking down the entire AMC journey for Indian doctors into simple steps, from eligibility to your first Australian job. Get insights on 2026 fees, realistic timelines, and the one classification mistake that derails Indian candidates more than any other. Let's get started.
What Is the AMC Pathway for Indian Doctors?
India is not a Competent Authority (CA) country under Australia's medical registration framework. This means Indian-trained doctors cannot use the faster Competent Authority Pathway available to graduates from the UK, Ireland, Canada, or the US. Instead, every Indian MBBS graduate must complete the AMC Standard Pathway with a primary source verification, an English test, the AMC CAT MCQ exam, the AMC Clinical Exam (or a Workplace Based Assessment), and registration with the Medical Board of Australia, over 18 months to 3 years, at a total cost of roughly US$23,000-34,000/AUD 35,000-48,000/₹22-32 lakh.
Here is exactly how it works, step by step.
Step 1: Confirm Your Eligibility (WDOMS-Listed Medical School)
Before spending a single rupee, confirm your MBBS institution is listed on the World Directory of Medical Schools (WDOMS). The global register the AMC uses to verify medical qualifications. Most Indian MBBS colleges recognised by the National Medical Commission are WDOMS-listed, but exceptions exist, especially for older graduates or institutions that have since closed or merged.
Action items:
- Search your medical school by name and graduation year on the official WDOMS database
- Confirm your degree qualifies you for unconditional eligibility to apply for AMC primary source verification
- If your school isn't listed, you'll need additional documentation before proceeding, don't skip this check.
This single step prevents the single biggest waste of time and money in the entire pathway. Applying for verification only to discover an eligibility gap months later.
Step 2: EPIC Registration and Primary Source Verification
Once eligibility is confirmed, you'll register with ECFMG's EPIC (Electronic Portfolio of International Credentials) system, which the AMC uses to verify your degree directly with your medical school. The process involves:
- EPIC Registration: a one-time activation fee of roughly US$35 (≈AUD 50 / ₹3,310)
- Primary source verification fee: approximately US$110 (≈AUD 156 / ₹10,400), paid to confirm your degree and graduation date directly with your institution
- AMC Portfolio creation: an initial registration fee of AUD 642 (≈US$451 / ₹42,700) for your first qualification
Verification timelines vary enormously depending on how quickly your medical college responds, anywhere from a few weeks to several months. Start this step the moment you decide to pursue Australia; it is almost always the longest, least controllable part of the entire timeline, and most delays in the AMC journey trace back to slow institutional responses here, not exam failures.
Step 4: Prove English Proficiency (IELTS, OET, or PTE Academic)
The Medical Board of Australia requires International Medical Graduates (IMGs) to demonstrate English proficiency before registration. Indian doctors can meet this requirement through recognised tests including IELTS Academic, OET, or PTE Academic.
| Test | Minimum Score Required | Validity |
| IELTS Academic | Overall 7.0 (minimum component requirements apply) | 2 years |
| OET Medicine | Minimum required score in all four components | 2 years |
| PTE Academic | Minimum required score 66 across communicative skills | 2 years |
Most Indian doctors choose between these based on their strengths:
- OET: Often preferred by healthcare professionals because it is built around clinical scenarios, patient consultations, referral letters, case notes, and medical communication. Doctors familiar with medical terminology often find the context more natural.
- IELTS: A good option for candidates comfortable with general academic English, essay writing, and broader language tasks.
- PTE Academic: A computer-based alternative that suits candidates who prefer faster results, typing-based responses, and a fully digital exam format.
The best choice depends on your preparation style, English strengths, and timeline. Since English test results are generally valid for two years, completing this step early alongside EPIC verification can prevent delays later in the AMC pathway.
Tip: Book your English test early and in parallel with Step 2's verification process. There's no reason to wait. Running these two steps simultaneously can shave months off your total timeline.
Step 4: The AMC CAT MCQ Exam (Can Be Taken From India/home country)
AMC CAT MCQ exam is delivered worldwide via Pearson VUE test centres, including multiple cities across India/other parts of the world. You do not need to travel to Australia for this step.
What to know:
- Format: 150 multiple-choice questions, one correct answer from five options, delivered in a single 3.5-hour computer-adaptive session
- Fee: AUD 2,920 (≈US$2,053 / ₹1,94,180) for a 12-month authorisation covering one attempt
- Pass mark: Reported on a 0–500 scale, with 250 as the pass standard and from 2026, the AMC has introduced a slightly higher pass standard for the MCQ exam, making first-attempt preparation more important than ever
- Free resource: AMC's free MCQ preparation app (which has over 210 practice questions) is a useful supplement, but historically around half of all candidates do not pass on the first attempt.
Don't worry! We have a solution.
Academically provides structured, mentor-guided preparation from faculty members who are AMC-qualified and AHPRA-registered doctors working and settled in Australia. It pays for itself many times over in saved exam fees alone. You can also get hugely benefitted from the community groups on Discord, AI-based mock test that simulate real time exam conditions.
There's no fee discount for repeat attempts. Every resit costs the full AUD 2,920 again. A strong argument for getting your preparation right the first time rather than treating the MCQ as a low-stakes practice round.
Step 5: AMC Clinical Exam or Workplace Based Assessment (WBA)
This is the hardest and costliest stage of the entire pathway and the one where most candidates need the most support.
Option A: AMC Clinical Exam
- An OSCE-format exam testing real-world clinical reasoning across multiple stations
- Conducted only in Melbourne (in-person), with very limited online sittings
- Fee: approximately AUD 3,991–4,391 (≈US$2,807–3,089 / ₹2,65,300–2,92,000) per attempt, plus travel and accommodation
Option B: Workplace Based Assessment (WBA)
- An alternative pathway assessed during structured supervised clinical placement in Australia.
- Generally lower direct cost than the Clinical Exam, but requires a longer period of supervised work to qualify.
- Better suited to candidates who can secure a supervised placement early and prefer demonstrating competence on the job over a single high-stakes exam day.
Given the difficulty and cost of repeat attempts, most successful candidates treat this stage as requiring dedicated OSCE-style practice. You've got scenario drilling, structured history-taking, and feedback on clinical communication, months before booking a seat.
Step 6: Registration With the Medical Board of Australia
Once you've cleared your AMC Clinical Exam (or completed your WBA) and hold AMC certification, you apply for registration with the Medical Board of Australia (AHPRA).
Key requirements:
- AMC Certificate confirming successful completion of the standard pathway
- Verified identity and qualification documents
- Annual AHPRA registration fee of approximately AUD 1,058 (≈US$744 / ₹70,400)
- Continuing Professional Development (CPD) compliance once registered
Most candidates register initially under limited or provisional registration, working under supervision before transitioning to general registration as they accumulate supervised practice hours.
Step 7: Visa and Permanent Residency (PR)
After completing the AMC pathway and moving toward Australian medical registration, Indian doctors usually explore employer-sponsored or skilled migration routes depending on their profile, location preference, and long-term goals.
Common pathways include:
- Temporary Skill Shortage Visa (Subclass 482): The most common starting route for many international doctors, linked to an Australian employer sponsorship such as a hospital, health service, or medical practice. It allows skilled professionals to work temporarily in Australia.
- Employer Nomination Scheme (Subclass 186): A permanent residency pathway where an Australian employer nominates an eligible skilled worker. Doctors are among the healthcare occupations commonly considered for employer-sponsored pathways.
- Skilled Independent Visa (Subclass 189): A points-based permanent residency pathway without employer sponsorship, available for eligible skilled occupations.
- State/Territory Nominated Visa (Subclass 190): A PR pathway requiring nomination from an Australian state or territory.
- Regional Pathways (Subclass 491/494): Options for doctors willing to work in regional Australia, where healthcare demand is often higher and migration pathways may be more accessible.
Medical practitioners such as General Practitioners, Resident Medical Officers, and specialist doctors are classified as high-priority healthcare occupations, with multiple visa pathways available depending on eligibility.
Visa strategy should be planned alongside your AMC and registration journey, not after completion, because employer opportunities, state nomination requirements, and regional options can significantly influence your pathway. Consulting a registered migration professional early can help avoid choosing a visa route that does not match your long-term PR goals.
Step 8: Finding Your First Job in Australia
With AMC certification and AHPRA registration secured, the final step is landing your first Australian medical role, as a Hospital Medical Officer (HMO) or in a supervised general practice or specialty placement.
A first-year HMO typically earns approximately AUD 85,000–100,000 (≈US$59,700–70,300 / ₹56.5–66.5 lakh) per year, before overtime and penalty rates. Figures that climb substantially with specialisation and seniority, with experienced specialists earning well into the AUD 400,000+ range (₹2 crore +)
Where to look:
- Public hospital networks in the state where you completed verification/registration
- Rural and regional health services, which often have higher demand and faster placement timelines for IMGs
- Specialist recruitment platforms and healthcare job portals built specifically for international medical graduates like Jobslly.
Total Timeline and Cost: India to Australia
| Stage | Realistic Duration |
| Eligibility check + EPIC/PSV | 2–6 months |
| English test (IELTS/OET) | Parallel, 1–3 months |
| AMC CAT MCQ exam (incl. prep) | 4–8 months |
| AMC Clinical Exam/WBA (incl. prep) | 6–12 months |
| AHPRA registration | 1–2 months |
| Visa processing | 3–8 months |
| Total realistic timeline | 18 months to 3 years |
Total cost (best case, first-attempt passes): approximately US$23,000-28,000 / AUD 33,000-40,000 / ₹22-26.6 lakh
Total cost (typical case, one retake): approximately US$27,500-34,000 / AUD 39,000-48,000 / ₹26-32 lakh
These figures cover verification, English testing, exam fees, AHPRA registration, CPD, and modest preparation costs. They exclude living expenses once you relocate to Australia.
The One Mistake Indian Doctors Keep Making
Because India is not a Competent Authority country, some candidates mistakenly research CA-pathway timelines and costs (much shorter, much cheaper) and assume the same applies to them. It doesn't. Confirming you're on the Standard Pathway from day one. Planning your timeline and budget accordingly is the single most important mental shift in this entire journey.