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Pathway information · Jamaican

UK Nurse Registration for Jamaican Nurses

Jamaica has a long tradition of nurse education in English and is not subject to the international-recruitment safeguards that apply to WHO red-list countries. If you trained in Jamaica and are registered with the Nursing Council of Jamaica, the NMC Test of Competence pathway on this site applies to you.

A Jamaican-trained nurse joins the UK NMC register through the standard Test of Competence — evidencing English (Jamaica is English-speaking, so a test is often not required), passing the CBT, having qualifications verified, and passing the OSCE in the UK. Jamaica is on neither the WHO red list nor the UK amber list. Confirm your position with the NMC. Source: NMC (nmc.org.uk). Information as of 2026-07.

At a glance

The key facts for a nurse who trained in Jamaica.

Regulator you register from
Nursing Council of Jamaica (NCJ)
UK registration route
NMC Test of Competence (CBT + OSCE)
English test
Often exempt (English-speaking) — confirm with NMC
Right to work in the UK
Health and Care Worker visa (employer-sponsored)
Typical starting NHS band
Band 5 — indicatively £29,970–£36,483 a year (NHS Agenda for Change, England, 2024/25)

Your route to the UK register

You follow the same NMC Test of Competence as every other internationally-educated nurse.

NMC Test of Competence route

Because Jamaica is outside the EU, the standard NMC Test of Competence applies: you sit the CBT (Part 1) — which can be taken from Jamaica — and then the OSCE (Part 2) in person at an approved UK test centre. Many internationally-educated nurses arrive on a role that supports OSCE preparation and sit it within their first weeks in the UK.

Your regulator and qualification

The NMC assesses your registration with the Nursing Council of Jamaica (NCJ) and your nursing qualification. Keep your certificates, transcripts and registration evidence organised — verification by your institution and regulator is often the stage that determines your timeline.

How you apply for a role

You apply directly, on your own account, to NHS trusts and other licensed UK employers. Gera does not recruit, place, match or sponsor — this is information only, to help you approach the process yourself.

The NMC pathway, step by step

The six-stage Test of Competence is the route every internationally-educated nurse from outside the EU follows.

  1. 1

    Create an NMC account and check eligibility

    You begin by opening an account on the NMC online portal and completing an eligibility self-assessment. The NMC checks that your nursing qualification and clinical experience map to a UK part of the register (for example, Registered Nurse — Adult). You will need your qualification certificates, transcripts, and proof of registration with the nursing regulator in your country of training.

  2. 2

    Provide evidence of English language competence

    You must show the NMC that your English meets the required standard — normally an IELTS Academic or OET result, unless you qualify for an exemption (for example, a nursing qualification that was taught and examined in English, or recent registration/practice in a majority English-speaking country). The exact accepted routes and scores are published by the NMC and are summarised on our English requirements page.

  3. 3

    Pass the Computer Based Test (CBT) — Test of Competence Part 1

    The CBT is the first part of the NMC Test of Competence. It is a multiple-choice exam delivered at Pearson VUE test centres in many countries (and, for some parts, remotely). It has a numeracy section and a clinical section based on the standards expected of a UK-registered nurse. You can sit the CBT from your home country before travelling to the UK.

  4. 4

    Submit your registration application and supporting documents

    You complete the full NMC application, upload your qualifications, and arrange for your training institution and regulator to verify your records and provide references. The NMC assesses your documents, identity, health and character declarations. This is the stage where most timelines vary, so keep your paperwork complete and responsive.

  5. 5

    Pass the OSCE — Test of Competence Part 2

    The Objective Structured Clinical Examination (OSCE) is taken in person at an approved test centre in the UK. It assesses whether you can apply nursing knowledge safely across assessment, planning, implementation and evaluation, plus practical clinical skills. Many internationally-educated nurses arrive in the UK on a role that supports OSCE preparation and sit the OSCE within their first weeks.

  6. 6

    Pay the registration fee and receive your NMC PIN

    Once every requirement is met, you pay the NMC annual registration fee and are entered on the register. You receive an NMC PIN, which is the number that confirms you are a registered nurse in the UK and can practise. Registration is then renewed each year, with revalidation every three years.

English language

You may be exempt from an English test

English is the official language of Jamaica, and the NMC treats several English-speaking countries as majority English-speaking for exemption purposes. Many Jamaican-trained nurses are therefore exempt from IELTS/OET — but the NMC sets and reviews the accepted-country list and the recency rules, so confirm your exemption directly with the NMC before applying.

See the full English requirements guide →

Right to work in the UK

Visa and sponsorship

Jamaican nationals normally need a Health and Care Worker visa sponsored by a licensed UK employer. You apply for the visa yourself once you have a job offer; Gera does not sponsor, place or recruit.

Typical NHS band and pay

Where you start

Newly registered nurses in England normally start on Agenda for Change Band 5 — indicatively £29,970–£36,483 a year (NHS Agenda for Change, England, 2024/25). Pay is negotiated and updated each year, and Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland run separate scales — treat these as indicative snapshots and confirm the current figures.

See the full NHS pay bands breakdown →

Indicative NMC cost

What the NMC process costs

The full overseas route carries several NMC-set fees — indicatively a £140 application/eligibility fee, an £83 CBT (Test of Competence Part 1), a £794 OSCE (Test of Competence Part 2), and a £153 annual registration fee. These are indicative snapshots; confirm the current amounts at nmc.org.uk before you budget.

Get your free personalised NMC pathway checklist

Tell us your email and we send a step-by-step checklist you can tick off — English test, CBT, application documents, OSCE prep and registration — plus updates when NMC fees or requirements change. No spam, no fee, unsubscribe anytime.

We are not a recruitment agency and never charge nurses a placement fee. The checklist is general information, not immigration advice.

Frequently asked questions

Can a Jamaican-trained nurse work in the UK?+

Yes. Nurses who trained in Jamaica can practise in the UK once they join the NMC register. You follow the standard NMC Test of Competence — evidencing English, passing the CBT and OSCE, and having your qualification verified. Jamaica is NOT on the WHO 2023 Health Workforce Support and Safeguards (red) List — Haiti is the only country from the Americas on that list — and it is NOT on the UK Code of Practice amber list (which currently lists only Kenya and Nepal). So Jamaica is outside the active-recruitment restriction. This page is general pathway information; you apply on your own account, and Gera does not actively recruit from any WHO-safeguard-list country.

What is the exam route for Jamaican-trained nurses?+

Because Jamaica is outside the EU, the standard NMC Test of Competence applies: you sit the CBT (Part 1) — which can be taken from Jamaica — and then the OSCE (Part 2) in person at an approved UK test centre. Many internationally-educated nurses arrive on a role that supports OSCE preparation and sit it within their first weeks in the UK.

What English evidence do Jamaican-trained nurses need for the NMC?+

English is the official language of Jamaica, and the NMC treats several English-speaking countries as majority English-speaking for exemption purposes. Many Jamaican-trained nurses are therefore exempt from IELTS/OET — but the NMC sets and reviews the accepted-country list and the recency rules, so confirm your exemption directly with the NMC before applying.

Do I need a visa to work as a nurse in the UK?+

Jamaican nationals normally need a Health and Care Worker visa sponsored by a licensed UK employer. You apply for the visa yourself once you have a job offer; Gera does not sponsor, place or recruit.

What does NMC registration cost for a Jamaican nurse?+

The full overseas route carries several NMC-set fees — indicatively a £140 application/eligibility fee, an £83 CBT (Test of Competence Part 1), a £794 OSCE (Test of Competence Part 2), and a £153 annual registration fee. These are indicative snapshots; confirm the current amounts at nmc.org.uk before you budget.

Does Gera place Jamaican-trained nurses into NHS jobs?+

No. Gera is not a recruitment agency. We do not place nurses, do not match you to specific vacancies, and never charge you a fee. This page is free information. You apply directly and on your own account to NHS trusts and other licensed employers, and any visa sponsorship comes from that employer.

What would I earn once registered?+

A newly registered nurse in England normally starts on NHS Agenda for Change Band 5 — indicatively £29,970 to £36,483 a year for 2024/25, plus a High Cost Area Supplement for London roles. See the NHS pay bands page for the full, sourced breakdown.

Pathway information for other countries

We publish country pages only for source countries that are not on the WHO 2023 Safeguards (red) List or the UK amber list. We do not actively recruit from any WHO-safeguard-list country.

Plan your move from Jamaica with confidence

Get a free personalised NMC pathway checklist covering English, exams or recognition, documents and registration. No recruitment, no fees, no obligation.

Important — please read

This is general information to help internationally-educated nurses understand the UK registration pathway. It is not recruitment, immigration or legal advice. Gera is not a recruitment agency: we do not place nurses into NHS jobs, do not match candidates to specific vacancies, and never charge a nurse a placement fee. You apply on your own account, directly to NHS trusts and other licensed employers. Requirements, fees and pay scales change — always confirm the current position with the NMC (nmc.org.uk), UK Visas and Immigration (gov.uk) and NHS Employers (nhsemployers.org).