IELTS Guide

IELTS Test Format

A complete guide to the IELTS test — format, timing, question types, and scoring for all four skills.

Listening
30 min
40 questions
Reading
60 min
40 questions
Writing
60 min
2 questions
Speaking
11–14 min
3 questions

Listening

30 minutes + 10 minutes transfer40 questions

Test Sections

Section 1

A conversation between two people in an everyday social context (e.g. booking a hotel room)

Section 2

A monologue in an everyday social context (e.g. a speech about local facilities)

Section 3

A conversation between up to four people in an educational or training context

Section 4

A monologue on an academic subject (e.g. a university lecture)

Question Types

Multiple choiceMatchingPlan/map/diagram labellingForm/note/table/flow-chart/summary completionSentence completion

Key Tips

  • 1Read the questions before the audio plays
  • 2Answers appear in order — don't fall behind
  • 3Watch for distractors — the speaker may change their mind
  • 4Check spelling carefully — wrong spelling = wrong answer

Reading

60 minutes40 questions

Test Sections

Academic

3 long passages from books, journals, magazines, and newspapers (750–900 words each). Texts are complex and may include diagrams, graphs, or illustrations.

General Training

Section 1: short factual texts (notices, ads, timetables). Section 2: work-related texts. Section 3: one longer, more complex text.

Question Types

Multiple choiceIdentifying information (True/False/Not Given)Identifying writer's views (Yes/No/Not Given)Matching informationMatching headingsMatching featuresMatching sentence endingsSentence completionSummary/note/table/flow-chart completionDiagram label completionShort-answer questions

Key Tips

  • 1Skim the passage first to understand the main idea
  • 2For TRUE/FALSE/NOT GIVEN: NOT GIVEN means the information is not in the text — do not use your own knowledge
  • 3Matching headings: read the first and last sentence of each paragraph
  • 4Don't spend more than 20 minutes on any one passage

Writing

60 minutes2 questions

Test Sections

Task 1 (Academic)

Describe, summarise, or explain a graph, chart, table, or diagram in at least 150 words. You are NOT expected to give your own opinion.

Task 1 (General Training)

Write a letter in at least 150 words. The letter may be formal, semi-formal, or informal depending on the situation.

Task 2 (Both)

Write an essay in response to a point of view, argument, or problem in at least 250 words. Task 2 carries more weight than Task 1.

Question Types

Task 1 Academic: line graph, bar chart, pie chart, table, map, process diagramTask 1 General: formal letter, semi-formal letter, informal letterTask 2: opinion essay, discussion essay, problem-solution essay, two-part question

Key Tips

  • 1Spend 20 minutes on Task 1 and 40 minutes on Task 2
  • 2Task 2 is worth twice as much as Task 1
  • 3Always plan your essay before writing — 2–3 minutes of planning saves time
  • 4Check your word count — under the minimum loses marks

Speaking

11–14 minutes3 questions

Test Sections

Part 1 (4–5 min)

The examiner asks general questions about yourself and familiar topics such as home, family, work, studies, and interests.

Part 2 (3–4 min)

You are given a cue card with a topic and bullet points. You have 1 minute to prepare, then speak for 1–2 minutes. The examiner may ask 1–2 follow-up questions.

Part 3 (4–5 min)

The examiner asks more abstract questions related to the Part 2 topic. This part tests your ability to discuss ideas and opinions at length.

Question Types

Part 1: personal questions about familiar topicsPart 2: extended monologue from a cue cardPart 3: abstract discussion questions

Key Tips

  • 1Speak at length — give extended answers, not just one sentence
  • 2Use a range of vocabulary and avoid repeating the same words
  • 3It's OK to self-correct — the examiner expects natural speech
  • 4In Part 2, use your preparation minute to make brief notes

How IELTS is Scored

Overall Band Score

The average of the four skill scores, rounded to the nearest 0.5

Listening & Reading

Raw score (number correct out of 40) converted to a band score

Writing

Assessed on Task Achievement/Response, Coherence & Cohesion, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range & Accuracy

Speaking

Assessed on Fluency & Coherence, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range & Accuracy, Pronunciation

Academic vs General Training

IELTS Academic
  • • For university admission (undergraduate & postgraduate)
  • • For professional registration (nurses, doctors, engineers)
  • • Reading: 3 long academic passages
  • • Writing Task 1: describe a graph, chart, or diagram
  • • Listening & Speaking: same as General Training
IELTS General Training
  • • For migration (UK, Australia, Canada, NZ, USA)
  • • For work visas and secondary education
  • • Reading: short notices, ads, and one longer text
  • • Writing Task 1: write a formal or informal letter
  • • Listening & Speaking: same as Academic

Where to Take IELTS

IELTS is jointly managed by the British Council, IDP: IELTS Australia, and Cambridge Assessment English. It is available in over 140 countries at more than 1,600 test centres.

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