ELTIS Complete Guide 2026 — English Language Test for International Students
Complete guide to the ELTIS (English Language Test for International Students): what it tests, format, scoring levels, how to prepare, and what to expect.

What Is the ELTIS?
The English Language Test for International Students (ELTIS) is a standardized English placement assessment developed and administered by ELS Language Centers, one of the largest English language training networks in the United States. The ELTIS is not a pass/fail proficiency exam — it is a placement instrument designed to identify where along the English language learning spectrum a student currently sits so they can be enrolled in the appropriate level of ESL instruction.
ELS operates intensive English programs at partner universities and independent centers across the US, Canada, and internationally. When a new international student arrives at an ELS program, they take the ELTIS to determine which of ELS's 12 program levels they should begin in — from beginning English (Level 101) to advanced pre-academic English (Level 112). The right placement ensures students learn efficiently without being placed in content that is too easy or too difficult.
The ELTIS is also used by some university English language programs outside the ELS network as an initial screening or placement tool for international student populations. For practice materials aligned to the ELTIS format, see our eltis test question bank.
ELTIS at a Glance
- Questions: ~85 multiple-choice
- Time: ~75 minutes
- Skills tested: Reading, grammar, listening
- Result type: Placement level (101–112)
- Pass/fail: No — placement only
- Results: Immediate or same day
- Provider: ELS Language Centers
- Location: On-site at ELS programs
- Access: Through your institution
- Students: International / ESL students
- Purpose: ESL course level placement
- Cost: Included in program enrollment
ELTIS Test Format
The ELTIS consists of approximately 85 multiple-choice questions across three main skill areas. Most students complete the test within 75 minutes, though timing may vary by format and administration site. The test is typically administered on a computer at the ELS center, though paper versions exist at some locations.
Reading Comprehension: Short passages followed by comprehension questions. Passages range from simple descriptive texts at lower levels to more academic and analytical content at upper levels. Questions test main idea identification, detail recall, vocabulary in context, and inference.
Sentence Structure and Grammar: Sentence completion and error identification questions covering verb tenses, subject-verb agreement, article usage, prepositions, clause construction, and other core grammar points. This section assesses structural accuracy across different proficiency bands.
Listening Comprehension: Audio recordings of conversations and short monologues followed by comprehension questions. Listening content covers everyday topics at beginning levels, with more complex academic discourse at advanced levels. This section evaluates auditory processing and comprehension in natural English context.
Unlike proficiency exams such as TOEFL or IELTS, the ELTIS does not include a writing or speaking section in its standard format — placement is based on the three receptive/structural skill areas above. For question-type walkthroughs specific to the ELTIS format, see our free eltis practice test video answers guide.

ELTIS Scoring and Level Placement
The ELTIS does not produce a numeric score like TOEFL or IELTS. Instead, your performance places you directly into one of 12 ELS program levels, numbered 101 through 112. These levels represent a continuous progression from foundational English to advanced academic preparation:
- Levels 101–103 (Beginning): Basic vocabulary, simple sentence structures, and foundational grammar. Students at these levels are developing the core building blocks of English communication.
- Levels 104–106 (Intermediate): Expanded vocabulary, more complex grammar, and growing conversational fluency. Students can engage in routine English interactions and understand main ideas in straightforward texts.
- Levels 107–109 (High Intermediate): Academic vocabulary, complex sentence structures, and the ability to understand and produce organized discourse. Students are developing the skills needed for university-level English use.
- Levels 110–112 (Advanced): Near-academic fluency. Students at these levels can engage with academic texts, understand lectures, and produce organized academic writing. Level 112 represents the highest ELTIS placement, often leading directly to conditional university enrollment.
Students who are placed at higher levels progress through fewer program cycles before meeting conditional admission requirements at partner universities. Understanding your starting level helps you set realistic timelines for your academic goals. For expert strategies on maximizing your ELTIS performance, read our eltis score tips guide.
ELTIS vs TOEFL vs IELTS — Key Differences
These tests serve fundamentally different purposes. The TOEFL and IELTS are proficiency tests that certify you have reached a fixed level of English competence — universities use them for admission decisions. The ELTIS is a placement test — it does not certify proficiency or lead to university admission by itself. Instead, it places you into the right ELS program level. After completing the ELS program at the required level, you may be conditionally admitted to a partner university without needing TOEFL/IELTS in some cases. The two types of tests are complementary, not interchangeable. For more on ELTIS preparation, see our eltis questions practice bank.
How to Prepare for the ELTIS

ELTIS Questions and Answers
More ELTIS Resources
About the Author
Educational Psychologist & Academic Test Preparation Expert
Columbia University Teachers CollegeDr. Lisa Patel holds a Doctorate in Education from Columbia University Teachers College and has spent 17 years researching standardized test design and academic assessment. She has developed preparation programs for SAT, ACT, GRE, LSAT, UCAT, and numerous professional licensing exams, helping students of all backgrounds achieve their target scores.