IELTS Exam Tips 2026 June: Strategies for Every Section

Get ready for your IELTS certification. Practice questions with step-by-step answer explanations and instant scoring.

IELTS Exam Tips 2026 June: Strategies for Every Section

IELTS Scoring Explained

IELTS uses a band score system ranging from 0 (did not attempt) to 9.0 (Expert user). Each of the four sections (Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking) is scored separately, and the four scores are averaged to produce the overall band score, rounded to the nearest 0.5.

IELTS Band Score Descriptors

Band 9 — Expert User: Fully operational command of English. Band 8 — Very Good User: Fully operational command with only occasional unsystematic inaccuracies. Band 7 — Good User: Operational command with some inaccuracies and misunderstandings in unfamiliar situations. Band 6 — Competent User: Generally effective command despite inaccuracies, mistakes, and misunderstandings. Band 5 — Modest User: Partial command, coping with overall meaning in most situations. Band 4 — Limited User: Basic competence limited to familiar situations. Band 3 and below — Extremely Limited User or below.

IELTS Listening Score: Raw Score to Band Conversion

The IELTS Academic and General Training Listening test has 40 questions — one mark per correct answer. The raw score out of 40 converts to a band score: 39–40 correct = Band 9; 37–38 = Band 8.5; 35–36 = Band 8; 32–34 = Band 7.5; 30–31 = Band 7; 26–29 = Band 6.5; 23–25 = Band 6; 18–22 = Band 5.5; 16–17 = Band 5; 13–15 = Band 4.5. These conversions are approximate — the exact scale adjusts slightly based on test version difficulty. Spelling errors in Listening answers result in a lost mark — spelling must be correct for full credit.

IELTS Reading Score: Raw Score to Band Conversion

Reading also has 40 questions. Academic Reading tends to have a slightly lower band conversion than General Training Reading for the same raw score: Academic: 39–40 = Band 9; 37–38 = Band 8.5; 35–36 = Band 8; 33–34 = Band 7.5; 30–32 = Band 7; 27–29 = Band 6.5; 23–26 = Band 6; 19–22 = Band 5.5; 15–18 = Band 5. General Training: 40 = Band 9; 39 = Band 8.5; 37–38 = Band 8; 36 = Band 7.5; 34–35 = Band 7; 32–33 = Band 6.5; 30–31 = Band 6; 27–29 = Band 5.5; 23–26 = Band 5. Understanding exactly how many correct answers you need for your target band score is essential for setting realistic section goals.

IELTS - International English Language Testing System international english language testing system study guide illustration

IELTS Listening Tips

The IELTS Listening test has 40 questions across four sections, with one continuous listening — the audio plays once only. The sections increase in difficulty from 1 to 4. Strategic listening and strong prediction skills compensate for the single-play limitation.

Before the Audio Plays

Use the preparation time before each section to read the questions carefully — do this in every section, not just the first. Identify keywords in each question that tell you what to listen for (names, numbers, places, actions, reasons). Predict the type of answer expected (name, number, date, category) based on question type. For form-completion and table questions: scan ahead to understand the overall context before the audio begins. For multiple-choice questions: read all options and identify the distinctions between them so you can listen for the deciding details.

During the Listening

Follow the questions in order — Listening answers always appear in the same order as the questions. If you miss an answer, do not stop and try to recover — immediately move to the next question. Missed answers are gone; spending additional focus time on them causes you to miss the next answer too. Write answers as you listen — don't try to hold multiple answers in memory. You will have time to transfer answers at the end. In form-completion: write exactly what you hear for names, addresses, and numbers — do not paraphrase. Note any unusual or technical vocabulary by writing phonetically and refining later. Section 4 (academic lecture) is the most challenging — it is longer, less conversational, and faster-paced. Focus especially carefully on the Section 4 preparation time.

After the Audio

You have 10 minutes at the end of the Listening test to transfer answers to your answer sheet. Use this time carefully: transfer answers legibly; check spelling — each misspelling costs one mark in Listening; verify that any numerical answers are in the format requested (e.g., if the question asks for the year, don't write the full date); recheck any guesses from questions you were uncertain about.

International English Language Test System guide for IELTS - International English Language Testing System exam preparation

IELTS Reading Tips

The IELTS Academic Reading test has 3 passages (approximately 2,500 to 3,000 words total) with 40 questions to complete in 60 minutes — no extra time for transfer. Time management is the greatest challenge, as most candidates cannot read all passages thoroughly in the allotted time.

Time Management Strategy

Allocate approximately 20 minutes per passage — each passage has approximately 13 questions. If you cannot answer a question in 90 seconds, mark your best answer and move on. Do not leave blanks — there is no penalty for wrong answers, so always guess. Monitor time at each passage — if you finish a passage early, use the extra time on the next passage, not reviewing previous answers. Attempting all questions is more important than perfecting any single answer.

Question-First Reading Approach

For most question types, read the questions before reading the passage — this tells you what information to locate. Identify keywords in each question that you will scan for in the passage (names, dates, specific terms, concepts). For True/False/Not Given and Yes/No/Not Given questions: underline the claim in the question and find the corresponding section of the passage — assess whether the passage supports, contradicts, or doesn't address the claim. Not Given means the information is not in the passage — don't infer or assume.

Matching Headings — The Toughest Question Type

Matching headings to paragraphs is consistently the most time-consuming IELTS Reading question type. Strategy: read the list of headings first and identify key concept differences between similar headings; read each paragraph for its main idea (usually in the first or last sentence); eliminate headings as you use them; if a heading seems to match multiple paragraphs, identify which paragraph it best describes at the paragraph level rather than sentence level.

IELTS Writing Tips

IELTS Writing is marked by four criteria for both tasks, each contributing equally to the Writing score: Task Achievement/Response (does the answer address all parts of the task?), Coherence and Cohesion (is the answer logically organized?), Lexical Resource (range and accuracy of vocabulary), and Grammatical Range and Accuracy (range and accuracy of grammar). Understanding these four criteria is the most important foundation for Writing improvement.

Writing Task 1 Tips (Academic)

Task 1 requires a 150-word minimum description of a graph, chart, table, diagram, or map. Key strategies: write an overview (2 to 3 sentences summarizing the main trends or key features) — this is the single most important paragraph for Task Achievement; select and compare specific data points rather than trying to describe every data point; use language of comparison and change (increased significantly, declined sharply, remained stable, overtook, accounted for); never give an opinion or conclusion in Task 1 — you are reporting facts, not interpreting causes; complete Task 1 in 20 minutes maximum — allocate more time to Task 2.

Writing Task 2 Tips (Academic and General Training)

Task 2 requires a 250-word minimum essay on a given topic. It is worth twice the marks of Task 1 — always complete Task 2 even if it means leaving Task 1 short. Planning: spend 5 minutes planning your essay structure before writing — a well-organized plan prevents mid-essay confusion and produces more coherent essays. Address the specific task — if the question asks 'discuss both views and give your opinion,' you must discuss both views AND give an opinion. Missing part of the task is the most common Task Achievement failure. Structure: introduction (paraphrase the question + thesis statement) → body paragraph 1 (first main point + evidence) → body paragraph 2 (second main point + evidence) → conclusion (restate thesis, no new information). Vocabulary: avoid repeating the same word more than 2 to 3 times — use synonyms and paraphrases to demonstrate Lexical Resource.

International English Language Testing System Book - IELTS - International English Language Testing System certification s...

IELTS Speaking Tips

The IELTS Speaking test is a face-to-face interview with a trained examiner, lasting 11 to 14 minutes across three parts. Speaking is marked on the same four criteria as Writing: Fluency and Coherence, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range and Accuracy, and Pronunciation.

Part 1: Introduction and Interview (4–5 minutes)

Part 1 covers familiar topics (hometown, job, hobbies, family). Tips: give extended answers — 2 to 4 sentences per answer — not one-word or one-sentence responses; avoid saying 'I don't know' or pausing silently — if you don't know the specific word, paraphrase; use natural conversation starters ('Well, actually...', 'To be honest...', 'That's an interesting question...') to demonstrate fluency; speak at natural conversation speed, not artificially slowly.

Part 2: Long Turn (3–4 minutes)

You receive a cue card with a topic and have 1 minute to prepare notes before speaking for 1 to 2 minutes. Tips: use the full 1-minute preparation time to make notes on all required bullet points; structure your response: opening (what/who), development (details, specifics, experiences), closing (why it's significant or memorable); refer to your notes but don't read them verbatim — speaking naturally while glancing at notes demonstrates fluency; if you finish early, the examiner may ask 1 to 2 follow-up questions based on your response.

Part 3: Discussion (4–5 minutes)

Part 3 involves abstract discussion questions related to the Part 2 topic. These require more complex, analytical answers. Tips: don't just state an opinion — develop it with reasons, examples, and implications; show flexibility by acknowledging multiple perspectives before stating your own; use discourse markers to show logical reasoning ('On the one hand...', 'However...', 'As a result...', 'This suggests that...'); Part 3 is where the difference between band 6 and band 7+ is most apparent — the ability to discuss abstract ideas with extended vocabulary and complex grammar separates scores.

IELTS Checklist

  • Know exactly how many correct answers you need in Listening and Reading for your target band
  • Listening: read questions before the audio plays — use preparation time productively every section
  • Listening: never stop and dwell on a missed answer — move to the next question immediately
  • Listening: check spelling during the 10-minute transfer time at the end
  • Reading: allocate 20 minutes per passage — do not spend more time on any single passage
  • Reading: attempt all 40 questions — wrong guesses score 0 but no penalty; blanks also score 0
  • Writing Task 1: always write an overview paragraph summarizing the main trends
  • Writing Task 2: plan your essay for 5 minutes before writing — structure your argument
  • Writing Task 2: address every part of the question — Task Achievement failures are common
  • Speaking: give extended 2-4 sentence answers in Part 1 — avoid one-word responses

IELTS Practice Test Questions

Prepare for the IELTS - International English Language Testing System exam with our free practice test modules. Each quiz covers key topics to help you pass on your first try.

IELTS Grammar: Complex Sentences

IELTS Exam Questions covering Grammar: Complex Sentences. Master IELTS Test concepts for certification prep.

IELTS Grammar & Sentence Structure

Free IELTS Practice Test featuring Grammar & Sentence Structure. Improve your IELTS Exam score with mock test prep.

IELTS Listening Comprehension

IELTS Mock Exam on Listening Comprehension. IELTS Study Guide questions to pass on your first try.

IELTS Listening for Specific Information

IELTS Test Prep for Listening for Specific Information. Practice IELTS Quiz questions and boost your score.

IELTS Online Sample Test

IELTS Questions and Answers on Online Sample Test. Free IELTS practice for exam readiness.

IELTS Reading Comprehension

IELTS Mock Test covering Reading Comprehension. Online IELTS Test practice with instant feedback.

IELTS Reading: Matching Headings

Free IELTS Quiz on Reading: Matching Headings. IELTS Exam prep questions with detailed explanations.

IELTS Speaking Part 2: Cue Cards

IELTS Practice Questions for Speaking Part 2: Cue Cards. Build confidence for your IELTS certification exam.

IELTS Speaking & Pronunciation

IELTS Test Online for Speaking & Pronunciation. Free practice with instant results and feedback.

IELTS Vocabulary & Lexical Resource

IELTS Study Material on Vocabulary & Lexical Resource. Prepare effectively with real exam-style questions.

IELTS Writing Skills & Composition

Free IELTS Test covering Writing Skills & Composition. Practice and track your IELTS exam readiness.

IELTS Writing Task 1: Describing Trends

IELTS Exam Questions covering Writing Task 1: Describing Trends. Master IELTS Test concepts for certification prep.

IELTS Writing Task 2: Opinion Essays

Free IELTS Practice Test featuring Writing Task 2: Opinion Essays. Improve your IELTS Exam score with mock test prep.

IELTS Pros and Cons

Pros
  • +Test-taking strategies can improve performance beyond raw content knowledge, especially on time-pressured multiple-choice sections
  • +Proven strategies for eliminating wrong answers and managing time are transferable across similar exams and situations
  • +Strategic approaches to pacing prevent candidates from losing points on questions they would answer correctly with adequate time
  • +Familiarity with question formats reduces cognitive load on exam day, freeing mental resources for content recall
  • +Strategy-focused preparation can accelerate readiness for candidates with strong foundational knowledge who need tactical refinement
Cons
  • Test-taking strategies cannot compensate for content knowledge gaps — strategy amplifies knowledge but does not replace it
  • Overemphasis on strategy during preparation can crowd out time needed for content review
  • Strategies that work in practice may fail under actual exam stress if not practiced enough to become automatic
  • Some strategy advice circulating online is specific to older exam formats and no longer applies to current versions
  • Generic strategy tips often underemphasize the domain-specific techniques that matter most for this particular exam type

IELTS Questions and Answers

About the Author

Dr. Yuki TanakaPhD Applied Linguistics, MA TESOL

Applied Linguist & Language Proficiency Exam Specialist

Georgetown University

Dr. Yuki Tanaka holds a PhD in Applied Linguistics and an MA in TESOL from Georgetown University. A former language examiner with the British Council, she has 18 years of experience designing and teaching language proficiency preparation courses for TOEFL, IELTS, CELPIP, Duolingo English Test, JLPT, Cambridge FCE/CAE, and Versant assessments worldwide.

Join the Discussion

Connect with other students preparing for this exam. Share tips, ask questions, and get advice from people who have been there.

View discussion (4 replies)