IELTS Band Scores Explained 2026 June: From 0 to 9 & What You Need

Understand every IELTS band score from 0 to 9. How scores are calculated, rounding rules, Academic vs General Training differences, and university requirements.

IELTS Band Scores Explained 2026 June: From 0 to 9 & What You Need

IELTS Band Score Key Facts

📊0–9Band Score RangeHalf-band increments
🎯6.5Typical University EntryMost UK/Australian universities
⏱️2 YearsScore ValidityFrom test date
🌍11,000+Accepting OrganisationsWorldwide
📝4Test SkillsListening, Reading, Writing, Speaking
🔄4 CriteriaWriting & Speaking MarkingEach skill graded separately
Ielts Band Scores Explained - IELTS - International English Language Testing System certification study resource

Your IELTS band score is a single number that sums up your English ability — and it carries real weight. Universities, immigration authorities, and employers around the world use it to decide who gets in, who gets a visa, and who gets the job. The scale runs from 0 to 9, reported in whole and half bands. Band 9 means Expert. Band 0 means you didn't attempt the test.

Here's the thing most people miss: your Overall Band Score is the average of your four section scores (Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking), rounded to the nearest whole or half band. So a 6.0 in Listening, 6.5 in Reading, 5.5 in Writing, and 6.5 in Speaking gives you an Overall Band of 6.125 — which rounds up to 6.5, not 6.0. That half band can be the difference between a visa approval and a refusal.

The test has two versions: Academic and General Training. Academic is for university entry and professional registration. General Training is for secondary education, work experience, and immigration to countries like Canada, Australia, and the UK. Both versions test the same four skills but the Reading and Writing sections differ — and their band score interpretations can vary too.

Whether you're aiming for a Band 6.0 for a UK student visa or a Band 7.0 for a nursing registration, understanding exactly how your score is built — and what you need to change to move it up — is the first step. Start with a take a free IELTS practice test to benchmark your current level before you plan your preparation strategy.

Most test-takers focus on their weakest skill. That's a reasonable starting point, but it isn't always the most efficient approach. If your Writing is dragging your Overall from 6.5 to 6.25 (which rounds to 6.5 anyway), but your Reading is at 5.5 and needs to reach 6.0 for a university condition, you should prioritise Reading. Score strategy — knowing which component to target — often matters as much as raw preparation time.

The IELTS test is jointly owned and managed by the British Council, IDP: IELTS Australia, and Cambridge Assessment English. It's accepted by more than 11,000 organisations in 140 countries. For immigration purposes, the UK Home Office, Australian Department of Home Affairs, and Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada all recognise specific IELTS thresholds as proof of English proficiency. For academic purposes, virtually every English-medium university in the UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and Ireland uses IELTS as a standard entry requirement.

IELTS isn't just for non-native speakers. Some universities require IELTS from all applicants whose previous education was not in English — regardless of nationality. If you studied your entire undergraduate degree in English, many institutions will waive the IELTS requirement. Check individual institution policies before booking.

One detail that surprises many test-takers: your Test Report Form (TRF) arrives in the post, but results also appear online through the IELTS website within 13 days of the test. Most universities and immigration systems accept the online result code. Keep your TRF in a safe place — replacement copies cost money and take time.

There is no pass or fail in IELTS. Every test-taker receives a band score between 0 and 9, and organisations set their own thresholds. A Band 4 is a valid result — it just isn't sufficient for most degree programmes. This distinction matters: you haven't 'failed' the test if you scored 5.5 when you needed 6.5. You've accurately measured your current level. The question is what to change before you sit again.

IELTS Band Score Scale: All 9 Levels

Pass: 6
09
00
Non-User
Did not attempt the test or provided too little evidence for assessment.
12
Intermittent User
Essentially no ability. Great difficulty understanding spoken and written English.
33
Extremely Limited User
Conveys and understands only general meaning in very familiar situations.
44
Limited User
Basic competence limited to familiar situations. Frequent problems in understanding and expression.
55
Modest User
Partial command of the language, copes with overall meaning in most situations though likely to make many mistakes.
66
Competent User
Generally effective command despite some inaccuracies. Can use and understand fairly complex language, particularly in familiar situations.
77
Good User
Operational command with occasional inaccuracies. Generally handles complex language well and understands detailed reasoning.
88
Very Good User
Fully operational command with only occasional unsystematic inaccuracies.
99
Expert User
Full operational command. Appropriate, accurate and fluent with complete understanding.

Half bands (e.g. 6.5, 7.5) are used for Overall and individual section scores.

Half Bands Can Make or Break Your Application

IELTS reports scores in whole and half bands: 5.0, 5.5, 6.0, 6.5, 7.0, 7.5, 8.0, 8.5, 9.0. That half-band gap between 6.0 and 6.5 can determine whether a UK Skilled Worker visa is approved or refused, whether a nursing body accepts your registration, or whether a top university offers you a conditional place. Never treat half bands as minor differences — organisations set exact thresholds, and 6.0 is not the same as 6.5. Not even close.

Band Descriptors: What Each Level Means

🔴Band 0–3: Non-User to Extremely LimitedBeginner

Bands 0–1 mean you didn't attempt the test or have almost no English. Band 2 shows extremely basic understanding. Band 3 means you can convey general meaning in very familiar situations — typical for complete beginners. Very few recognised programmes accept below Band 4.

  • Band 0: Did not attempt
  • Band 1: Isolated words only
  • Band 2–3: Extremely limited communication
🟡Band 4–5: Limited to Modest UserElementary

Band 4 gets you basic competence in familiar situations but causes frequent problems. Band 5 means you cope with overall meaning but still make many mistakes — acceptable for some pre-sessional English courses and certain vocational programmes. Not suitable for most university degrees.

  • Band 4: Limited user, familiar situations only
  • Band 5: Partial command, many mistakes
🟢Band 6–6.5: Competent UserMost Required

The most important zone for most test-takers. Band 6.0 is the minimum for UK student visas and many undergraduate programmes. Band 6.5 unlocks postgraduate entry at most Russell Group universities and satisfies UKVI English requirements for Skilled Worker visas. Despite occasional inaccuracies, you can use fairly complex language here.

  • Band 6.0: UK student visa minimum
  • Band 6.5: Most postgraduate programmes
🔵Band 7–7.5: Good UserProfessional

Band 7 is required for professional registration (NMC nursing, GMC medicine) and competitive postgraduate programmes. Band 7.5 satisfies immigration requirements for permanent residency in Australia and Canada. Occasional inaccuracies are still acceptable but complex language is generally handled well.

  • Band 7.0: NMC/GMC professional registration
  • Band 7.5: Australian PR points threshold
Band 8–9: Very Good to Expert UserExpert

Band 8 means you have full operational command with only occasional unsystematic errors. Band 9 — Expert — is the ceiling. Fewer than 1% of test-takers score Band 9 in all four skills. These scores are required for some elite immigration pathways and professional licensing bodies with the highest thresholds.

  • Band 8.0: Elite immigration/professional pathways
  • Band 9.0: Expert — near-native command

Each of the four IELTS skills — Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking — produces its own band score. Then those four scores are averaged to create your Overall Band Score. Sounds simple. The rounding rules are where it gets interesting — and where many test-takers trip themselves up when planning their target scores.

The official IELTS rounding rules work like this: add up your four section scores and divide by four. If the result ends in .25, it rounds UP to the next half band. If it ends in .75, it rounds UP to the next whole band. If it ends in .0 or .5, it stays exactly as is. So a raw average of 6.25 becomes 6.5. A raw average of 6.75 becomes 7.0. A raw average of 6.5 stays 6.5.

Example calculation: Listening 7.0, Reading 6.5, Writing 5.5, Speaking 6.5 → total = 25.5 → divided by 4 = 6.375 → rounds up to 6.5. That rounding rule saved (or cost) many test-takers a crucial half band. When you're targeting a specific score, always calculate what you need from each section to hit your target average — don't just aim for a vague overall improvement.

Listening and Reading are scored on raw marks, then converted to band scores using official conversion tables. The exact conversion varies slightly between test sessions and paper types, but a Listening score of around 30/40 typically corresponds to Band 7.0. A Reading score of 30/40 in Academic typically corresponds to around Band 7.0. Writing and Speaking are marked by trained examiners using four criteria each — not raw counts.

That distinction matters a great deal for preparation strategy. Listening and Reading scores are predictable and trainable in a short period — raw-mark conversions follow consistent patterns. Writing and Speaking scores depend on examiner judgement across four subjective criteria. They respond better to longer-term development and practised feedback loops. Two weeks before a test? Focus on Listening and Reading. Two months to go? Invest in Writing and Speaking.

There's also a common misconception about what 'one band' means across skills. Moving your Listening from Band 6 to Band 7 means answering roughly 7–8 more questions correctly out of 40. Moving your Writing from Band 6 to Band 7 requires a fundamentally different command of vocabulary range, coherence, and grammatical complexity — not just correcting more errors. The effort is not equal. Plan accordingly.

For the best representation of real test conditions, use the IELTS sample test online tests on this site, which mirror the actual question formats across all four sections. Timing yourself under real conditions is the only way to build accurate section-by-section data on your current performance.

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How Each Skill Is Scored

Format — 4 sections, 40 questions, 30 minutes of audio + 10 minutes transfer time.

Scoring — Each correct answer = 1 mark. Raw score out of 40 converts directly to a band score. Roughly: 39–40 = Band 9, 35–37 = Band 8, 30–31 = Band 7, 23–25 = Band 6, 15–18 = Band 5. Exact conversion varies slightly per test version.

Academic vs General Training — Identical test. No version difference in Listening. Same conversion table applies to both.

Key trap — Spelling counts. A correct answer with a misspelled word is marked wrong. American and British spellings are both accepted — but be consistent.

Academic vs General Training: Key Differences

🎓Academic
  • University entry at undergraduate or postgraduate level
  • Professional registration (nurses, doctors, lawyers)
  • 3 complex academic reading texts from journals and books
  • Task 1: Describe a graph, chart, diagram, or map
  • Band 6.0–7.0 typically required for university entry
  • Higher band thresholds for competitive postgraduate programmes
VS
🌍General Training
  • Immigration to UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand
  • Work experience and vocational training programmes
  • Shorter practical texts plus one longer academic-style text
  • Task 1: Write a formal, semi-formal, or informal letter
  • Band 6.0 typical for skilled migration pathways
  • Band 7.0–8.0 for points-based permanent residency streams

Band Score Requirements: Universities & Immigration

🇬🇧Band 6.0–6.5UK Student Visa (UKVI)6.0 Overall with no component below 5.5 for most universities. IELTS for UKVI version required — not the standard test.
🏥Band 7.0+NMC Nursing Registration7.0 minimum in each component. No overall averaging allowed — all four skills must independently reach 7.0.
🩺Band 7.5GMC Medical Registration7.5 minimum in each of the four components with a minimum overall score of 7.5. Some pathways require 8.0 in Speaking.
🇦🇺Band 6.0–7.0Australian ImmigrationSkilled Worker visa: 6.0 each band (Competent English). PR: 7.0+ each band (Proficient). 8.0 earns extra points.
🇨🇦Band 6.0+Canadian PR (Express Entry)CLB 7 threshold = approximately IELTS 6.0 Listening/Reading, 5.5 Writing/Speaking. Higher IELTS earns more CRS points.
🏛️Band 7.0–8.0Selective UniversitiesOxford, Cambridge, Imperial: 7.0–7.5 overall. Many require no component below 6.5 or 7.0 for postgraduate research.

Writing and Speaking are marked by human examiners using four criteria each. Knowing what examiners actually look for — and what lowers your score — is more useful than any generic study tip.

Writing — Task Achievement (Academic) / Task Response (General Training): Did you answer the question fully? For Task 2, this means presenting a clear position, supporting it with developed arguments, and staying on topic. For Task 1 Academic, it means covering all the key features of the graph with accurate data selection — not just describing every data point but identifying the most significant trends. Off-topic responses or underdeveloped answers cap your score here regardless of how good your language is.

Writing — Coherence and Cohesion: Does your writing flow logically? This criterion assesses paragraph organisation, the sequencing of ideas, and your use of linking devices. Overusing connectors like 'firstly', 'secondly', 'furthermore' actually hurts you — examiners are looking for a variety of cohesive devices, not a formulaic list. Paragraphs should have clear central ideas. Aim for natural-sounding transitions between ideas rather than mechanical connectors at the start of every sentence.

Take the IELTS Writing Task 2 practice test practice quiz to apply these criteria in real test conditions. Each question type reflects the actual formats examiners use, so you'll build instinct for what a Band 6.0 versus Band 7.0 response actually looks like.

Lexical Resource (both Writing and Speaking): Range and accuracy of vocabulary. Band 7 requires using less common vocabulary with some awareness of collocation. Band 8 requires flexible and sophisticated use with rare errors. The single biggest mistake test-takers make: using the same basic words repeatedly — 'important', 'many', 'good'. Examiners are specifically looking for variety. 'Significant', 'substantial', 'considerable' — and understanding when each one fits — demonstrates Lexical Resource at Band 7 level.

Grammatical Range and Accuracy (both Writing and Speaking): Range means using a mix of simple, compound, and complex sentence structures. Accuracy means minimal errors that don't impede communication. Band 7 requires frequent error-free sentences with a range of structures.

Band 8 means most sentences are error-free and complex structures are used flexibly and accurately. Don't confuse complexity with length — a shorter sentence with a relative clause used correctly scores better than a long tangled sentence full of errors. Quality over quantity, always.

Speaking — Fluency and Coherence: This doesn't mean speaking fast. It means speaking at a natural pace without long pauses to search for words or reformulate grammar. You can hesitate — humans do — but the hesitation should feel communicative, not panicked. Coherence means your answers make sense as a whole and connect ideas clearly. Practise with the IELTS Speaking practice test practice test to develop natural fluency across all three speaking parts.

Speaking — Pronunciation: Systematic mispronunciation of specific sounds, incorrect word stress, or unclear sentence stress will lower your score. A foreign accent won't. You're not being tested on whether you sound like a native speaker — you're being tested on whether a listener can understand you without effort. Practise connected speech, word stress patterns, and the difference between stressed and unstressed syllables, as these affect intelligibility more than individual sound production.

One final note on Writing and Speaking: both sections are double-marked or monitored for examiner reliability. If you believe your score is significantly lower than expected, you can apply for a re-mark (Enquiry on Results) within six weeks of the test. Re-marks are not free and the score can go up, stay the same, or go down. Statistically, the majority of re-marks result in no change — examiners are trained and calibrated to strict standards. But for borderline results where half a band determines a visa or a university offer, an EOR can be worth the fee.

Preparing across all four criteria — not just writing more words or speaking longer — is the most reliable path to a higher Writing and Speaking band. Examiners follow a standardised marking system, so knowing exactly what each band descriptor requires gives you a concrete, measurable target rather than a vague aspiration to 'sound better' or 'write more complex sentences'.

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How to Improve Your IELTS Band Score

  • Identify your weakest criterion within Writing and Speaking — not just your weakest skill overall
  • Take a full timed practice test under real exam conditions before starting any targeted study
  • For Listening: practise note-taking while listening — not reading while listening (two different skills)
  • For Reading: practise skimming for gist first, then scanning for specific answers — never read word-by-word
  • For Writing Task 2: spend 5 minutes planning before you write — structure and argument coherence earn marks
  • For Speaking: record yourself and listen back — most people don't notice their hesitation patterns until they hear them
  • Learn collocations, not just individual vocabulary — 'make a decision', not 'do a decision'
  • Vary your sentence structures deliberately — use one complex sentence for every two simple ones
  • Get your Writing Task 2 marked by a qualified IELTS examiner at least once — feedback is irreplaceable
  • For UKVI applications: book IELTS for UKVI specifically — the standard version is not accepted for UK visas

IELTS band scores are valid for two years from the test date. After two years, your Test Report Form (TRF) is no longer accepted by most organisations — and you'll need to resit the test. This applies to both Academic and General Training versions equally. No extensions. No exceptions for expired scores.

There are a few edge cases. Some immigration programmes may accept older scores if you can demonstrate continuous language use in an English-speaking environment — but this is rare and always organisation-specific. Don't assume this applies to you. Always check the requirements of your specific university, immigration body, or professional regulator directly, not just the general two-year rule. The NMC strictly enforces the two-year window with no exceptions whatsoever.

Plan your booking timeline carefully. Results are available online within 13 days of the test date for paper-based IELTS. Computer-delivered IELTS results often arrive in 3–5 days. The official paper TRF is posted within two weeks of results release. If you're applying close to a deadline, the online result is typically accepted as evidence while the paper TRF is in transit — but confirm this with the organisation before you book the test.

You can resit IELTS as many times as you want. No limit. That said, scores don't automatically improve without targeted practice. Review your TRF carefully: it breaks down your individual component scores and provides a broad indication of the band range within each criterion for Writing and Speaking. Use that data to guide your next preparation period.

Don't study the same material the same way and expect a different result. If your Writing held you back, find a qualified examiner for marked practice. If Listening was the issue, practise with diverse accents — Australian, British, American, Canadian — because IELTS Listening uses all of them. Targeted gaps work faster than general study.

The international english language testing system practice test resources on this site let you simulate full test conditions before you book again. You'll build an honest picture of your readiness by skill, so you can identify whether you're close to your target before committing the test fee and the time.

One question many test-takers ask: can I improve my band by half in four weeks? Realistically, yes — but only if you've identified the specific sub-criteria holding you back. If your Writing is at Band 5.5 and you're losing marks on Task Response (not answering the question fully), that's fixable quickly with targeted practice. If your Writing band is limited by Lexical Resource (narrow vocabulary), that takes longer. Know your specific weakness before you plan.

The international english language testing system preparation resources that work best combine timed full practice tests with focused skills work. Full tests give you stamina and timing. Focused skills work — vocabulary building, grammar exercises, listening dictation — gives you incremental gains in specific areas. Both matter. Neither alone is sufficient.

IELTS Academic vs General Training: Quick Decision Guide

Choose Academic If You...
  • +Are applying to a university at undergraduate or postgraduate level
  • +Need professional registration as a nurse, doctor, or lawyer
  • +Are applying to a programme that specifically requires Academic
  • +Want recognition from the widest range of educational institutions
  • +Are taking the test as a benchmark of your academic English ability
Choose General Training If You...
  • Are applying for a UK, Australian, or Canadian immigration visa
  • Are seeking work experience or a vocational training programme
  • Need IELTS for UKVI — both Academic and GT versions exist, check which is required
  • Are applying to a secondary school or English language course
  • Have been specifically told by the accepting organisation that GT is accepted

IELTS Questions and Answers

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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.

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