IELTS Practice Tests 2026: Free Online Tests for All Sections
Free IELTS practice tests for Listening, Reading, Writing, and Speaking. Practice with realistic IELTS questions and get band score guidance for 2026.

How to Use IELTS Practice Tests Effectively
IELTS practice tests are one of the most valuable tools in your preparation — but only when used correctly. Many test-takers make the mistake of taking practice tests without reviewing their answers thoroughly or without simulating real exam conditions. Both mistakes limit the learning value of practice.
The most effective approach follows a cycle: take a timed practice test under conditions as close to the real exam as possible, then review every answer carefully. For Listening and Reading sections, identify why you got wrong answers — was it a vocabulary gap, a misunderstanding of the question type, or a timing issue? For Writing, compare your response to high-scoring sample answers and identify specific improvements. For Speaking, record yourself and compare your responses to band-level descriptors.
The IELTS is offered in two versions: Academic (for university admission and professional registration) and General Training (for work, migration, and non-academic training programs). The Listening and Speaking sections are identical for both versions. The Reading and Writing sections differ — Academic Reading passages are longer and more complex; Academic Writing Task 1 requires describing data from graphs or charts, while General Training Task 1 requires writing a letter. Ensure you practice the correct version for your purpose.
Official IELTS practice materials from British Council, IDP, or Cambridge Assessment English (the three IELTS test administrators) are the most accurate simulation of real test conditions. The Cambridge IELTS book series (books 1–18 as of 2025, published by Cambridge University Press) contains retired actual IELTS tests and is the gold standard for practice material. Supplement with online practice tests and resources for volume and variety.

IELTS Listening Practice
The IELTS Listening section is 30 minutes long (plus 10 minutes to transfer answers) and contains 40 questions across four sections. You hear each recording only once and must answer questions while listening. The recordings cover four contexts: a conversation between two people in a social setting; a monologue in an everyday social context; a conversation among up to four speakers in an educational or training context; and a monologue on an academic topic.
Listening Question Types
IELTS Listening uses multiple question formats across sections: multiple choice (selecting from 3 options or matching from a longer list), form and note completion (filling blanks with words heard in the recording), sentence completion (completing sentences using exact words from the recording), short answer questions, and matching and labeling (matching information to categories or labels on a map, plan, or diagram). Multiple formats appear in each practice test section.
Listening Strategies
Before each section starts, you have brief time to preview the questions — use this time to predict what kind of information you will hear. For form and note completion, identify whether the blank requires a number, name, type, or date. When listening, follow the questions in order — answers appear in the sequence of the recording. Write words exactly as you hear them for completion questions — spelling mistakes lose marks. For map or diagram labeling, familiarize yourself with the layout before audio begins. Contractions and informal speech are common in sections 1 and 2; academic vocabulary is more common in sections 3 and 4.

IELTS Reading Practice
The IELTS Reading section is 60 minutes for 40 questions across three passages. For Academic IELTS, the passages are authentic texts drawn from books, journals, magazines, and newspapers — they are complex, dense, and often include technical vocabulary from multiple disciplines. For General Training IELTS, passages include advertisements, notices, workplace documents, and one or two longer texts on subjects of general interest.
Reading Question Types
IELTS Reading includes a wide variety of question types: True/False/Not Given and Yes/No/Not Given (the distinction matters — YNNG applies when the text expresses opinions or claims, while TFNG applies to factual statements), matching headings to paragraphs (requiring understanding of each paragraph's main idea), matching information (locating where specific information appears in the passage), matching sentence endings, sentence completion, summary completion, multiple choice, and short answer. The variety of question types means you need to adapt your reading strategy to each question format.
Reading Strategies
Time management is the biggest challenge in IELTS Reading — 60 minutes for 40 questions means 1.5 minutes per question on average, and passages require time to read. Effective strategies include: skim the passage for structure and main ideas before reading questions (30–45 seconds); for locating information questions, scan for keywords rather than reading every word; for True/False/Not Given, be strict about what 'Not Given' means — if the text does not address the statement, it is NG even if the statement seems plausible; for matching headings, cover the options, read each paragraph and summarize it, then match. Always leave 5 minutes at the end to check all answers are filled in the answer sheet.
IELTS Writing Practice
The IELTS Writing section is 60 minutes for two tasks. Task 1 (Academic: describing data from a graph, chart, table, or diagram; General: writing a letter) should be completed in approximately 20 minutes and requires at least 150 words. Task 2 (both versions: essay responding to a point of view, argument, or problem) should be completed in approximately 40 minutes and requires at least 250 words. Task 2 carries twice the marks of Task 1, so allocate your time accordingly.
Academic Task 1: Describing Data
For Academic Task 1, you are presented with a visual (line graph, bar chart, pie chart, table, map, process diagram) and must summarize the key features and make comparisons where relevant. Do not give opinions or interpretations beyond what the data shows. Introduce the graph, describe the overall trend or main feature, and provide specific data support for your key points. A good Task 1 response: paraphrases the prompt without copying it, provides a clear overview of the most significant features, and uses specific figures accurately to support points.
Task 2: Essay Writing
IELTS Writing Task 2 essay types include: discussion essays (discuss both views), opinion essays (agree/disagree or to what extent), problem and solution essays, advantages and disadvantages essays, and two-part question essays. Each type has a slightly different structure. A strong IELTS essay: directly addresses all parts of the task, presents clear and logically developed ideas, uses a variety of grammatical structures, demonstrates a range of vocabulary without excessive repetition, and reaches a minimum of 250 words. Practice writing under timed conditions — completing a full essay in 40 minutes requires both planning skill and writing speed.

IELTS Speaking Practice
The IELTS Speaking section is a face-to-face interview with a certified IELTS examiner, lasting 11 to 14 minutes. It consists of three parts that assess different aspects of spoken English ability. The Speaking test is conducted on the same day as the other sections or on a separate day within 7 days of the written test.
Part 1: Introduction and Interview (4–5 minutes)
The examiner asks general questions about you, your home, work, study, interests, and everyday topics. Questions are designed to be accessible — they do not require specialized knowledge. Your goal is to speak naturally and at length with accurate grammar and varied vocabulary. Short answers (yes/no responses) indicate low fluency; aim to extend your answers with reasons and examples without waiting for follow-up prompts.
Part 2: Individual Long Turn (3–4 minutes)
You receive a task card describing a topic to speak about (e.g., 'Describe a book you have read and enjoyed') along with prompts covering what, when, where, and why. You have 1 minute to prepare notes and then must speak for 1 to 2 minutes. Practice structuring your long turn: introduce the topic, cover the prompt points, and add detail and reflection. End clearly to indicate you have finished. Common mistakes: running out of things to say before 1 minute, or speaking unfocused without addressing the prompts.
Part 3: Two-Way Discussion (4–5 minutes)
The examiner asks more abstract questions related to the Part 2 topic. These questions require expressing and justifying opinions, discussing possibilities, and speculating about abstract ideas. Part 3 assesses your ability to discuss complex topics at a higher level of abstraction than Part 1. Use discourse markers (however, on the other hand, it depends on...) to organize your ideas. Practice speaking about unfamiliar topics under time pressure — the ability to generate ideas and language quickly is what Part 3 measures.
Practice With Official Cambridge IELTS Books
About the Author
Attorney & Bar Exam Preparation Specialist
Yale Law SchoolJames R. Hargrove is a practicing attorney and legal educator with a Juris Doctor from Yale Law School and an LLM in Constitutional Law. With over a decade of experience coaching bar exam candidates across multiple jurisdictions, he specializes in MBE strategy, state-specific essay preparation, and multistate performance test techniques.