
IELTS Speaking Exam
​The IELTS Speaking test lasts 11–14 minutes and is the same for both Academic and General Training. It is a face-to-face interview with an examiner and is divided into three parts.
Jump to Section
Part 1 Speaking
Introduction and Interview (4–5 minutes)
​
This section is designed to make you feel comfortable and get you talking naturally about familiar topics.
​
What happens:
-
The examiner will introduce themselves and ask you to confirm your identity.
-
You’ll answer general questions about your home, work, studies, and interests.
-
Questions are simple and conversational, for example:
-
“Do you work or study?”
-
“What do you like about your hometown?”
-
“How often do you use the internet?”
-

Part 2 Speaking
Long Turn (3–4 minutes)
​
This section tests your ability to speak at length on a given topic.
​
What happens:
-
You’ll receive a task card (cue card) with a topic and three or four bullet points to guide your answer.
-
You have one minute to prepare and up to two minutes to speak.
-
After you finish, the examiner may ask one or two follow-up questions.
​
Example topic:
Describe a book you’ve recently read.
You should say:
-
What the book is
-
What it is about
-
Why you decided to read it
-
And explain what you liked or disliked about it
Part 3 Speaking
Discussion (4–5 minutes)
​
This section is a two-way discussion on broader or more abstract topics related to Part 2.
​
What happens:
-
The examiner asks deeper, opinion-based questions.
-
You’ll discuss ideas, trends, and social issues, for example:
-
“Do you think reading habits are changing among young people?”
-
“How do you think technology has influenced education?”
-
