
IELTS Listening is the 30-minute first paper that opens every IELTS test, built from four sections of 10 questions each — 40 questions in total, recorded once and played once. The four sections move from an everyday conversation to an academic lecture, and your raw score to band conversion is fixed. This guide covers the […]

In IELTS Listening, a multiple choice question gives you a spoken passage and a set of printed options, and you mark the one the speaker actually confirms. Almost every option you see also gets named in the audio, so the work is hearing confirm versus reject rather than spotting a familiar word. This guide explains […]

The IELTS Listening test draws on nine types of question, and knowing which one you face before the audio plays is half the work. Each format has a fixed answer shape — a label, a single letter, one word, or a number — so spotting the type in the reading window tells you exactly what […]

To improve listening you train your ear with deliberate technique, not background noise: shadowing, dictation and active note-taking lift comprehension far faster than passive exposure ever will. Active listening is the skill underneath every gain — engaging with meaning instead of letting sound wash past. This guide covers what active listening is and why it […]

The most reliable IELTS Listening gains come from a fixed method, not luck: the same routine on every section stops you missing answers you could hear. You start with a pre-listening routine, read and annotate questions, predict the answer type, follow signpost words, stay one question ahead, train all four accents, transfer answers carefully, and […]

Table completion gives you a grid of rows and columns to fill, and the headers tell you the category of every gap before the audio starts. You read each gap as a known type — a price, a date, a place — then catch that value as the speaker moves through the table. This guide […]

A complete IELTS Listening practice test gives you four recorded sections, 40 questions, an audio file and an answer key so you can sit the real thing before exam day. This guide covers what a practice test includes and how to use one under timing. It also shows where to find free sample questions with […]

Form completion gives you a part-filled form and asks you to write the missing words and numbers as you hear them, almost always in Section 1 of the IELTS Listening test. The audio is an everyday transaction, so the gaps hold predictable personal details such as spelled names, phone numbers, addresses and dates. This guide […]

The fastest way to listen better is to stop listening to reply and start listening to understand. That single shift turns passive hearing into active listening, where you track meaning instead of waiting for your turn. The article closes with how each strategy transfers to IELTS Listening, which rewards the same focus on meaning and […]

IELTS Listening sentence completion asks you to fill the gap in a printed sentence with the exact word from audio, kept inside a stated word limit. The trick is that the missing word must fit the sentence grammatically, so the question is half listening and half grammar. Read the stem first and predict whether the […]

A registration form in IELTS Listening puts you in a Section 1 sign-up scene. One speaker enrols for a course, gym, library, or conference, and you write down the details you hear. The answers it tests are the exact Section 1 types: spelled names, a date of birth, an address with postcode, a phone number, […]

Section 1 of the IELTS Listening test is an everyday conversation between two people that you answer with form completion across 10 questions. It is built from a registration, booking, or enquiry exchange, so the audio gives you names, numbers, dates, and addresses to write down rather than ideas to interpret. That makes it the […]