IELTS Speaking (Academic) — Part 1 Complete Tutorial
In this tutorial you’ll learn exactly how to give short, natural answers that match examiner expectations in Part 1. You’ll follow a simple structure, practise micro-skills, and see mini-examples that you can adapt to your own life. Keep your tone friendly, your ideas concrete, and your delivery steady.
Understand the task and the timing
In Part 1, the examiner asks familiar questions about everyday topics like work, studies, home, habits, and preferences. Your goal is a short, focused response that sounds spontaneous but organized. Do not give a speech; think “one clear idea + one reason + one tiny example”. Keep an eye on time: around 12–18 seconds is ideal for each answer in practice. This window prevents rambling and encourages precision. If you speak too briefly, your ideas may feel undeveloped; if you go too long, you risk losing accuracy. Pacing matters: breathe, pause briefly after the question, then answer confidently. You don’t need advanced or rare vocabulary to succeed; everyday words used accurately are powerful. Avoid memorized answers—the examiner can hear rehearsed language. Instead, anchor your reply in your real life to sound authentic. Finally, remember that Part 1 warms you up; use it to establish fluency, control, and a steady rhythm.
Mini-Example
Q: “Do you work or are you a student?”
A: “I’m a software student at a local college, and I enjoy the hands-on projects because they help me understand theory more quickly.”
Quick checklist
Answer the question first, then expand
Begin directly—say “I work,” “I’m a student,” or “I live in…”. This immediate response shows comprehension and confidence. After your direct answer, add a reason introduced by “because,” “since,” or “mainly”. Keep your reason concrete rather than abstract; mention a feature, habit, or routine. Then add a mini-example to make the reason believable. The example can be a short incident, a typical day, or a quick comparison. Avoid long background stories; Part 1 doesn’t require narrative detail. Use linking words sparingly: “and,” “also,” “so,” “but” are enough here. If you hesitate, say a placeholder like “Well, to be honest,” then deliver your idea. The core rhythm is: Answer → Reason → Mini-example. Practise saying this structure aloud until it feels automatic.
Mini-Example
Q: “What do you like about your studies?”
A: “I’m a business student, and I like the case studies because they connect theory with real companies; for example, last week we analysed a local start-up’s marketing plan.”
Quick checklist
Keep ideas familiar and specific
Choose details from your real routine: places you go, people you meet, and tools you use. Specifics reduce hesitation because you already know the facts. Avoid generalities like “It is very important”; instead, name a concrete point. If you need to invent, keep it realistic and consistent with your life. Use simple nouns and verbs before advanced vocabulary. Pronouns should be clear—if you say “it,” the listener must know what “it” refers to. Name days, times, or locations briefly to anchor your answer. Avoid lists; one or two items are enough in Part 1. If the question asks “why,” make sure your sentence actually explains the reason. Practise transforming a general idea into a precise example in one sentence. This habit lifts both coherence and lexical precision.
Mini-Example
General: “Transport is convenient.” → Specific: “The metro near my flat comes every six minutes, so I usually arrive on campus early.”
Quick checklist
Use clear, short sentence chains
Fluency improves when you link two or three short sentences rather than one long sentence. Start with the main idea, then attach a reason, then a brief example. Avoid excessive subclauses; they increase the chance of grammar slips. If you make a small mistake, keep going—repair it quickly with a simple reformulation. Use light connectors such as “so,” “because,” and “for example” to guide the listener. Intonation should rise slightly at the start and fall on the final key word. Keep your verbs active; prefer “I take the bus” over “The bus is taken by me.” Articles (“a,” “an,” “the”) are small but essential for accuracy. Countable nouns need plurals or articles; check this habit in practice. Finish confidently; don’t fade out with “and… yeah.” The examiner values control and completion more than complexity for its own sake.
Mini-Example
Chain: “I live near the river. I like it because it’s quiet in the morning. For example, I often jog there before class.”
Quick checklist
Show controlled vocabulary (not flashy words)
Examiners reward accurate, appropriate word choice. Use everyday verbs precisely: “commute,” “prepare,” “prefer,” “enjoy,” “organise.” Add one specific modifier when useful: “a quiet street,” “a crowded bus,” “a tight schedule.” Paraphrase simple ideas to avoid repetition: “I like” → “I enjoy / I’m into / I appreciate.” Collocations show naturalness: “make time,” “catch the bus,” “hand in homework.” Avoid forcing rare words that don’t fit your situation. If you forget a word, explain it simply instead of freezing. Pronounce multi-syllable words clearly; stress the right syllable for clarity. Avoid fillers like “like, you know, kinda” in every sentence. Use one idiom only if it’s natural for you; don’t stack idioms. Remember: clarity beats cleverness in Part 1.
Mini-Example
Upgrade: “I usually grab a quick breakfast and catch the metro, so I make it to class on time.”
Quick checklist
Maintain grammar control with simple tenses
Most Part 1 answers use present simple for habits and facts. Use present continuous for actions happening around now if relevant. Past simple fits short experiences; future with “going to” or “will” is fine for plans. Keep subject–verb agreement tight; listen for third-person “s”. Articles and prepositions create many errors—slow down to place them correctly. If a sentence feels long, split it in two to keep accuracy high. Conditionals can appear, but prefer type 0/1 patterns for clarity. Relative clauses are useful, but keep them short to avoid losing the sentence. Self-correct calmly: “I go—sorry—I went there last weekend.” A few precise sentences with no errors will impress more than ambitious but broken grammar.
Mini-Example
Form: “I study economics. I’m preparing for midterms this month, and I went to the library yesterday to review.”
Quick checklist
Sound natural: pace, pause, and intonation
Start after a micro-pause; it signals control. Keep a steady pace—neither rushed nor slow. Emphasise key content words; reduce function words naturally. Use falling intonation to finish the main point confidently. Smile lightly; it relaxes your voice and helps rhythm. If you lose a word, paraphrase quickly and move on. Avoid monotone delivery; vary pitch slightly across the three sentences. Do not copy a foreign accent that doesn’t belong to you. Clarity is more important than speed; aim for clean syllables. Practise with a timer and record yourself to check pacing. Over time, your delivery will feel automatic and calm.
Mini-Example
Practice cue: Pause 1 second → “I’m a design student.” → small rise → “I enjoy studio classes” → fall → “because I get feedback on real projects.”
Quick checklist
Handle follow-ups and “why” questions
Examiners often ask one quick follow-up to deepen your first idea. Treat it as a chance to add one new detail, not a new story. If asked “why,” point to a clear cause—time, money, convenience, mood, or learning. Use a contrast if helpful: “I used to…, but now…”. Keep the same structure: direct answer → reason → mini-example. Avoid repeating the same words; paraphrase lightly. If you don’t have a strong opinion, say something mild and explain briefly. Stay on topic; follow-ups still belong to the original theme. End cleanly after your example so the examiner can move on. This skill shows both fluency and coherence under gentle pressure.
Mini-Example
Follow-up: “Why do you like your neighbourhood?”
A: “Mainly because it’s safe at night; for instance, I often walk back from the gym around 9 pm and there are still families outside.”
Quick checklist
Avoid common traps
Don’t memorise long scripts; they sound unnatural and may not fit the question. Don’t give lists of three or four items; choose one or two to develop. Don’t apologise for your English; show confidence through clarity. Don’t chase rare vocabulary; choose accurate, natural words. Don’t forget articles and plurals; tiny errors can distract. Don’t contradict yourself; keep facts consistent across answers. Don’t copy the question word-for-word; paraphrase slightly. Don’t end with “and that’s it”; finish with a strong final word. Don’t speak too fast; maintain a comfortable rhythm. Don’t ignore the examiner’s follow-up; answer it briefly and directly.
Mini-Example
Trap fix: Instead of “I like many things such as parks, cafés, cinemas, malls…,” say “I like the parks because they’re quiet; for example, I often read there before class.”
Quick checklist
Practise with the “A-R-E” micro-template
Use a three-piece micro-template in every answer to build automaticity. Answer the question in one short clause. Give a clear Reason with “because/since/mainly.” Add a tiny Example: a habit, place, time, or story fragment. Speak for 12–18 seconds and stop confidently. If you need variety, reorder reason and example: Answer → Example → Reason. This rhythm protects your grammar and timing while showing coherence. Record yourself and check: direct start, concrete reason, believable example. With practice, you’ll produce consistent Band-7+ style answers. Use the practice in Part 2 immediately to lock the skill in place.
Mini-Example (A-R-E)
Q: “How do you usually spend your weekends?”
A: “I usually meet a close friend for coffee because it helps me switch off after a busy week; for example, we try a new café every Saturday morning.”
Quick checklist
IELTS Speaking (Academic) — Part 1: Three Official-Style Practice Questions
For each question: Preparation (15s) → Answer & Recording (15s) → Playback → Submit to WhatsApp/Email. Your preparation time is equal to your speaking time. Speak naturally and concisely, just like the real test.
Q1 Work/Study — Daily Routine
Prep: 15s • Answer: 15sQuestion: Do you work or are you a student? What do you like most about it?
Tip: Give a short status (work/student), one specific thing you enjoy, and a quick example.
Your Recording — Q1
Keep this file; attach it when sending via WhatsApp or Email below.
Submit Q1 to LingExam
WhatsApp sends to +1 559 462 0638. Email opens your mail app to Lingexam.com@gmail.com. Please attach your audio before sending.
Q2 Home — Neighbourhood
Prep: 15s • Answer: 15sQuestion: Where do you live now? What do you like about your neighbourhood?
Tip: Mention the area (city/part), one feature (e.g., parks, transport), and an example.
Your Recording — Q2
Keep this file; attach it when sending via WhatsApp or Email below.
Submit Q2 to LingExam
WhatsApp sends to +1 559 462 0638. Email opens your mail app to Lingexam.com@gmail.com. Please attach your audio before sending.
Q3 Free Time — Weekends
Prep: 15s • Answer: 15sQuestion: How do you usually spend your weekends? Why do you enjoy these activities?
Tip: Give 1–2 activities, one short reason each, and a tiny example/story.
Your Recording — Q3
Keep this file; attach it when sending via WhatsApp or Email below.
Submit Q3 to LingExam
WhatsApp sends to +1 559 462 0638. Email opens your mail app to Lingexam.com@gmail.com. Please attach your audio before sending.
Part 3 — Band 7+ Sample Answers, Stream-Only Audio & Instant Answer Keys
Listen to a concise Band-7+ style sample for each question (audio is stream-only). Then read the instant answer key and a sentence-by-sentence explanation showing why the sample earns a strong score. Use this as a model for your own 12–18 second replies.
Q1 Work/Study — Daily Routine
Band 7+ SampleQuestion
Do you work or are you a student? What do you like most about it?
Sample Answer (Text)
I’m a computer science student at a public college, and what I enjoy most is the project-based learning. It keeps the theory practical, because every week we build something small that tests a new idea. For instance, last month my group created a simple budgeting app, and that helped me understand data structures much faster than lectures alone.
Sample Answer (Audio — stream-only)
Audio is for listening only — downloads are disabled by design.
Why this earns Band 7+ (Instant Answer Key)
Step-by-Step Explanation
Open the detailed explanation (12–16 sentences)
1) The sample opens with a direct status (“I’m a computer science student”), which immediately addresses the first part of the question. 2) It follows with a clear preference (“what I enjoy most is the project-based learning”), placing the key idea early. 3) The phrase “keeps the theory practical” paraphrases the benefit rather than repeating “I like it”. 4) Time framing (“every week”) signals a routine, aligning with present simple. 5) “We build something small” is concrete and manageable for Part 1 timing. 6) The example (“a simple budgeting app”) is specific enough to sound authentic without becoming a long story. 7) Switching to past simple (“created”) marks a completed action cleanly. 8) The clause “helped me understand data structures” expresses impact, not just activity. 9) Vocabulary stays natural yet precise (“project-based”, “data structures”). 10) Sentences are short and linked by logical connectors (“because,” “for instance”). 11) There’s no list; the answer develops one idea deeply, which boosts coherence. 12) The ending lands on the benefit (“faster than lectures alone”), giving a strong final word. 13) The overall delivery would be steady, allowing clear word stress. 14) The content fits comfortably within 12–18 seconds for realistic practice.
Q2 Home — Neighbourhood
Band 7+ SampleQuestion
Where do you live now? What do you like about your neighbourhood?
Sample Answer (Text)
I live in the north side of the city, near a small metro station, and I like the area because it’s convenient without feeling crowded. The trains run every few minutes in the morning, so I can get to campus early and grab coffee before class. On weekends there’s a park nearby, and the walking paths are quiet enough to clear my head.
Sample Answer (Audio — stream-only)
Audio is for listening only — downloads are disabled by design.
Why this earns Band 7+ (Instant Answer Key)
Step-by-Step Explanation
Open the detailed explanation (12–16 sentences)
1) The answer starts with a precise but brief location, which satisfies the first part quickly. 2) The preference (“convenient without feeling crowded”) gives a balanced evaluation. 3) The transport detail (“every few minutes”) is concrete and believable. 4) Purpose is marked with “so I can…,” a natural spoken connector. 5) The coffee routine adds personal color without drifting off topic. 6) The weekend sentence introduces contrast (weekday vs weekend), which enriches coherence. 7) “Walking paths” and “clear my head” are common, idiomatic combinations. 8) All verbs are controlled and simple, protecting accuracy. 9) No lists are used; only two benefits are developed briefly. 10) The example remains short to respect the Part-1 time frame. 11) Word choice is everyday but precise, which suits Band-7 descriptors. 12) The closing image (quiet paths) gives a satisfying finish for intonation. 13) The structure maps to Answer → Reason → Example again. 14) The overall pacing is steady, enabling clean pronunciation and stress.
Q3 Free Time — Weekends
Band 7+ SampleQuestion
How do you usually spend your weekends? Why do you enjoy these activities?
Sample Answer (Text)
Most weekends I meet a close friend for coffee and a short walk, and I enjoy it because it helps me reset after a busy week. We try a new café every couple of weeks, so there’s always something small to talk about, like a different roast or pastry. If the weather’s good, we walk by the river for twenty minutes before heading home.
Sample Answer (Audio — stream-only)
Audio is for listening only — downloads are disabled by design.
Why this earns Band 7+ (Instant Answer Key)
Step-by-Step Explanation
Open the detailed explanation (12–16 sentences)
1) The answer begins with a routine marker (“Most weekends”), which frames the topic clearly. 2) Two related activities (coffee + short walk) keep the scope tight. 3) The reason (“reset after a busy week”) expresses a personal effect rather than a generic value. 4) The café detail provides variety while avoiding a long list. 5) Specific nouns (“roast,” “pastry”) add realism and lexical precision. 6) The conditional (“If the weather’s good…”) is accurate and adds flexibility. 7) The time reference (“twenty minutes”) is concise and concrete. 8) Verbs are active and common, which supports accuracy under time pressure. 9) Phrasal verbs like “head home” are idiomatic and natural for Band-7 discourse. 10) Sentences are short, enabling clean stress placement. 11) The progression is logical: routine → reason → example → variation. 12) The content remains personal and believable, meeting examiner expectations. 13) There is no unnecessary narrative; the answer ends neatly. 14) Everything can be delivered in under 18 seconds with calm pacing.
Part 4 — Hardest Words from the Sample Answers (with IPA, Patterns & Pitfalls)
Explore the five most challenging words from each sample. Tap each entry to review its British/American IPA, part(s) of speech, common patterns, a clear context-based definition, a model sentence, a simpler synonym, and typical learner mistakes.
From Q1 Work/Study — Daily Routine
5 key wordsproject-based BrE /ˈprɒdʒ.ekt beɪst/ · AmE /ˈprɑː.dʒekt beɪst/
practical BrE/AmE /ˈpræk.tɪ.kəl/
budgeting BrE/AmE /ˈbʌdʒ.ɪ.tɪŋ/
theory BrE /ˈθɪə.ri/ · AmE /ˈθiː.ə.ri/
data structure BrE /ˈdeɪ.tə ˈstrʌk.tʃə/ · AmE /ˈdeɪ.tə ˈstrʌk.tʃər/
From Q2 Home — Neighbourhood
5 key wordsconvenient BrE /kənˈviː.ni.ənt/ · AmE /kənˈviː.niənt/
crowded BrE/AmE /ˈkraʊ.dɪd/
metro BrE /ˈmet.rəʊ/ · AmE /ˈmet.roʊ/
campus BrE/AmE /ˈkæm.pəs/
nearby BrE /ˌnɪəˈbaɪ/ · AmE /ˌnɪrˈbaɪ/
From Q3 Free Time — Weekends
5 key wordsreset BrE/AmE /ˌriːˈset/
roast BrE /rəʊst/ · AmE /roʊst/
pastry BrE/AmE /ˈpeɪ.stri/
routine BrE/AmE /ruːˈtiːn/
couple (of) BrE/AmE /ˈkʌp.əl/
Why these words?
These items are frequent in academic or everyday high-level contexts and require control of pronunciation, collocation, and usage. They also appear directly in the three sample answers, so learners can connect study with performance.
Part 5 — Hardest Phrases & Expressions (with IPA, Patterns & Pitfalls)
Review the five most challenging phrases/expressions from each sample. Each entry includes British/American IPA, possible parts of speech/function, typical patterns, a context-based definition, a model sentence, common synonyms, and mistakes learners often make.
From Q1 Work/Study — Daily Routine
5 key phraseskeep (the) theory practical BrE /kiːp ðə ˈθɪə.ri ˈpræk.tɪ.kəl/ · AmE /kiːp ðə ˈθiː.ə.ri ˈpræk.tɪ.kəl/
build (something) small BrE/AmE /bɪld ˈsʌm.θɪŋ smɔːl/
for instance BrE/AmE /fər ˈɪn.stəns/
help (someone) understand BrE/AmE /help ˈsʌm.wʌn ˌʌn.dəˈstænd/
faster than (X) alone BrE/AmE /ˈfɑː.stə ˈðæn əˈləʊn/ · /ˈfæstər ˈðæn əˈloʊn/
From Q2 Home — Neighbourhood
5 key phrasesthe north side of the city BrE/AmE /ðə nɔːːθ saɪd əv ðə ˈsɪ.ti/ · /ðə nɔːrθ saɪd əv ðə ˈsɪ.t̬i/
convenient without feeling crowded BrE/AmE /kənˈviː.ni.ənt wɪˈðaʊt ˈfiː.lɪŋ ˈkraʊ.dɪd/
grab coffee BrE/AmE /ɡræb ˈkɒf.i/ · /ɡræb ˈkɑː.fi/
run every few minutes BrE/AmE /rʌn ˈev.ri fjuː ˈmɪn.ɪts/
clear my head BrE/AmE /klɪə(r) maɪ hed/ · /klɪr maɪ hed/
From Q3 Free Time — Weekends
5 key phrasesreset after a busy week BrE/AmE /ˌriːˈset ˈɑːf.tə(r) ə ˈbɪz.i wiːk/ · /ˌriːˈset ˈæf.tɚ ə ˈbɪz.i wiːk/
every couple of weeks BrE/AmE /ˈev.ri ˈkʌp.əl əv wiːks/
head home BrE/AmE /hed həʊm/ · /hed hoʊm/
if the weather’s good BrE/AmE /ɪf ðə ˈweð.əz ɡʊd/ · /ɪf ðə ˈweð.ɚz ɡʊd/
a short walk BrE/AmE /ə ʃɔːt wɔːk/ · /ə ʃɔːrt wɔːk/
How to master these phrases
Shadow each phrase in a 12–18 second answer. Record, listen back, and check for: (1) a direct answer, (2) one reason, (3) one mini-example. Keep your stress natural and finish with a falling tone.
Part 6 — Interactive Practice (Random 10 MCQs, Instant Answer Keys)
From a pool of 30 questions built on Parts 4–5, you’ll see a random 10 each run. Select an answer to reveal a 10-sentence explanation. Track your score, then retake for a new set.
Session Summary
Great work! Review the explanations you missed, then tap Retake for a fresh set.