IELTS Speaking Practice Tests

IELTS Speaking – Advanced Tests (updating...)

IELTS Speaking questions about Advanced Tests (updating...) for Parts 1, 2 and 3, with transcript-based AI feedback available after practice.

IELTS Speaking – Forecast Tests 2025 (Part 1)

IELTS Speaking questions about Forecast Tests 2025 (Part 1) for Parts 1, 2 and 3, with transcript-based AI feedback available after practice.

IELTS Speaking – Forecast Tests 2025 (Part 2-3)

IELTS Speaking questions about Forecast Tests 2025 (Part 2-3) for Parts 1, 2 and 3, with transcript-based AI feedback available after practice.

IELTS Speaking – Practice Tests 2025

IELTS Speaking questions about Practice Tests 2025 for Parts 1, 2 and 3, with transcript-based AI feedback available after practice.

Frequently Asked Questions About IELTS Speaking Practice

IELTS Speaking has three parts and lasts 11–14 minutes. Part 1 lasts 4–5 minutes and covers familiar personal topics. Part 2 lasts 3–4 minutes, including one minute to prepare before the long turn. Part 3 lasts 4–5 minutes and develops a broader discussion related to Part 2. You can practise all three parts in the Ace of English Speaking library.

IELTS Speaking uses four equally weighted criteria: Fluency and Coherence, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range and Accuracy, and Pronunciation. During practice, track recurring issues instead of focusing only on a band estimate. Ace of English provides transcript-based feedback on answer development, vocabulary and grammar. It does not currently assess pronunciation from the audio.

Start by learning the three-part format and answering familiar Part 1 questions. Then practise planning a Part 2 long turn and supporting opinions in Part 3. Record your answer, review one specific issue and try the same skill again. Progress depends on your starting level, practice frequency and the quality of your review.

After you record an answer, the system uses the transcript to generate practice feedback. It can comment on answer development, vocabulary, grammar and relevance visible in the text. It does not currently evaluate pronunciation, accent, intonation or overall voice delivery. Use the result as a practice reference, not as an official IELTS score.

No. The feedback is generated as a self-study aid and is not produced by an official IELTS examiner. A transcript cannot capture every feature of spoken delivery, so use the suggestions to guide repeated practice and seek qualified human feedback when you need a formal or high-stakes assessment.

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