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Scoring

How IELTS band scores work

What IELTS bands mean, how practice scores differ from the official exam, and how to use Listening/Reading results productively.

What an IELTS band means

Official IELTS reports a band from 0 to 9 (often in half bands) for each skill — Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking — plus an overall average. Universities and visa pathways usually ask for a minimum overall band and sometimes a skill floor (for example 6.5 overall with no skill below 6.0).

Listening and Reading bands map from raw correct answers on a 40-question paper. Writing and Speaking use examiner criteria (task response, coherence, vocabulary, grammar, fluency, pronunciation).

Practice bands vs official results

  • Practice Listening/Reading scores are estimates from answer keys — useful for tracking progress, not certificates
  • AI band estimates and tips for Writing and Speaking. For practice only, not an official score.
  • Writing & Speaking are reviewed by your center's teachers, with feedback in your results.
  • Independent practice platform. Not affiliated with IELTS, British Council, IDP, or Cambridge Assessment English.

How to use practice scores well

Treat instantaneous Listening and Reading bands as a training signal: retake sections, review wrong answers, and watch whether your average stabilizes. For Writing and Speaking, prioritize actionable feedback (criteria + next drafts) over chasing a single number.

Independent students on IELTS Ready can use optional AI feedback for Writing/Speaking — always labelled as AI-estimated. Center students typically get instructor review through their institute.

Common mistakes

  • Assuming one strong mock guarantees the same official result
  • Ignoring Writing/Speaking until late because Listening looked fine
  • Comparing practice bands across different apps without knowing the answer-key quality

Start with free practice on your IELTS Ready account.

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Independent practice platform. Not affiliated with IELTS, British Council, IDP, or Cambridge Assessment English.

Questions? hello@ieltsready.org