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IELTS

Why Your IELTS Speaking Score Is Probably Higher Than You Think

Self-assessment in Speaking is notoriously inaccurate. Understanding what examiners actually score changes how you prepare — and how you feel walking in.

5 min read · 10 April 2025

In every IELTS cohort, Speaking is the section most frequently underestimated by test-takers. Students who believe they will score 5.5 often achieve 6.0 or 6.5. The reason is consistent: candidates judge themselves on accent and grammar, while examiners score on fluency, coherence, and vocabulary range.

What Examiners Actually Score

  • Fluency and Coherence (25%): How smoothly and logically you speak — not whether you speak fast
  • Lexical Resource (25%): Range and precision of vocabulary — not number of advanced words
  • Grammatical Range and Accuracy (25%): Variety of structures used — not whether you make errors
  • Pronunciation (25%): Whether your speech is consistently clear — not whether you have an accent
Accent does not affect your IELTS Speaking score. An Indian, Brazilian, or Arabic accent is not penalised. Pronunciation scoring is about intelligibility — whether the listener can consistently understand you — not about sounding British or American.

The Fluency Misconception

Many candidates believe fluency means speaking quickly without pausing. Examiners define fluency as the ability to produce extended speech without frequent repetition or self-correction. A student who speaks at a measured pace, develops their ideas logically, and maintains coherence will score higher on Fluency than one who speaks fast but repeats and self-corrects constantly.

How to Accurately Self-Assess Your Speaking

  • Record yourself answering a Part 2 topic (2-minute monologue) and listen back
  • Count how often you use filler words or repeat the same vocabulary — that is your Lexical Resource gap
  • Notice where you restart sentences — that is your Fluency and Coherence gap
  • Ask: can a listener follow my argument without confusion? That is Coherence
  • Read the IELTS Speaking band descriptors — most students score themselves on a different scale than examiners use

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