Test of English as a Foreign Language
Structure & Format
- The TOEFL iBT measures all four academic language skills: Reading, Listening, Speaking, and Writing, in a way that reflects how English is used in real classroom settings.
- The test takes just under 2 hours, but with check-in and administrative time, you should plan for ~2.5 hours.
- It’s offered in two modes:
Skills Assessed
- Reading: Understanding academic passages, comparing ideas, drawing inferences.
- Listening: Comprehending lectures, discussions, and conversations.
- Speaking: Includes independent tasks (expressing opinion) and integrated tasks (based on reading + listening).
- Writing: Two tasks — one where you read + listen and write, another where you write your opinion in a classroom-discussion style.
Scoring
- Each section (Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing) is scored on a 0–30 scale.
- The total score (sum of all sections) ranges from 0–120.
- Speaking and Writing responses are evaluated using a combination of AI scoring and human raters.
- Score Validity: Your TOEFL iBT score is valid for 2 years.
Changes Coming (from Jan 21, 2026):
- The scoring scale will shift to 1–6 (in 0.5 increments), aligning with the CEFR framework.
- For a transition period (2 years), you’ll also receive a comparable 0–120 score along with the new scale.
Why It Matters
- Academic Relevance: TOEFL iBT is designed around real academic contexts, so it’s highly aligned with the demands of university-level study.
- Flexibility: With the Home Edition option, students who don’t have access to a test center can still take the test remotely.
- Reliability & Fairness: The hybrid scoring system helps maintain consistency and reduce bias in evaluating speaking and writing
- Global Recognition: Widely accepted by universities around the world; it’s one of the most trusted academic English proficiency tests.