IELTS · Pronunciation · Nigeria
Pronunciation for the IELTS Exam — Nigerian candidates
5% of the IELTS test plan. Pronunciation is one of four scored criteria for Speaking — covering individual sounds, word stress, sentence stress, and intonation. Calibrated for Nigerian candidates.
High-stakes exams reward two skills equally: knowledge and test-craft. This page focuses on both for one of the most failure-prone areas. Pronunciation sits at roughly 5% of the International English Language Testing System content distribution — Pronunciation is scored holistically. Examiners listen for intelligibility, not native-speaker accent. Common Band-6 ceilings are caused by inconsistent word stress and lack of intonation variety. In 2023, the published band 7-or-higher rate for IELTS candidates in Nigeria was 41% (IELTS Test-Taker Performance — Nigerian Academic candidates). For Nigerian candidates preparing for IELTS, the calibration of study to local context matters: Nigeria has West Africa's largest exam-prep market. WAEC, JAMB, and NECO are the high-stakes national tests; IELTS and PTE are dominant migration credentials.
Common failure modes
These are the patterns that cause most candidates to lose marks on this topic. Recognising them in advance is half the work.
- !Flat intonation across all sentences
- !Word-stress on the wrong syllable (PHOto-graph vs phoTOgrapher vs photoGRAPHic)
- !Voiced/unvoiced confusion (think/this; sip/zip; rice/lice)
- !Schwa /ə/ avoidance — pronouncing every vowel as a full vowel
Study tips
- 1Drill word-stress patterns for 2-, 3-, and 4-syllable words.
- 2Shadow a 60-second clip from a native speaker daily.
- 3Practice the schwa /ə/ — it appears in over 30% of unstressed English syllables.
- 4Record and review 2-minute monologues weekly to track intonation variety.
- 5In Nigeria, internet stability during IELTS computer-based testing varies by centre — booking centres in Lagos, Abuja, or Port Harcourt typically delivers the best test-day experience.
Sample IELTS Pronunciation questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real IELTS questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
Which feature is most likely to push a Band 6 Pronunciation score to Band 7?
- AA British accent
- BFaster speech
- CVariety in intonation and consistent word stressCorrect
- DNo filler words
Why this answer?
IELTS Pronunciation is scored on use of features (stress, rhythm, intonation, individual sounds), not on accent or speed. Variety in intonation and consistent word stress are the explicit Band-7 descriptors.
Frequently asked questions
Will my native accent lower my Pronunciation score?
What is the IELTS Pronunciation pass rate for Nigerian candidates?
How long should Nigerian candidates study Pronunciation for the IELTS?
Practice IELTS reading, writing, listening, speaking — free.
Band-7 vocabulary, Task-1 / Task-2 templates, and AI speaking partners that score by band descriptors.
Related study guides
- Reading for IELTS (Nigeria)Another IELTS topic for Nigerian candidates
- Writing Task 1 for IELTS (Nigeria)Another IELTS topic for Nigerian candidates
- Writing Task 2 for IELTS (Nigeria)Another IELTS topic for Nigerian candidates
- Listening for IELTS (Nigeria)Another IELTS topic for Nigerian candidates
- Speaking for IELTS (Nigeria)Another IELTS topic for Nigerian candidates
- Pronunciation for IELTS — U.S. candidatesSame Pronunciation topic, different locale framing
- Pronunciation for IELTS — U.K. candidatesSame Pronunciation topic, different locale framing
- Pronunciation for IELTS — Indian candidatesSame Pronunciation topic, different locale framing