IELTS · Reading: True / False / Not Given · India

Reading: True / False / Not Given for the IELTS Exam — Indian candidates

8% of the IELTS test plan. True/False/Not Given questions test precise distinction between facts the passage states, contradicts, or does not address. They are the most-missed reading question type for non-native speakers. Calibrated for Indian candidates.

Most exam coaching covers the curriculum at the same depth across all topics. That misses the asymmetry of high-stakes testing: a few topics carry disproportionate weight on the score. Reading: True / False / Not Given sits at roughly 8% of the International English Language Testing System content distribution — TFNG (and YNN — Yes/No/Not Given) appears in every IELTS Academic Reading test. Many candidates lose 3–5 marks on a single passage by selecting "False" when the passage simply does not address the claim ("Not Given"). Mastering this distinction is one of the highest single-task score levers. In 2023, the published band 7-or-higher rate for IELTS candidates in India was 32% (IELTS Test-Taker Performance — Indian Academic candidates). For Indian candidates preparing for IELTS, the calibration of study to local context matters: India is the world's largest single-country exam market. Most national exams (JEE, NEET, GATE, CUET) are conducted by NTA in English plus regional language editions.

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.

  • !Marking "False" when the passage says nothing about the claim — must be "Not Given"
  • !Marking "True" based on outside knowledge instead of the passage text
  • !Confusing TFNG (Reading) with YNN (Yes/No/Not Given for opinion-based passages)
  • !Reading too superficially and missing qualifying words like "some", "always", "primarily"

Study tips

  • 1Underline keywords in the question, then locate the corresponding passage sentence; never answer from memory.
  • 2Apply the 3-step rule: (1) is the claim stated? (2) is it contradicted? (3) is it absent? Map to True/False/Not Given respectively.
  • 3Watch qualifiers — "all", "every", "always" in a question often mean "False" if the passage uses "some" or "many".
  • 4Practice 100 TFNG questions across topic types (science, history, social science) before sitting the test.
  • 5For candidates in India, IELTS test windows are typically denser in the spring; book test centres in metro cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Bengaluru, Chennai, Kolkata) early to secure preferred dates.

Sample IELTS Reading: True / False / Not Given questions

These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real IELTS questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.

  1. 1

    Passage states: "Many architects in the 19th century rejected Gothic Revival." Question: "All 19th-century architects rejected Gothic Revival." This claim is:

    • ATrue
    • BFalseCorrect
    • CNot Given
    • DCannot determine
    Why this answer?

    The passage says "many" — not "all". The question asserts a stronger universal claim that contradicts the passage. Mark False. If the passage said nothing about how many architects, the answer would be Not Given.

Frequently asked questions

What is the difference between TFNG and YNN?
TFNG (True / False / Not Given) is used for factual passages — claims about events, data, or descriptions. YNN (Yes / No / Not Given) is used for opinion or argumentative passages — claims about what the author thinks. The decision logic is identical.
What is the IELTS Reading: True / False / Not Given pass rate for Indian candidates?
The published band 7-or-higher rate for IELTS candidates in India in 2023 was 32%, according to IELTS Test-Taker Performance — Indian Academic candidates. Pass rates within specific topics like Reading: True / False / Not Given are not separately published, but the topic represents roughly 8% of the exam.
How long should Indian candidates study Reading: True / False / Not Given for the IELTS?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Reading: True / False / Not Given requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. India is the world's largest single-country exam market. Most national exams (JEE, NEET, GATE, CUET) are conducted by NTA in English plus regional language editions. Combine Reading: True / False / Not Given study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

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