IELTS · Reading · Germany

Reading for the IELTS Exam — German candidates

25% of the IELTS test plan. IELTS Academic Reading is a 60-minute, 40-question test covering three long passages with multiple-choice, matching, completion, and TFNG items. Calibrated for German candidates.

Examiners do not award marks for content alone — they award them for the ability to demonstrate competency in the precise format the test demands. Reading sits at roughly 25% of the International English Language Testing System content distribution — Reading is one of the four scored IELTS modules. The Academic version uses three long, journal-style passages; the General Training version uses everyday and workplace texts. Time pressure and the True/False/Not Given format are the dominant failure modes. Pass rates for the IELTS are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For German candidates preparing for IELTS, the calibration of study to local context matters: Germany operates Abitur for university entrance, Goethe / TestDaF for German proficiency, and various Cambridge tiers (FCE, CAE) for English.

Pass rates for IELTS (Germany) are published periodically by the awarding body.

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.

  • !Spending too long on one passage and not finishing the other two
  • !Confusing False with Not Given on TFNG items
  • !Skim/scan misread on heading-matching items
  • !Wrong-grammar transferred answers in completion tasks

Study tips

  • 1Practice strict 20-minute time blocks per passage with a hard cutoff.
  • 2Drill TFNG distinctions: False (contradicted by passage) vs Not Given (no info present, even if topic mentioned).
  • 3Skim each passage in 90 seconds before answering — get the macro structure first.
  • 4Mark question numbers in the passage as you scan to avoid re-reading.
  • 5Deutsche Kandidaten, die für die IELTS lernen, profitieren von einem klaren Studienplan; deutsche Lerngewohnheiten (systematisches Vorgehen, Karteikartenarbeit) sind hier ein Vorteil.

Sample IELTS Reading 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

    On a True/False/Not Given item, "Not Given" is the correct answer when:

    • AThe passage clearly contradicts the statement
    • BThe passage states the same idea in different words
    • CThe passage neither confirms nor contradicts the statementCorrect
    • DThe statement is only partially true
    Why this answer?

    Not Given is the correct answer when the passage neither confirms nor contradicts the statement. False applies only when the passage actively contradicts; partial truth or paraphrased agreement counts as True.

Frequently asked questions

How many words per minute do I need to read for IELTS?
IELTS Academic passages average 700–1,000 words each. To answer 40 questions in 60 minutes, you need to read at roughly 200–250 words per minute while comprehending — about double a casual native-speaker pace.
Is the Academic Reading harder than the General Training?
Yes — Academic uses denser, journal-style texts. Both have 40 questions and the same scoring scale, but the band descriptor is calibrated to make a Band 7 in Academic harder than in General Training.
What is the IELTS pass rate for German candidates?
Pass rates for IELTS candidates in Germany are published periodically by the awarding body. Practice questions, full-length simulations, and weak-area drills are the highest-impact way to improve your odds.
How long should German candidates study Reading for the IELTS?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Reading requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. Germany operates Abitur for university entrance, Goethe / TestDaF for German proficiency, and various Cambridge tiers (FCE, CAE) for English. Combine Reading study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

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