IELTS · Speaking · South Korea

Speaking for the IELTS Exam — Korean candidates

15% of the IELTS test plan. IELTS Speaking is a 11–14 minute, 3-part oral interview covering personal questions, a 2-minute long turn, and a discussion. Calibrated for Korean candidates.

For candidates aiming to clear this exam on the first attempt, the difference between Band 6 and Band 7+ — or "passing" and "comfortable margin" — usually comes down to fluency on a small number of high-leverage topics. Speaking sits at roughly 15% of the International English Language Testing System content distribution — Speaking is scored on four criteria: Fluency & Coherence, Lexical Resource, Grammatical Range & Accuracy, and Pronunciation. Most candidates lose marks on Lexical Resource (vocabulary too narrow) and Grammatical Range (no complex structures). Pass rates for the IELTS are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Korean candidates preparing for IELTS, the calibration of study to local context matters: TOEIC and TOEFL are the dominant English credentials. TOPIK (Korean proficiency) and CSAT (Suneung) gate domestic outcomes.

Pass rates for IELTS (South Korea) 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.

  • !Memorised answers (heavily penalised when detected)
  • !Single-clause sentences only (no relative, conditional, or subordinate clauses)
  • !Filler phrases ("you know", "like", "stuff") used excessively
  • !Pronunciation errors on critical sounds (/r/, /l/, /θ/, /ð/, /ʃ/)

Study tips

  • 1Practice the 2-minute long turn with a stopwatch — talk for the full 2 minutes without pausing for direction.
  • 2Drill 5 complex sentence templates ("If I had ... I would ...", "Despite the fact that ...").
  • 3Record yourself daily and listen for filler phrases.
  • 4Memorize a vocabulary set of 50 high-band Part 3 phrases (abstract / discussion vocabulary).
  • 5한국 응시자에게 IELTS 대비의 핵심은 독해 속도와 듣기 정확도입니다 — 한국식 시험 문화와 다른 출제 패턴에 익숙해지세요.

Sample IELTS Speaking 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

    In Part 2 (long turn), how long does the candidate have to prepare and speak?

    • A30 seconds prep, 1 minute speaking
    • B1 minute prep, 1–2 minutes speakingCorrect
    • C2 minutes prep, 2 minutes speaking
    • DNo prep, 3 minutes speaking
    Why this answer?

    Part 2 of IELTS Speaking gives the candidate 1 minute to prepare with a notepad and pencil, then 1–2 minutes to speak on the cue card topic. The examiner will stop the candidate at 2 minutes regardless.

Frequently asked questions

Should I speak in a British or American accent?
Neither — speak in your natural accent. IELTS examiners are trained on a wide range of accents. What matters is intelligibility, intonation, and stress placement.
Can I ask the examiner to repeat a question?
Yes. "Could you repeat that?" or "Could you rephrase that?" is allowed and not penalized. Don't do it more than twice in the test.
What is the IELTS pass rate for Korean candidates?
Pass rates for IELTS candidates in South Korea 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 Korean candidates study Speaking for the IELTS?
For most candidates, focused mastery of Speaking requires 20–40 hours of deliberate practice — drilling sample questions, reviewing failure modes, and timing yourself against exam conditions. TOEIC and TOEFL are the dominant English credentials. TOPIK (Korean proficiency) and CSAT (Suneung) gate domestic outcomes. Combine Speaking study with full-length mock exams in the final two weeks before your test date.

Practice IELTS reading, writing, listening, speaking — free.

Band-7 vocabulary, Task-1 / Task-2 templates, and AI speaking partners that score by band descriptors.

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