PET · Listening Comprehension · United Kingdom
Listening Comprehension for the PET Exam — UK candidates
10% of the PET test plan. Understanding B1-level conversations, announcements, and interviews in a variety of everyday contexts. Calibrated for British 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. Listening Comprehension sits at roughly 10% of the Cambridge Preliminary English Test (B1) content distribution — B1 Preliminary Listening has 4 parts testing understanding of short conversations, longer monologues, and radio-style content. Unlike A2, some B1 listening content involves understanding attitude, opinion, and implied meaning — not just factual information. Pass rates for the PET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For UK candidates preparing for PET, the calibration of study to local context matters: UK candidates often take exams for both domestic licensure (NMC, GMC) and migration purposes. IELTS UKVI is a separate, higher-stakes track.
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.
- !Missing the speaker's opinion because they focus only on the facts mentioned
- !Confusing what the speaker says with what a second speaker says in dialogue questions
- !Not using the preparation time to read questions before the audio
Study tips
- 1Listen to B1-level English podcasts: BBC 6 Minute English, Voice of America Learning English.
- 2Practice identifying speaker attitude: positive, negative, uncertain, enthusiastic, disappointed.
- 3For multiple-choice listening, predict the likely answer type (place, time, person, reason) from the question.
- 4In the UK, PET schedules and reschedules align with state holiday calendars and post-Brexit fee adjustments — confirm pricing on the awarding body's site before booking.
Sample PET Listening Comprehension questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real PET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
You hear two friends talking. Woman: "I thought the film was really interesting." Man: "I see what you mean, but personally I found it a bit slow." How does the man feel about the film?
- AHe agrees it was interesting
- BHe found it boring and uninteresting
- CHe thought it was interesting but too slowCorrect
- DHe disagrees that it was interesting
Why this answer?
The man says "I see what you mean" (partial agreement with "interesting") "but personally I found it a bit slow" (partial disagreement). He acknowledges its interest but criticises the pace. He does not say it was boring — just slow.
Frequently asked questions
How long is the B1 Preliminary Listening test?
What is the PET pass rate for British candidates?
How long should British candidates study Listening Comprehension for the PET?
Practice Cambridge PET (B1) free with Koydo.
Cambridge B1 Preliminary — every paper, every task type.
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