PET · Test Timing & Strategy · India
Test Timing & Strategy for the PET Exam — Indian candidates
8% of the PET test plan. Time management, question prioritisation, and exam technique for the Cambridge B1 Preliminary examination. 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. Test Timing & Strategy sits at roughly 8% of the Cambridge Preliminary English Test (B1) content distribution — B1 Preliminary candidates have limited time across all components. Reading and Writing runs 1 hour 30 minutes for 6 reading parts and 1 writing task. Poor timing — especially spending too long on Reading — leaves insufficient time to write a quality email. Knowing time allocations per part is essential. Pass rates for the PET are published annually by the awarding body and vary by cohort and locale. For Indian candidates preparing for PET, 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.
- !Spending 15+ minutes on each Reading part and not finishing the Writing task
- !Not checking reading answers before submitting
- !Starting the Writing task without planning, producing a disorganised response
Study tips
- 1Allocate 60 minutes for Reading (6 parts × 10 minutes) and 30 minutes for Writing (plan 5 + write 20 + check 5).
- 2For each Reading part, move on if stuck — return to difficult questions after completing all parts.
- 3In Writing, plan before you write: note the 3 content points and one sentence for each.
- 4For candidates in India, PET 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 PET Test Timing & Strategy questions
These sample items mirror the format and difficulty of real PET questions. Practice with thousands more on the free Koydo question bank.
- 1
In B1 Preliminary Reading/Writing, how much time should be allocated to the Writing email task?
- A10 minutes
- B20–30 minutesCorrect
- C45 minutes
- D5 minutes
Why this answer?
The Writing task requires a 100-word email covering 3 points. Allocating 20–30 minutes allows 3–5 minutes planning, 15–20 minutes writing, and 3–5 minutes checking. Less than 20 minutes risks a rushed, incomplete response; more than 30 minutes leaves too little time for Reading.
Frequently asked questions
Can I bring a dictionary to B1 Preliminary?
What is the PET pass rate for Indian candidates?
How long should Indian candidates study Test Timing & Strategy for the PET?
Practice Cambridge PET (B1) free with Koydo.
Cambridge B1 Preliminary — every paper, every task type.
Related study guides
- Reading Comprehension for PET (India)Another PET topic for Indian candidates
- Vocabulary at B1 Level for PET (India)Another PET topic for Indian candidates
- Grammar at B1 Level for PET (India)Another PET topic for Indian candidates
- Listening Comprehension for PET (India)Another PET topic for Indian candidates
- Speaking at B1 Level for PET (India)Another PET topic for Indian candidates
- Test Timing & Strategy for PET — U.S. candidatesSame Test Timing & Strategy topic, different locale framing
- Test Timing & Strategy for PET — U.K. candidatesSame Test Timing & Strategy topic, different locale framing
- Test Timing & Strategy for PET — Filipino candidatesSame Test Timing & Strategy topic, different locale framing