IELTS Academic Writing practice
Full 60-minute IELTS Academic Writing simulation: 20 minutes on Task 1 (describing a chart, graph, or diagram in at least 150 words) and 40 minutes on Task 2 (a 250-word opinion or discussion essay).
- Start testWriting Practice Test 1Task 1: bar chart on household energy use. Task 2: opinion essay on remote work.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 2Task 1: bar chart on leisure hours by age group. Task 2: opinion essay on shorter working weeks.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 3Task 1: line graph on urbanisation in four Middle Eastern countries. Task 2: discussion essay on the purpose of education.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 4Task 1: table on renewable energy generation by source. Task 2: discussion essay on housing vs green spaces.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 5Task 1: table on tropical climate temperature and rainfall. Task 2: discussion essay on early vocational specialisation.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 6Task 1: bar chart on commute modes & line graph on commute duration. Task 2: discussion essay on automation and corporate retraining.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 7Task 1: line graph on weekly seafood retail prices. Task 2: discussion essay on automation and corporate responsibility.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 8Task 1: floor plan comparison of a university campus library (2005 vs today). Task 2: discussion essay on balanced urban–rural population distribution.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 9Task 1: bar chart on international student enrolment across five faculties. Task 2: advantages/disadvantages essay on skipping university for work or vocational paths.
- Start testWriting Practice Test 10Task 1: line graph on daily public transport ridership across four modes. Task 2: discussion essay on government limits to corporate data collection.
About the IELTS Academic Writing test
The Academic Writing test lasts 60 minutes and contains two tasks. In Task 1 you describe visual information — a bar chart, line graph, pie chart, table, map or process diagram — in at least 150 words. In Task 2 you write a 250-word essay arguing a position, comparing views, or proposing solutions to a problem. Task 2 is worth twice as many marks as Task 1.
Both tasks are scored on four criteria: Task Achievement, Coherence & Cohesion, Lexical Resource, and Grammatical Range & Accuracy. Strong candidates plan for 3–5 minutes before writing, leave time to check, and write in formal academic English.