IELTS Exam Recalls This Week: What Test-Takers Reported (Jul 5 – Jul 13, 2026)

July 13, 2026
A detailed analysis of this week's IELTS exam recalls, highlighting actual candidate experiences and actionable strategies for Listening, Reading, Writing, and Speaking.
Exam Recalls & Trends
Listening Question Types
Reading Question Types

Why Relying on Topic Prediction Creates Exam-Room Anxiety

Many IELTS candidates walk into the test room hoping their predicted topics—be it the Voynich Manuscript or tomato cultivation—will appear. This week’s exam recalls from real test-takers, however, show just how unreliable this approach can be. The variety of reported topics and question types underscores that true readiness comes from mastering skills, not chasing themes.

Listening: Consistent Formats, Shifting Scenarios

Listening recalls from July featured a wide range of contexts: club activities, job applications, hotel bookings, and even discussions about Vikings and painters. Despite the diversity of topics, the structure remained predictable—form-filling, multiple choice, and story completion dominated. For example, Section 1 typically required extracting basic details (names, prices, times), while Section 3 often involved following an academic discussion or a student-teacher dialogue.

The key takeaway? Instead of guessing whether the next test will be about sociology or art, candidates should focus on practicing listening question types and learning to spot paraphrased information and distractors. Familiarity with the format, not the theme, is what leads to confident performance.

Reading: Question Types, Not Passage Topics, Determine Success

This week’s reading passages spanned everything from archaeological discoveries and big data to Australian parrots and the history of coffeehouses. Yet, the question types—True/False/Not Given, matching, fill-in-the-blank, and multiple choice—remained the real test. Many candidates struggle not with the content, but with the logic of True/False/Not Given or the subtlety of matching headings.

Consider the difference in approach: faced with a passage on the Olmec civilization, a weak response might simply state, "The Olmec made stone heads. True." A stronger answer would be, "The passage explains that the Olmec are renowned for their colossal stone heads, confirming the statement as True." The latter demonstrates precise comprehension and evidence-based reasoning—skills that transfer across any reading topic.

Writing: Mastering Task 1 Visuals—Maps and Stacked Charts

Writing Task 1 this week included a map of Riverside Park and a stacked chart. Candidates often hope for familiar visuals, but the real differentiator is the ability to describe changes, compare data, and organize information clearly—regardless of what’s shown. For example, describing a map:

  • Weaker: "There are more trees and a new playground in the north part."
  • Stronger: "The northern section, which previously contained only open grassland, now features a newly constructed playground and an increased number of trees, highlighting a shift towards recreational use."

The stronger version provides precise location, describes the change, and uses a wider range of vocabulary and grammar. For more on map labelling and effective Task 1 strategies, see our Writing resource.

Speaking: Recurring Themes, Spontaneous Development

Speaking recalls from July reveal familiar themes—work or study, city life, hobbies, and gifts—but the challenge lies in spontaneous, developed answers. For instance, Part 2 asked candidates to describe a TV or online programme they enjoy. Memorized responses like, "I like a show. It is interesting. I watch it every week," fall short. A stronger answer might be: "One programme I particularly enjoy is a documentary series about world cuisine. Not only does it introduce me to new cultures, but it also inspires me to try cooking unfamiliar dishes at home. I first discovered it during the lockdown, and it quickly became a weekly ritual." Such answers show coherence, lexical range, and direct engagement with the prompt—qualities examiners reward.

How to Use This Week’s Recalls for Effective Preparation

The breadth of topics in this week's exam recalls confirms that IELTS success depends on skill, not speculation. Candidates who train to analyze question types, paraphrase, organize data, and develop answers will outperform those who rely on topic prediction. For more practice with real listening formats, see the 2026-06 listening tests. To refine your writing technique, consult our Writing resource. Ultimately, the most reliable path to a high band score is to prepare for the skills the exam actually tests—not the topics you hope to see.

IELTS Exam Recalls This Week: What Test-Takers Reported (Jul 5 – Jul 13, 2026) | IELTS Actual Tests