Hello, I’m Chen Wei, and after training thousands of IELTS learners in Singapore and online, I can confidently say that your score often depends more on timing than vocabulary. Many students know the answers — they just don’t reach the last passage in time. In this guide, I’ll show you how to master time management in the test, using proven examiner strategies that help you finish all 40 questions calmly and accurately.
The IELTS Reading test gives you 60 minutes for 3 sections and 40 questions. Unlike Listening, there’s no extra transfer time. Every second you spend thinking or erasing counts against your performance.
Effective time management allows you to:
Let’s break down how to use your time strategically.
|
Section |
Type of Text |
Suggested Time |
No. of Questions |
|
Section 1 |
Short factual or everyday texts |
18 minutes |
13–14 |
|
Section 2 |
More complex or work-related |
20 minutes |
13–14 |
|
Section 3 |
Long analytical passage |
22 minutes |
13–14 |
These timings are not strict rules — they’re benchmarks. If you finish early, use extra time to check spelling and transfer accuracy.
1️⃣ First 3 Minutes — Preview and Skim
Before you read in detail, skim each passage quickly. Note headings, structure, and the general topic. This builds a mental map that saves time later when scanning for details.
2️⃣ Next 15–17 Minutes — Section 1
These are usually the easiest questions. Work confidently and keep a steady rhythm. Avoid spending more than 60 seconds per question here.
3️⃣ 20 Minutes — Section 2
The middle section often involves matching information or short-answer tasks. You’ll need more scanning skill and slightly slower pace. Mark any uncertain answers with a symbol (e.g. “?”) and move on.
Remember: IELTS questions usually follow passage order — use that to your advantage.
4️⃣ Final 20 Minutes — Section 3
The final passage is longer and conceptually harder. Stay calm; apply the same strategy. Skim first, underline keywords in questions, then scan for paraphrased information.
You should have at least 3–4 minutes left at the end for checking spelling, plural forms, and word limits.
|
Activity |
Time |
Focus |
|
Preview all 3 sections |
3 mins |
Overall structure |
|
Section 1 |
17 mins |
Easy accuracy |
|
Section 2 |
20 mins |
Controlled focus |
|
Section 3 |
20 mins |
Deep comprehension |
|
Final check |
0–2 mins |
Spelling & blanks |
If you practise this structure repeatedly, your internal sense of timing will become automatic
1️⃣ Spending too long on one question
→ Solution: Move on and return later. Every question equals one mark; don’t lose five minutes for one uncertain answer.
2️⃣ Reading too deeply during skimming
→ Skimming means seeing structure, not studying detail.
3️⃣ Not tracking time
→ Always bring a simple watch (not a smartwatch). Divide the hour into three visible checkpoints: 18, 38, and 58 minutes.
4️⃣ Leaving answer transfer for the end
→ Dangerous! Write answers directly on the answer sheet as you go.
From examiner data, high-band candidates follow a consistent time pattern:
|
Band Level |
Avg. Section Completion |
Accuracy Rate |
Notes |
|
Band 8–9 |
55–57 minutes |
90%+ |
Calm pacing, double-checking |
|
Band 6–7 |
59–60 minutes |
75% |
Often rush last passage |
|
Band <6 |
Over time |
60% or below |
Poor pacing and planning |
The difference isn’t English ability alone — it’s timing discipline.
Scenario:
A student spends 28 minutes on Section 1, 20 minutes on Section 2, and only 12 minutes on Section 3.
Result:
They leave 8 questions blank — a potential loss of two whole band points.
Correction:
Practise strict timing at home. Set a phone timer per section until it becomes habit.
✅ Can I finish 40 questions in 60 minutes during practice?
✅ Do I mark uncertain answers and return later?
✅ Do I write answers directly on the sheet?
✅ Do I check spelling and word limits in the final minute?
If you can answer “yes” to all, your timing is already IELTS-ready.
Time management in the IELTS Reading test is about control, not speed. Develop steady habits, follow the 18-20-22 rule, and train under timed conditions every week. You’ll soon complete the test comfortably within 60 minutes — and with higher accuracy.
Next, continue with Reading for Inference to learn how to interpret hidden meanings and author attitudes.
Or go back to IELTS Reading Skills & Exam Strategy for the full skill set.
For more official advice, explore the British Council IELTS Reading Guide for free sample papers.
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