Introduction

Hi, I’m Jonathan Mitchell, IELTS Writing examiner and academic English trainer.
In Academic Writing Task 1, strong data vocabulary separates a Band 6.5 script from a Band 8 or 9. The way you describe numbers, percentages, proportions, and changes shows your ability to use precise and varied academic language.

In this guide, we’ll explore how to describe data clearly, avoid repetition, and use correct structures to communicate trends, comparisons, and quantities naturally.

Why Data Vocabulary Matters

Under Lexical Resource, examiners assess your range, accuracy, and appropriacy of vocabulary.
Repeating basic words like increase and decrease limits your band score. Instead, you should demonstrate variety and precision — using different word forms and accurate collocations.

For example:
The number increased a lot.
The figure rose sharply by 25% over the decade.

That single sentence shows a richer command of English and improves your lexical score immediately.

Vocabulary for Quantities and Proportions

Meaning

Useful Vocabulary

Example Sentence

Large amount

majority, bulk, vast number, a large proportion

The majority of students preferred online learning.

Small amount

minority, small fraction, slight proportion

Only a small fraction of residents used public transport.

Half or equal

half, one in two, equally, the same proportion

Half of the respondents were in favour of the proposal.

Three-quarters / one-third

a quarter, a third, three-quarters

Nearly three-quarters of the population owned smartphones.

Band 8 Tip: Use approximately, around, or just over to make your data description sound natural.

Approximately 60% of households had Internet access.

Vocabulary for Percentages and Ratios

Expression Type

Examples

Exact percentages

10%, 25%, 40% — Twenty-five percent of respondents…

Approximate values

around 50%, nearly one-third, roughly 10%

Comparisons

twice as much as, three times higher than, half as many as

Example:

In 2020, the proportion of female graduates was nearly twice as high as that of males.

Vocabulary for Trends and Changes

Avoid overusing “increase” and “decrease.” Rotate between different verbs and nouns for variety.

Trend Type

Verbs

Nouns

Increase

rise, climb, grow, go up, soar, surge

a rise, an increase, a growth, an upward trend

Decrease

fall, drop, decline, go down, plummet, diminish

a fall, a decline, a reduction, a downward trend

No change

remain stable, stay constant, maintain

stability, no significant change

Fluctuation

vary, oscillate, shift

fluctuation, variation, inconsistency

Example:

Exports rose gradually during the first half of the period but fell sharply afterwards.

Adverbs and Adjectives for Describing Degree

Using descriptive adverbs and adjectives makes your report sound precise and academic.

Degree

Adverbs / Adjectives

Example

Large

dramatically, significantly, substantially, sharply

Sales increased significantly in 2020.

Moderate

steadily, gradually, moderately, consistently

The rate grew gradually over the decade.

Small

slightly, marginally, minimally

The figure declined slightly after 2015.

Sudden

rapidly, abruptly, quickly

Tourism numbers rose rapidly following 2018.

Band 8 Tip: Combine adverbs and verbs correctly: rose dramatically, fell slightly, remained relatively stable.

Vocabulary for Extremes and Comparisons

Purpose

Examples

Highest / Lowest

the highest, the lowest, the peak, the bottom point

Equality

equally, similarly, almost the same

Contrast

whereas, while, in contrast to, compared with

Superlatives

the most significant, the least common, the greatest number

Example:

Germany recorded the highest level of renewable energy use, whereas Japan’s figure remained the lowest.

Vocabulary for Describing Averages and Totals

Function

Examples

Mean / Average

the mean, the average figure, on average

Total / Overall

total amount, combined total, in total

Proportionate statements

accounted for, represented, constituted

Example:

In 2020, renewable sources accounted for nearly 30% of total electricity production.

Vocabulary for Describing Time and Frequency

Expression Type

Examples

Time phrases

over the period, between 2000 and 2020, throughout the decade

Frequency

frequently, rarely, occasionally

Sequence indicators

initially, subsequently, eventually, thereafter

Example:

Initially, Internet usage was low, but it increased rapidly thereafter.

Formal and Academic Substitutions

Avoid using everyday vocabulary in formal descriptions.

Informal / Basic

Formal Alternative

a lot of

a large number of / a significant proportion of

very big

substantial / considerable

very small

minimal / marginal

go up

increase / rise / grow

go down

decrease / decline / fall

show

illustrate / depict / represent

Band 8 Tip: Examiners look for formal precision, not creative expression. Avoid idioms and conversational tone.

Collocations for IELTS Task 1

Collocation Type

Examples

Trend Collocations

experience growth, witness a decline, remain unchanged

Comparison Collocations

show a contrast, demonstrate a difference, display similarity

Quantity Collocations

a large proportion, a slight majority, a considerable number

Time Collocations

over the next decade, in the following years, throughout the period

Example:

The country witnessed a steady rise in exports over the following years.

Common Mistakes with Data Vocabulary

Mistake

Explanation

Correction

Using informal words

Reduces academic tone

Replace a lot with a large proportion

Mixing up “by” and “to”

Alters meaning

Increased by 10% → final value rose to 60%

Repeating “increase/decrease”

Repetitive language

Use rise, fall, drop, climb, decline

Adding explanations (“because”)

Task 1 doesn’t require reasons

Focus only on describing data

Using incorrect quantifiers

Many information

Much information / many figures

Mini Practice

Task: Rewrite this sentence using precise data vocabulary.

The number of tourists went up a lot after 2015.

Answer:

The number of tourists increased significantly after 2015.

Now try improving:

There was a small drop in car sales.Car sales declined slightly during the same period.

Quick Self-Check

Before finishing your report, ask yourself:

  • Did I use at least five varied data verbs and nouns?
  • Are my adverbs and prepositions accurate?
  • Did I avoid repetition and informal words?
  • Is my vocabulary formal and precise throughout?

If yes, you’re already producing Band 7+ lexical performance.

Summary & Next Steps

Effective Data Vocabulary for Academic Task 1 helps you describe complex visuals clearly and confidently.
Focus on variety, precision, and collocation rather than memorising long word lists.

Next, move on to Model Answers & Analysis to see these vocabulary techniques in action across real Band 8–9 samples.
You can also return to the IELTS Writing Overview: Format, Scoring & Key Skills for a complete foundation, or visit IELTS.org for authentic sample tasks.