Introduction

Hi, I’m Jonathan Mitchell, an IELTS Writing examiner and academic English specialist.
If you’re preparing for IELTS Academic Task 1, one of the most important paragraphs in your report is the Overview.
An effective overview shows that you can summarise data clearly — without copying, guessing, or describing every number. In this guide, I’ll explain what an overview is, why it’s essential for a high band score, and how to write it perfectly every time.

What Is an Overview in Task 1?

An overview is a short summary of the main trends, patterns, or key features in the visual information.
It comes after the introduction and gives the examiner a clear snapshot of what the chart, graph, or process shows overall.

Example Task:

The line graph below shows the percentage of households with Internet access in three countries between 2000 and 2020.

Example Overview:

Overall, Internet access increased significantly in all three countries, with the UK maintaining the highest level throughout the period.

This one sentence already demonstrates understanding, organisation, and accuracy — all highly valued by examiners.

Why the Overview Matters

The Task Achievement criterion directly measures whether your overview is clear and accurate.
Without one, your score is immediately capped at Band 5.0–6.0, even if your grammar and vocabulary are strong.

Examiners look for:

  • A clear summary of main patterns (not isolated data)
  • Appropriate vocabulary and structure
  • Logical organisation following the introduction

A good overview acts like a “map” — it guides the reader through the data before the details begin.

Where to Place the Overview

You can place your overview either:

  1. After the introduction (recommended), or
  2. At the end of your report (less common but acceptable).

The preferred and most examiner-friendly structure is:

  1. Introduction → 2. Overview → 3. Body Paragraph 1 → 4. Body Paragraph 2

This ensures your summary is visible immediately and sets the tone for the rest of your writing.

What to Include in an Overview

In the overview, aim for 2–3 key points that summarise the data.
You should not include specific numbers or years — just describe the general direction or relationship.

What to Include

Examples

General trend

Overall, all figures increased during the period.

Highest and lowest points

The USA had the highest rate, while Japan recorded the lowest.

Main comparisons

Employment in the service sector was higher than in manufacturing.

General stability or fluctuation

The number of tourists remained stable after 2015.

Band 8 Tip: Keep the overview factual and objective — never explain why the trend happened.

Example Structure for the Overview

Introduction:

The bar chart illustrates the proportion of students choosing different fields of study in 2020.

Overview:

Overall, science and business were the most popular fields, while arts and law attracted the fewest students.

Body 1 & 2:
Describe details with data and comparisons.

Useful Phrases for Overviews

Function

Phrases

Introducing general trends

Overall, it is clear that… / In general, it can be seen that… / The chart indicates that…

Describing increases or decreases

There was a steady rise in… / A gradual decline was observed in…

Highlighting extremes

The highest proportion was recorded in… / The lowest figure belonged to…

Summarising patterns

In summary, most categories experienced growth.

Example Overview:

In general, car ownership rose significantly in all countries, with the UK showing the greatest increase.

Grammar for Writing Overviews

Use Present Simple when describing data shown as a general fact or pattern, and Past Simple for completed time periods.

Situation

Tense

Example

Historical data

Past Simple

Employment levels rose steadily from 2000 to 2020.

General summary

Present Simple

It is clear that renewable energy accounts for the largest share.

Process diagrams

Present Passive

The process begins with raw material collection and ends with packaging.

Avoid using future tenses unless the chart includes projections.

Common Mistakes in Overviews

Mistake

Why It’s Wrong

Correction

Including data

Too detailed — not a summary

Remove figures and focus on trends

Copying the question

No paraphrasing shown

Restate in your own words

Writing only one trend

Incomplete summary

Mention 2–3 main features

Giving reasons or opinions

Inaccurate task response

Stay objective and factual

Misplacing the overview

Harder for examiner to locate

Put it directly after the introduction

Sample Task & Model Overview

Task:
The pie charts below show the proportion of electricity generated from different sources in France in 1990 and 2020.

Model Overview:

Overall, nuclear energy became the dominant source of electricity by 2020, while the share of coal and oil declined significantly over the period.

Why it works:

  • Summarises change clearly
  • Highlights contrast between years
  • No specific numbers
  • Objective tone

Mini Practice

Question:
The table shows average monthly household spending in five categories in the UK and Ireland.

Write an overview:
Overall, both countries spent the largest proportion of their income on housing and food, while the least money was allocated to entertainment.

Quick Self-Check

Before finishing your overview, ask:

  • Did I summarise 2–3 main features?
  • Did I avoid numbers or exact details?
  • Is my language formal and varied?
  • Does the overview clearly show the main trend or comparison?

If yes, you’ve written a high-scoring overview.

Next Steps

A strong overview is the heart of IELTS Task 1. It demonstrates that you can see the “big picture,” organise ideas logically, and write concisely.
Without it, even excellent data description cannot achieve Band 7+.

Next, move on to Process & Map Description to learn how to describe non-graph visuals using sequencing and passive forms.
You can also return to the IELTS Writing Overview: Format, Scoring & Key Skills page or consult IELTS.org for official examiner marking guidance.