TOEFL · Speaking Section
TOEFL Speaking 2026: Format, Tasks, Scoring, and Practice Guide
In the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section, you complete two distinct task types — Listen and Repeat, and Take an Interview — across 11 scored questions in approximately 8 minutes. This guide explains exactly how each task works, what raters evaluate, common mistakes, and how to build the skills you need to perform confidently.
Built around official 2026 TOEFL Speaking task design · By the LingoLeap Research Team
Task types
2 Speaking tasks
Section time
~8 min
Total questions
11 scored items
What is TOEFL Speaking 2026?
In the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section, test takers complete 11 scored questions across two task types — Listen and Repeat (7 items) and Take an Interview (4 questions) — in approximately 8 minutes. The section is linear and non-adaptive, and tests both pronunciation accuracy and spoken communication ability.
TOEFL Speaking 2026 at a Glance
In the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section, two task types cover distinct speaking skills — sentence-level accuracy and conversational fluency — within a short, focused test window.
Task Types
2
Listen and Repeat + Take an Interview
Scored Items
11
7 repetition + 4 interview questions
Approximate Time
~8 min
Linear, non-adaptive format
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Section position | Speaking (one of four TOEFL sections) |
| Task types | Listen and Repeat; Take an Interview |
| Total scored questions | 11 (7 + 4) |
| Approximate duration | About 8 minutes |
| Format | Linear — not adaptive |
| Response delivery | Spoken responses recorded by the test system |
| Scoring | Task-specific criteria; evaluated by automated scoring |
TOEFL Speaking 2026 Format at a Glance
The two task types in the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section test fundamentally different skills. Here is a side-by-side comparison.
| Task Type | Number of Questions | Response Time | Main Skill Focus | What Strong Performance Looks Like |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Listen and Repeat | 7 items | 8 s / 10 s / 12 s | Pronunciation accuracy, intelligibility | Accurate repetition with natural rhythm and clear articulation |
| Take an Interview | 4 questions | 45 s each | Fluency, coherence, grammar, vocabulary | Clear, organized responses with relevant detail and natural pacing |
Listen and Repeat
In the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section, Listen and Repeat presents you with 7 spoken sentences one at a time. After each sentence plays, a response window opens and you must repeat the sentence as accurately as possible before time runs out.
The response windows vary by sentence length: sentences 1–2 allow 8 seconds, sentences 3–5 allow 10 seconds, and sentences 6–7 allow 12 seconds. Raters focus on how accurately you reproduce the words, how intelligible your speech is, and whether your rhythm and intonation reflect natural spoken English.
| Items | Response Window | Typical sentence complexity |
|---|---|---|
| 1–2 | 8 seconds | Shorter sentences |
| 3–5 | 10 seconds | Medium-length sentences |
| 6–7 | 12 seconds | Longer, more complex sentences |
For a full breakdown of this task type, including what raters listen for and how to train effectively, see the TOEFL Listen and Repeat guide.
Take an Interview
In the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section, Take an Interview presents 4 spoken questions to which you respond within 45 seconds each. The questions progress in complexity: early questions tend to be personal and factual — such as describing a preference or experience — while later questions may require more developed responses with reasons, examples, or elaboration.
Unlike Listen and Repeat, the Interview task evaluates how well you communicate ideas spontaneously. Raters consider fluency, coherence, grammatical range, and vocabulary use alongside pronunciation. You do not need to produce perfect speech, but your response should be clear and organized enough for a listener to follow without difficulty.
For detailed preparation advice, example prompts, and scoring criteria, see the TOEFL Speaking Interview guide.
How TOEFL Speaking Is Scored in 2026
In the current TOEFL 2026 Speaking section, each task type is evaluated using criteria specific to the kind of speech it elicits.
Listen and Repeat scoring
- Accuracy of word reproduction
- Clarity and intelligibility
- Rhythm, stress, and intonation
- Completeness of the repeated sentence
Take an Interview scoring
- Fluency and natural pacing
- Coherence and organization of ideas
- Grammatical range and accuracy
- Vocabulary range and appropriateness
- Pronunciation and intelligibility
For a detailed breakdown of the rubrics and what distinguishes score levels, see the TOEFL Speaking rubrics guide.
What Makes a High-Scoring Response
High-scoring TOEFL Speaking responses share several qualities across both task types. Here is what raters look for.
Accurate repetition
For Listen and Repeat, reproduce each word as heard. Do not substitute or skip words — accuracy is the primary criterion.
Intelligibility
Your speech must be clear enough for a listener to understand without significant effort. This applies to both task types.
Conversational pace
Speak at a natural, steady rate. Speaking too fast reduces clarity; speaking too slowly can signal difficulty with fluency.
Coherent elaboration
For the Interview task, organize your response with a clear answer followed by reasons or examples. Avoid rambling.
Rhythm and intonation
Natural English stress and intonation patterns help raters follow your speech and signal language competence.
Grammar and vocabulary control
Use grammatically accurate sentences and varied vocabulary. Errors that disrupt meaning lower your score on the Interview task.
Common TOEFL Speaking Mistakes in 2026
Paraphrasing instead of repeating in Listen and Repeat
The task asks you to repeat the sentence as you heard it, word for word. Substituting synonyms or restructuring the sentence reduces your accuracy score.
Starting too late after the beep
Response windows are short. Begin speaking within one second of the response window opening — especially on 8-second items — to avoid running out of time.
Giving a one-sentence answer in the Interview task
A 45-second window expects a developed response. After your direct answer, add a reason, example, or brief elaboration to demonstrate fluency and coherence.
Speaking in a monotone without natural stress
English rhythm relies on word stress and sentence-level intonation. Flat, monotone delivery reduces intelligibility and signals limited prosodic control.
Memorizing a scripted response for the Interview
Rehearsed responses often sound unnatural and do not respond directly to the question asked. Focus on flexible speaking skills rather than memorized scripts.
Neglecting pronunciation practice before test day
Both task types assess how clearly you can be understood. Regular shadowing and self-recording practice are essential — not optional — preparation activities.
How to Practice TOEFL Speaking Efficiently
Effective TOEFL Speaking preparation goes beyond reading about the format. Here are the highest-impact practice methods for both task types.
Timed repetition drills
Record sentences and practice repeating them within 8, 10, and 12 second windows. This trains your working memory and response speed for Listen and Repeat.
Shadowing
Listen to native-speaker audio — podcasts, news clips, or TOEFL sample audio — and repeat each sentence immediately after, matching rhythm and intonation. Shadowing is one of the most efficient tools for developing natural speech patterns.
Self-recording and review
Record your speaking responses and listen back critically. Compare your clarity, pacing, and accuracy against what you intended to say. This builds self-awareness that silent practice cannot provide.
Answer planning for the Interview task
Practice structuring short answers: a clear direct response, one or two supporting reasons, and a brief example. You do not have preparation time before each question, so fluent real-time organization is the goal.
Full mock Speaking sections
Complete full simulated Speaking sections under realistic timing. This builds endurance, reduces test-day anxiety, and exposes you to the full range of question formats before the actual exam.
Practice TOEFL Speaking with Realistic Tasks
LingoLeap offers task-aligned Speaking practice for both Listen and Repeat and Take an Interview, with timing matched to the real 2026 format.
Start Free TOEFL Speaking PracticeFrequently Asked Questions
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Related TOEFL Speaking Guides
TOEFL Listen and Repeat
Format, timing, and strategies for the sentence repetition task.
Read guide →TOEFL Speaking Interview
How the 45-second interview task works and how to prepare.
Read guide →TOEFL Speaking Rubrics
How Listen and Repeat and Interview responses are scored.
Read guide →TOEFL Speaking Practice
Study plans, drills, and mock test advice for Speaking.
Read guide →TOEFL Mock Test
Full-length practice tests covering all four sections.
Read guide →TOEFL 2026 Test Structure
Complete overview of the updated TOEFL format.
Read guide →