TOEFL · Planner Tools
By Erin, SEO & Content Specialist · Reviewed by LingoLeap TOEFL Content Team · Last updated
Enter your section scores or select your weakest section. This tool generates a focused 4-week plan that prioritizes your lowest-scoring area with targeted task cycles, revision sessions, and a closing mock test.
The 2026 TOEFL uses a 1–6 band scale where each section contributes equally to your overall score. A Band 3.0 in Speaking while scoring 5.0 elsewhere caps your overall average — improving that weak section has the highest impact per hour of study.
TOEFL 2026’s overall band is a straight arithmetic mean of four section bands. That seemingly neutral formula quietly punishes any single low score: moving from 3.0 → 4.0 in your weakest section lifts your overall band by 0.25, while moving from 5.0 → 5.5 in your strongest section lifts it by only 0.125. Hour-for-hour, weak-section work is roughly twice as efficient when the gap is at least 1.0 band wide. The Weakness Plan encodes this directly by allocating 55–65% of the weekly budget to your lowest section during the focus cycle.
Four weeks is the default cycle length, chosen deliberately. Shorter cycles don’t give enough repetitions at the level you’re targeting; longer cycles risk atrophy in the maintenance sections. Cambridge’s Guided Learning Hours benchmark implies 150–200 hours per CEFR level for B2–C1 learners. A single TOEFL band gain lives inside roughly half that — call it 75–125 focused hours. A 4-week plan at 10 hours/week delivers 40 of those hours; combine that with surrounding prep and the full gain becomes realistic inside a 10–14 week arc.
The plan does NOT let the strong sections decay. Each week, 35–45% of the hours still go to a rotating maintenance slot across the other three sections — enough to keep timed-test fluency, not enough to dilute the weak-section focus. The practical reason: mixing task types within the week prevents the weak section from becoming an isolated silo that doesn’t integrate with the full mock-test context, and keeps the other sections sharp on test day.
Weakness-focus has limits. If your weakest section is below Band 3.0 AND the gap to your others is less than 1.0 band, the underlying problem is usually general English (vocabulary breadth, grammar, working listening comprehension) — not TOEFL-specific. In that case, 4 weeks of drilling Speaking Task 4 or Writing academic discussion won’t move the number; you need broader English work first. The plan will still run, but treat it as a diagnostic: if week 3’s mock test shows no movement, step back to the full multi-section generator.
Choosing which section to treat as “weakest” matters more than people assume. The default answer is your lowest raw band, but two caveats apply. First, if two sections are within 0.5 band of each other and both below your strongest, pick the one with the steepest task-type floor — i.e., the section where a single task type is scoring far below the others (a Band 3.0 Speaking Task 4 inside an otherwise-Band-4.0 Speaking section is a bigger lever than an evenly-4.0 Reading).
Second, Speaking and Writing generally move faster than Reading and Listening per study hour, because Speaking and Writing errors are more directly correctable through rubric-guided rewrites. If your lowest two sections are a productive one (Speaking/Writing) and a receptive one (Reading/Listening), weight the productive section first. Every practice cycle on the weak section should be paired with the post-practice review protocol; the targeted plan only moves the band when the review step is explicit, not implicit. For task-type-level focus, switch over to the Section Score Improvement Plan.
These are the recurring patterns we see in 4-week cycles, and the matching fix the plan rotates through:
| Section | Pattern | Fix the plan applies |
|---|---|---|
| Speaking | Task 4 missing structure and summary | Template drilling and rubric self-scoring |
| Writing | Academic-discussion arguments are thin | Idea-generation prompts and rewrite passes |
| Reading | Inference where learners stop at literal meaning | Annotated re-reads and wrong-answer analysis |
| Listening | Note-taking where working memory overloads | Abbreviated-note drilling and short-clip retention |
Across the learners we see running the Weakness Plan, three patterns recur — these are where the targeted format fits cleanly. These show how the 55–65% allocation lands for different starting profiles — they describe expected pacing, not guaranteed score outcomes.
With one section at 3.0 (e.g., Speaking) and the others at 4.5+, the plan allocates 6 of 10 weekly hours to Speaking practice, 3 hours to maintenance across the other three sections, and 1 hour to mock review every other week. Across 4 weeks (40 hours total), expected pacing is 0.3–0.5 band on the focus section when consistency holds — Speaking and Writing typically move faster per hour than Reading and Listening because rubric-guided rewrites/re-records correct errors directly.
If three sections sit at 3.5–4.0 and one is at 2.5, the gap is too small for pure weakness focus to dominate. The bottleneck is usually general English fluency — vocabulary breadth, listening comprehension, clause-level grammar — not TOEFL task-type execution. Run the plan as a 4-week diagnostic; if the closing mock test shows minimal movement, step back to broader English work for 2–3 months before resuming the targeted plan.
Reading 4.5 / Listening 4.5 / Writing 3.5 / Speaking 3.5 — the two productive sections are tied as weakest. Pick Speaking first (productive sections move faster per study hour than receptive sections), run a 4-week cycle, then run a second 4-week cycle on Writing. Splitting one plan across both sections halves the per-section practice volume and dilutes the gain. Per the ETS Speaking and Writing rubrics, both sections reward rubric-aligned practice with rewrites/re-records, so sequential cycles preserve depth on each.
Target your lowest-scoring section with TOEFL practice tasks and real-time AI evaluation.
Start Targeted PracticeOpen the guide for strategy, then go practice that section right away — keep the loop tight.
Listening
Speaking