TOEFL · Listening Section

TOEFL Listening Section: Format, Question Types, and Strategies

The updated TOEFL Listening section uses a multistage adaptive format with four task types: Listen and Choose a Response, Conversations, Announcements, and Academic Talks. This guide covers the full Listening section — format, all four task types, question patterns, scoring, strategies, and how to practice effectively.

Built around official 2026 TOEFL Listening task design · By the LingoLeap Research Team

Task types

4 (incl. Choose Response)

Questions / Time

47 Qs / ~29 min

Format

Multistage adaptive

Scoring

1–6 scale (CEFR-aligned)

What is TOEFL Listening 2026?

TOEFL Listening 2026 is the updated Listening section of the TOEFL iBT. It uses a multistage adaptive format with 47 questions in approximately 29 minutes. The section includes four task types: Listen and Choose a Response, Conversations, Announcements, and Academic Talks. Audio features multiple accents and authentic speech patterns. Questions test main ideas, details, inference, purpose, method, and attitude. Scores are reported on a new 1–6 scale aligned to CEFR levels.

TOEFL Listening Overview

The Listening section tests your ability to understand spoken English in academic and campus settings. Here is a high-level summary of the updated section structure.

Task types

4: Choose Response, Conversation, Announcement, Academic Talk

Format

Multistage adaptive, 47 Qs, ~29 min

Scoring

1–6 scale, half-point increments, CEFR-aligned

FeatureTOEFL Listening 2026
Task types4: Choose a Response, Conversation, Announcement, Academic Talk
Total questions47 questions
TimeApproximately 29 minutes (base time)
FormatMultistage adaptive (Module 1 difficulty determines Module 2)
Scoring1–6 scale, half-point increments, CEFR-aligned
Question typesMain Idea, Factual, Inference, Purpose, Method, Attitude
Audio featuresMultiple accents (N. America, UK, Australia); authentic speech
NavigationCannot go back once you select Next

What Is TOEFL Listening?

TOEFL Listening tests your ability to understand spoken English across four distinct task types. Listen and Choose a Response presents a brief spoken question or statement (played once, text not shown) and asks you to pick the most appropriate written response. Conversations are short dialogues (35–100 words) between two speakers in campus or social settings. Announcements are simulated campus messages (40–85 words) about schedules, rules, directions, or achievements. Academic Talks are short presentations (175–250 words) in a podcast-style format covering history, science, business, arts, and other disciplines.

The section uses a multistage adaptive format: your performance on Module 1 determines the difficulty of Module 2. Audio plays only once, and you cannot go back to previous questions. Note-taking is allowed but not always recommended. Audio features multiple accents (North American, British, Australian) and authentic speech patterns including reduced forms, false starts, hesitations, and polite interruptions.

Across the Conversation, Announcement, and Academic Talk tasks, questions cover six types: Main Idea, Factual, Inference, Purpose, Method, and Attitude. The section includes 47 questions in approximately 29 minutes, scored on a new 1–6 scale aligned to CEFR levels.

For a detailed breakdown of each question type, see the TOEFL Listening Question Types guide.

TOEFL Listening Task Types

The updated TOEFL Listening section includes four task types, each testing different listening skills. Understanding what each task type requires is the first step to effective preparation.

Listen and Choose a Response

Quick response

You hear a brief spoken question or statement (played once, text not shown) and pick the most appropriate written response from four options.

What it tests: Rapid comprehension of short spoken prompts, pragmatic understanding, and selecting the best contextual reply.

What to focus on: Listen carefully to the full prompt before reading the options. Focus on the intent behind the question or statement, not just the literal words.

Listen to a Conversation

Campus interaction

Short conversations (35–100 words) between two speakers in campus or student-life settings — such as a student and professor, or a student and campus staff member. Each conversation has 2 questions.

What it tests: Understanding the main topic, following the interaction flow, identifying speaker purpose and attitude, and catching key details.

What to focus on: Listen for why the conversation is happening, what each speaker wants, and how the interaction resolves.

Listen to an Announcement

Campus message

Simulated campus messages (40–85 words) about schedules, rules, directions, or achievements. Each announcement has 2 questions.

What it tests: Extracting key information from brief spoken announcements, identifying the main purpose, and retaining specific details like times, locations, or instructions.

What to focus on: Listen for the purpose of the announcement, who it is addressed to, and any specific actions or details the listener needs to know.

Listen to an Academic Talk

Academic presentation

Short academic presentations (175–250 words) in a podcast-style format covering history, science, business, arts, and other disciplines. Each academic talk has 4 questions.

What it tests: Tracking main ideas, understanding supporting details, following argument structure, recognizing transitions, and making inferences about what the speaker means.

What to focus on: Map the talk structure in your notes, track transitions and contrasts, and note the speaker's main argument before focusing on details.

For a complete breakdown of every question pattern, see the TOEFL Listening Question Types guide.

TOEFL Listening Format

The Listening section follows a straightforward process. Here is how it works in plain terms.

1

Listen to the audio

You hear a prompt, conversation, announcement, or academic talk played once. You can take notes while listening. Focus on understanding the overall message, not catching every single word.

2

Review your notes

After the audio ends, questions appear one at a time. Your notes are your primary resource for answering, since you cannot replay the audio.

3

Answer strategically

Use your notes and memory to select answers. Focus on what the speaker meant, not just what they said. Eliminate answers that sound plausible but do not match the actual content.

Key takeaway: The audio plays only once. Focus on understanding purpose and structure during listening, and use your notes to verify details during the question phase.

Task-by-Task Breakdown

This table summarizes all four Listening task types, what each involves, and the best approach for each.

Task typeTypical settingWhat you hearWhat questions testBest first focusCommon challenge
Choose a ResponseVarious (brief prompts)A brief spoken question or statementPragmatic understanding, contextual appropriatenessListen to the full prompt before reading optionsChoosing a literal reply instead of the contextually appropriate one
ConversationCampus or student-lifeTwo speakers discussing a topic or problem (35–100 words)Main idea, purpose, details, attitudeListen for the reason the conversation is happeningMissing purpose while focusing on details
AnnouncementCampus messageSimulated campus message about schedules, rules, or directions (40–85 words)Main idea, factual details, purposeIdentify the purpose and audience of the announcementMissing specific details like times or locations
Academic TalkAcademic presentationShort academic presentation covering a topic (175–250 words)Main idea, structure, details, inferenceMap the talk structure and transitions in notesLosing track of organization during a longer talk

Note-Taking Tips for TOEFL Listening

Note-taking is allowed in TOEFL Listening but is not always necessary. For Choose a Response tasks, the audio is brief enough that notes may not help. For Conversations, Announcements, and Academic Talks, effective notes can significantly improve your accuracy. Here are key strategies.

1

Listen for structure, not every word

Focus on how the speaker organizes their points rather than trying to catch every word. Structure tells you where to find answers.

2

Take selective notes, not transcripts

Write down main ideas, transitions, examples, and key terms. Trying to write everything causes you to miss important points.

Note-taking strategies
3

Track speaker purpose and shifts

Pay attention to why the speaker says something and when they change direction. Words like "however," "actually," and "the key point is" signal important shifts.

4

Use question intent to revisit notes

When answering, identify what the question is really asking (main idea, detail, purpose, inference) and look for the matching information in your notes.

5

Adapt your approach for each task type

Choose a Response needs no notes. Conversations focus on problem-solution flow. Announcements focus on specific details and purpose. Academic Talks focus on argument structure. Use different note-taking approaches for each.

Conversation strategiesAcademic Talk strategies
6

Practice with time pressure

Build comfort listening under realistic conditions. Timed practice sets train you to process audio efficiently and answer within the expected pace.

7

Review why wrong answers are wrong

After practice, analyze incorrect answers. Understanding why a distractor seemed right but was wrong improves your accuracy faster than simply doing more questions.

Common TOEFL Listening Mistakes to Avoid

These are the most frequent mistakes students make in the updated Listening section. Recognizing them before test day gives you a meaningful edge.

Trying to write everything down

Writing too much causes you to miss key information while focused on note-taking. Take selective notes focused on structure and main points.

Missing the main point while chasing details

Some students get caught up in specific facts and miss the overall topic or argument. Always identify the main idea first.

Not tracking why the speaker says something

Many questions ask about purpose and function, not just content. If you only note what was said without considering why, you miss these questions.

Using the same approach for every task type

Choose a Response, Conversations, Announcements, and Academic Talks each have different structures. Adapt your listening and note-taking approach to match the task type.

Panicking after missing one line

Missing a sentence does not mean you will fail the question. Continue listening and use context to fill in gaps. Most questions test overall understanding, not individual sentences.

Guessing without checking notes strategically

After listening, review your notes before answering. Quick guessing leads to errors on questions where your notes contain the answer.

How to Practice TOEFL Listening Effectively

A structured practice routine is more effective than random listening. Here is a progression that builds from skill isolation to full test simulation.

1. Choose a Response warm-ups

Start with Listen and Choose a Response tasks for quick warm-ups. These build rapid comprehension skills and get you comfortable with the test interface.

2. Focused conversation drills

Practice conversations individually to build familiarity with campus interaction patterns, speaker purpose tracking, and problem-solution flow.

3. Focused announcement drills

Practice announcements to sharpen your ability to extract specific details like times, locations, and instructions from brief campus messages.

4. Focused Academic Talk drills

Practice Academic Talks individually to build comfort with longer academic audio, structure mapping, and detail retention.

5. Note-taking practice

Dedicate practice sessions specifically to improving note-taking. Compare your notes against transcripts to identify what you miss and what you capture unnecessarily.

6. Timed mixed listening sets

Combine all four task types in timed sessions that simulate real test conditions. This builds transition skills and endurance.

7. Full practice test application

Take complete TOEFL mock tests that include Listening alongside Reading, Writing, and Speaking. This builds test-day endurance and pacing.

LingoLeap offers structured TOEFL Listening practice that covers all four task types, with timed sessions and AI-powered feedback designed for the updated 2026 format.

Practice TOEFL Listening with Realistic Tasks

Build TOEFL Listening skill with structured practice, realistic question flows, and focused training across all four task types. LingoLeap covers Choose a Response, Conversations, Announcements, and Academic Talks with guided feedback.

Start TOEFL Listening Practice

Frequently Asked Questions

What is TOEFL Listening 2026?
TOEFL Listening 2026 is the updated Listening section of the TOEFL iBT. It uses a multistage adaptive format with 47 questions in approximately 29 minutes. The section includes four task types: Listen and Choose a Response, Listen to a Conversation, Listen to an Announcement, and Listen to an Academic Talk. Audio features multiple accents (North American, British, Australian) and authentic speech patterns. Scores are reported on a new 1–6 scale aligned to CEFR levels.
What are the four task types in TOEFL Listening?
TOEFL Listening has four task types. Listen and Choose a Response: you hear a brief spoken question or statement and pick the best written response from four options. Listen to a Conversation: short dialogues (35–100 words) between two speakers in campus or social settings, with 2 questions each. Listen to an Announcement: simulated campus messages (40–85 words) about schedules, rules, or directions, with 2 questions each. Listen to an Academic Talk: short academic presentations (175–250 words) in a podcast-style format, with 4 questions each.
What are the 6 question types in TOEFL Listening?
Across the Conversation, Announcement, and Academic Talk tasks, TOEFL Listening uses six question types: Main Idea questions (overall topic or purpose), Factual questions (specific stated information), Inference questions (implied meaning or conclusions), Purpose questions (why a speaker says something), Method questions (how a speaker explains or organizes), and Attitude questions (speaker feelings, certainty, or opinion).
How does the TOEFL Listening adaptive format work?
TOEFL Listening uses a multistage adaptive design. Your performance on Module 1 determines the difficulty of Module 2. You cannot go back to previous questions once you select Next. Audio plays only once, and the section features authentic speech including reduced forms, false starts, hesitations, and polite interruptions.
Do I need note-taking for TOEFL Listening?
You are allowed to take notes during TOEFL Listening, but note-taking is not always recommended. Because audio plays only once, notes can help you remember key details for Conversation, Announcement, and Academic Talk tasks. However, for Listen and Choose a Response tasks, the audio is brief enough that notes may not be necessary. When you do take notes, focus on main ideas and structure rather than trying to transcribe everything.
How is TOEFL Listening scored in 2026?
Since January 21, 2026, TOEFL Listening uses a new 1–6 scoring scale with half-point increments. The scale is CEFR-aligned: C2 = 6, C1 = 5–5.5, B2 = 4–4.5, B1 = 3–3.5, A2 = 2–2.5, A1 = 1–1.5. Each question is worth 1 raw score point, and raw scores are converted to scaled scores.
How should I practice TOEFL Listening?
Practice all four task types separately to build format familiarity. Start with Listen and Choose a Response for quick warm-ups, then work on Conversations and Announcements, and finally tackle Academic Talks. Get comfortable with multiple accents and authentic speech patterns. Add timed sets to simulate the adaptive format. Review wrong answers to understand why the correct answer works, and progress to full practice tests to build endurance.

TOEFL Listening Guides

Explore deeper guides for each Listening task type, strategies, and practice resources.

Listening task guides

Practice & overview