What Changed in TOEFL 2026
In January 2026 ETS rolled out a completely redesigned TOEFL. Every speaking and writing task was replaced, which means old templates built for Independent Speaking or Integrated Writing no longer match the test. Here is a side-by-side comparison of what changed.
| Section | Old Task (Pre-2026) | New Task (2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Speaking Task 1 | Independent Speaking | Listen and Repeat |
| Speaking Task 2 | Integrated Speaking (Campus) | Interview |
| Writing Task 1 | Integrated Writing | Build a Sentence |
| Writing Task 2 | — | Email Writing |
| Writing Task 3 | Academic Discussion | Academic Discussion (revised) |
Key takeaway
Old templates — like the classic "independent speaking template" or "integrated writing template" — are no longer directly applicable. You need templates built specifically for the 2026 tasks.
Which Tasks Still Benefit from Templates
Not every TOEFL 2026 task is helped by a template. Some are purely skill-based and require practice, not structure. Here is a quick guide.
Speaking: Interview task
Opinion-based questions that ask you to explain a preference, agree or disagree, or describe an experience. A clear template gives you a reliable structure for every prompt.
Speaking: Listen and Repeat
A repetition task where you listen to a sentence and repeat it aloud. No template needed — this is a pronunciation and listening accuracy exercise.
Writing: Email
Emails have a clear format — greeting, purpose, details, closing. A template helps you nail the structure and tone every time so you can focus on the content details.
Writing: Academic Discussion
A structured response to a professor's question where you state a position and support it. Templates help you organize position, acknowledgment, reasoning, and conclusion within the time limit.
Writing: Build a Sentence
A grammar and syntax task where you construct correct sentences from given words. This is a skill-based task, not a writing task — no template applies.
Speaking Templates Overview
The Interview task is the main speaking task that benefits from templates. It asks opinion-based questions — "Do you prefer X or Y?", "Do you agree or disagree?", "Describe a time when..." — and gives you about 45 seconds to respond. Here are three proven frameworks.
Framework A
Opinion + Reason + Example
- Step 1:: State your opinion clearly (5s)
- Step 2:: Give your main reason (10s)
- Step 3:: Provide a specific example (20s)
- Step 4:: Wrap up / restate (10s)
Best for: Agree/disagree, preference questions
Framework B
Choice + Two Reasons
- Step 1:: State your choice (5s)
- Step 2:: First reason with brief detail (15s)
- Step 3:: Second reason with brief detail (15s)
- Step 4:: Concluding sentence (10s)
Best for: "Which do you prefer?" questions
Framework C
Habit + Explanation
- Step 1:: Describe the habit or routine (5s)
- Step 2:: Explain why you do it (15s)
- Step 3:: Give a specific situation or story (15s)
- Step 4:: Quick summary (10s)
Best for: Describe, explain, routine questions
Writing Templates Overview
Two of the three writing tasks benefit from templates: the Email task and the Academic Discussion task. Build a Sentence is a grammar exercise with no room for structure. Here are previews of both template-friendly tasks.
Email Writing Template
Greeting
Address the recipient appropriately (Dear Professor Smith, Hi Alex).
Context / Purpose
State why you are writing in 1–2 sentences.
Detail 1
First specific detail or piece of information the prompt asks for.
Detail 2 & 3
Additional details, requests, or questions as required by the prompt.
Closing
Polite sign-off with a clear action or thanks (Thank you for your help, Best regards).
Academic Discussion Template
Position Statement
Clearly state whether you agree or disagree with the prompt, or which side you support.
Acknowledge the Other Side
Briefly reference the opposing view or another student's point to show critical thinking.
Supporting Evidence
Provide your main reason and a specific example or explanation. This is the core of your response.
Conclusion
Restate your position or connect back to the original question in one sentence.
Old Template Terms People Still Search
If you arrived here looking for an "integrated writing template" or an "independent speaking template," you are not alone. Thousands of students still search for these terms every month. Here is the reality: those tasks no longer exist on the TOEFL as of January 2026.
Old Intent → New Equivalent
"Integrated writing template"
The Integrated Writing task has been replaced. Depending on what you need, the closest equivalents are the Email Writing template or the Academic Discussion template.
"Independent speaking template"
Independent Speaking has been replaced by two tasks: Listen and Repeat (no template needed) and the Interview template, which is the closest match for the old opinion-based task.
For a full breakdown of what changed and how to transition, see our integrated writing template transition guide.
How to Use Templates Without Sounding Memorized
A template is a framework, not a script. The students who score highest use templates as invisible scaffolding — their answers sound organized but natural. Here are five ways to make that happen.
Adapt the language to your own vocabulary
Don't memorize phrases word-for-word. If the template says "In my opinion," switch to "I personally think" or "From my experience" — whatever you would actually say.
Always include specific details and personal examples
Generic answers are the number one giveaway of a memorized template. Replace placeholder content with real details from your life, studies, or observations.
Vary your sentence starters
If every answer starts with "I believe that..." followed by "The reason is...", it sounds robotic. Mix it up: "One thing I've noticed...", "A good example of this is...", "What stands out to me is..."
Practice until the structure feels automatic, not forced
The goal is to internalize the template so deeply that you no longer think about it during the test. You should be thinking about what to say, not where to put it.
Focus on content quality, not just structure
Scorers care about your ideas, vocabulary range, grammar accuracy, and coherence. A perfect template with thin content will score lower than a slightly messy answer with strong ideas.
Common Template Mistakes to Avoid
Using the same template for both speaking and writing
Fix: Speaking responses need a 45-second verbal structure. Writing tasks need paragraph-level organization. Use task-specific templates.
Memorizing template phrases instead of understanding the structure
Fix: Learn the framework (opinion → reason → example → conclusion) and express it in your own words each time.
Skipping the specific example or detail
Fix: Every template includes a slot for a specific example. Vague generalizations are the #1 reason templates still produce low scores.
Using templates for tasks that don't need them
Fix: Listen and Repeat and Build a Sentence are skill-based tasks. Applying an opinion template to these will hurt, not help.
Best Pages to Visit Next
Speaking Template Hub
All TOEFL speaking templates in one place with frameworks, sample answers, and practice tips.
Writing Template Hub
Complete writing templates for Email and Academic Discussion tasks with examples.
Interview Template (Most Popular)
The most-used TOEFL 2026 speaking template with four proven frameworks for the Interview task.
Email Writing Template
Step-by-step email template with greeting, context, details, and closing structure.
Academic Discussion Template
Position-based template for responding to a professor's discussion prompt.
Writing Template Examples
See templates in action with full sample responses scored and annotated.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are TOEFL templates allowed?
Do TOEFL 2026 templates work for the old test format?
Which TOEFL section benefits most from templates?
Can I use the same template for every question?
How long should I practice with a template before the test?
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