IELTS vs TOEFL vs Cambridge: Which Exam Is Right for You?

IELTS vs TOEFL vs Cambridge: Which Exam Is Right for You?
Exam Comparison Guide

IELTS vs TOEFL vs Cambridge: Which Exam Is Right for You?

A side-by-side breakdown of the three most widely recognised English exams - what they test, where they are accepted, and how to choose the right one for your goals.

Updated April 2026 Covers B1 - C2 levels Decision guide included

Choosing between IELTS, TOEFL, and Cambridge exams is one of the most important decisions for any learner pursuing study abroad, immigration, or professional certification. Each exam has different formats, scoring systems, and acceptance profiles worldwide. This guide compares them directly and gives you a clear framework for deciding which to take.

British Council / IDP / Cambridge
  • Score: 0-9 band scale
  • Duration: 2h 45min
  • Format: paper or computer
  • Valid: 2 years
  • Cost: ~$220-$250
ETS (Educational Testing Service)
  • Score: 0-120 total
  • Duration: ~2 hours
  • Format: computer only
  • Valid: 2 years
  • Cost: ~$185-$255
Cambridge University Press & Assessment
  • Score: Cambridge Scale (80-230)
  • Duration: varies by level (3-4h)
  • Format: paper or computer
  • Valid: lifetime
  • Cost: ~$150-$220

Key difference at a glance: IELTS and TOEFL are proficiency tests that give a score used for applications. Cambridge qualifications are tiered certifications (B1, B2, C1, C2) that you either pass or fail - and they do not expire.

Exam Format Comparison

All three exams test the four language skills - reading, writing, listening, and speaking - but they differ significantly in how they test each skill. Understanding these differences helps you choose the exam that suits your strengths.

Component IELTS Academic TOEFL iBT Cambridge B2 First / C1 Advanced
Reading 60 min | 3 long texts | 40 questions 35 min | 2 passages | 20 questions 75 min | various text types | gap-fill, matching, multiple choice
Writing 60 min | Task 1 (graph/diagram 150w) + Task 2 (essay 250w) 29 min | Integrated task + Academic Discussion 80 min | Email/letter + Essay
Listening 30 min | 4 recordings | 40 questions | accents vary 36 min | 3 lectures + 2 conversations 40 min | monologues + conversations | British/international accents
Speaking 11-14 min | face-to-face with examiner | 3 parts 16 min | recorded responses to computer prompts 15 min | with partner + examiner | 4 parts
Use of English Not separate - integrated into other skills Not separate Separate paper: grammar, vocabulary, word formation

A key distinction is how the speaking test is conducted. IELTS uses a live examiner in an interview-style format. TOEFL records your spoken responses to prompts on a computer - many candidates find this format less natural. Cambridge has you speak with both a partner and an examiner, which can feel more conversational.

Scoring Systems Compared

Each exam uses a different scoring scale. Understanding how scores relate to CEFR levels helps you compare them directly and know what score you need for your goal.

CEFR Level IELTS Band TOEFL iBT Score Cambridge Exam Cambridge Scale Score
B1 4.0 - 4.5 42 - 71 B1 Preliminary 140 - 159
B2 5.5 - 6.5 72 - 94 B2 First (FCE) 160 - 179
C1 7.0 - 8.0 95 - 109 C1 Advanced (CAE) 180 - 199
C2 8.5 - 9.0 110 - 120 C2 Proficiency (CPE) 200 - 230

Cambridge advantage: Once you pass a Cambridge exam, the certificate never expires. This matters if you are planning to study or work abroad but not immediately - you take the exam once and the certificate remains valid indefinitely.

Where Each Exam Is Accepted

Acceptance is the single most important factor in choosing an exam. No matter how well you perform, the result is worthless if the institution or authority does not accept it.

Purpose / Destination IELTS TOEFL Cambridge
UK universities Yes (preferred) Some accept Yes (widely accepted)
US universities Most accept Yes (preferred) Some accept
Australia / Canada immigration Yes (often required) Not accepted Not accepted
EU universities Yes Most accept Widely accepted
European employers / HR Some Limited Yes (well recognised)
North Africa (Algerian / Moroccan / Tunisian admin) IELTS most common Growing acceptance Cambridge B2/C1 accepted
Professional licensing (medical, legal) IELTS OET variant Limited Context-dependent
Validity period 2 years 2 years Lifetime

For immigration to Australia, Canada, or the UK under points-based systems, IELTS is almost always the required exam. TOEFL is not accepted for immigration purposes in these countries.

Which Exam Should You Take?

Use the following decision guide based on your primary goal. Match your situation to the recommendation on the right.

Decision Guide: Match Your Goal to the Right Exam

I want to immigrate to Australia, Canada, or the UK IELTS Academic or General Training is required for visa applications in these countries
IELTS
I am applying to US graduate programs (business, engineering, sciences) Most US universities prefer TOEFL iBT; check each school's requirements
TOEFL
I want a permanent certificate for my CV or portfolio Cambridge certificates do not expire and are universally recognised by European employers
Cambridge
I am applying to UK, Australian, or Canadian universities Both IELTS and Cambridge are widely accepted; IELTS is slightly more universal
IELTS or Cambridge
I prefer face-to-face human interaction and dislike computers Both IELTS and Cambridge offer speaking with a human examiner; TOEFL is computer-only
IELTS or Cambridge
I am strong at grammar and vocabulary but weaker at speaking spontaneously Cambridge has a Use of English paper where grammar knowledge directly earns marks
Cambridge
I need a score quickly (retake in 5 days possible) TOEFL allows retakes after 3 days; IELTS requires 7+ days between sittings; Cambridge has fixed test windows
TOEFL

Which Exam Is Harder?

The honest answer is: it depends on your background. For learners from Arabic-speaking countries, some patterns are consistently reported:

Aspect Easier for Arabic speakers Harder for Arabic speakers
IELTS Reading Long analytical texts suit readers who study academic Arabic British English accents and speed in Listening
TOEFL Listening Academic lecture format is familiar from university Fast American academic speech, note-taking under pressure
TOEFL Writing Structured essay format mirrors Arabic university writing style Integrated task requires synthesis while reading and listening simultaneously
Cambridge Writing Structured formats (letter, report, review) with clear criteria Range of text types requires flexible register switching
Cambridge Use of English Grammar rules are explicit - study leads directly to marks Vocabulary range required is very broad at C1/C2

Many North African learners find IELTS the most accessible first choice because they are already familiar with British English through secondary school instruction, and the Academic Writing Task 2 essay format aligns with French-style academic argument writing.

Cost, Availability, and Registration

All three exams are available in major North African cities. Costs vary by country and test centre.

Factor IELTS TOEFL iBT Cambridge
Typical cost (North Africa) ~$180-$240 ~$190-$255 ~$150-$210
Results availability 3-5 days (computer); 13 days (paper) 4-8 days 2-6 weeks (varies by level)
Test frequency Up to 48 dates per year ~30+ dates per year Fixed sessions per year (typically 3-4)
Score sending TRFs to 5 organisations free 4 score reports free; additional ~$20 each One certificate; certified copies available
Preparation materials Very extensive - books, apps, free Cambridge resources ETS official prep, Khan Academy partnership Official Cambridge past papers and Practice Tests Plus series

How Long to Prepare?

Starting from a solid B1 level, realistic preparation timelines for reaching a competitive score:

3-4
months for IELTS 6.5
(from B1)
3-5
months for TOEFL 90+
(from B1)
4-6
months for Cambridge B2 Pass
(from B1)
6-9
months for Cambridge C1 Pass
(from B2)

All three exams reward consistent practice over crash courses. Attempting IELTS or TOEFL without at least 8-10 weeks of targeted practice typically results in a score 0.5-1.0 bands lower than potential.

Important: Do not book the exam before you are consistently hitting your target score in full practice tests under timed conditions. Practice test performance is the most reliable predictor of actual exam results.

Our Recommendation by Profile

Here is a summary recommendation based on the most common goals among North African learners.

Your Profile Best Choice Why
Planning to study or settle in the UK IELTS Academic Required for UK student and work visas; preferred by most UK universities
Planning to immigrate to Canada or Australia IELTS General Training Required for Express Entry, Points-Based System; TOEFL not accepted
Applying to US universities TOEFL iBT Preferred by most US institutions; widely available score-sending infrastructure
Want a CV credential that does not expire Cambridge B2 First or C1 Advanced Lifetime validity; strong employer recognition in Europe and North Africa
First English certification, flexible goal IELTS or Cambridge B2 Both are globally recognised and have extensive preparation resources

For further detail on each exam individually, read the dedicated guides: IELTS Exam Guide, TOEFL Exam Guide, and Cambridge English Exams. For preparation strategies that apply to any exam, see English Exam Preparation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Neither is objectively harder - they test the same skills in different ways. IELTS speaking is face-to-face with a human examiner and many candidates find this less stressful than speaking into a computer microphone as in TOEFL. TOEFL reading passages are shorter but integrated with listening, which adds complexity. Candidates who studied through British-oriented education systems (common in North Africa and the Middle East) often perform better on IELTS initially. The best approach is to take a free practice test for each and see which feels more natural.

For most UK visas and immigration purposes, no. The UK Home Office has a specific list of Secure English Language Tests (SELTs) approved for visa purposes, and this list includes IELTS but not Cambridge qualifications. Cambridge certificates are widely accepted by UK universities for academic entry, but they are not a substitute for IELTS in immigration and visa applications. Always verify current requirements on the official UK government website or with the relevant embassy.

There is no limit on retakes for any of the three exams. IELTS allows retaking after 7 days; TOEFL after 3 days. Cambridge exams have fixed session windows, so retakes typically happen at the next available session 3-6 months later. Keep in mind that each retake costs the full exam fee. It is more cost-effective to prepare thoroughly before your first sitting than to retake multiple times. TOEFL also offers MyBest Scores, which lets institutions see your highest score from each section across multiple sittings.

French universities that require English certification typically accept both IELTS and TOEFL, with minimum requirements usually around IELTS 6.0 or TOEFL 80-90. Many business schools (Grandes Ecoles) also accept Cambridge B2 First or C1 Advanced. Check the specific institution's language requirements before choosing. That said, IELTS tends to have more test centres in North Africa and faster available dates, making it a practical default for students in the region.

All three are internationally recognised, but they serve slightly different purposes. IELTS and TOEFL generate a numerical score that lets institutions compare candidates on a spectrum. Cambridge qualifications certify that you achieved a specific CEFR level - you either pass or fail at that level. For employers and language learning contexts, a Cambridge certificate at C1 is very clearly understood. For competitive university admissions where rankings matter, a high IELTS or TOEFL score can distinguish you from other applicants at the same broad level.

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