Communicate effectively face-to-face, expressing opinions and presenting arguments
follow the news
write clear, detailed English, expressing opinions and explaining the advantages and disadvantages of different points of view
write letters, reports, stories and lots of other types of text.
Accepted for entry to foundation/pathway/pre-sessional courses in English-speaking countries.
Accepted for entry to undergraduate programmes taught in the medium of English in non-English-speaking countries.
CEFR level: B2
Scale score: 160–179
Test format: Computer or paper-based
No. of papers: 4
Exam length: About 3.5 hours
Paper: 1 hour 15 minutes
Content:7 parts/52 questions
Purpose: Shows you can deal confidently with different types of text, such as fiction, newspapers and magazines. Tests your use of English with tasks that show how well you can control your grammar and vocabulary.
Paper: 1 hour 20 minutes
Content: 2 parts
Purpose: Requires you to be able to produce two different pieces of writing, such as letters, reports, reviews and essays.
Paper: about 40 minutes
Content: 4 parts/30 questions
Purpose: Requires you to be able to follow and understand a range of spoken materials, such as news programmes, presentations and everyday conversations.
Paper: 14 minutes per pair of candidates
Content: 4 parts
Purpose: Tests your ability to communicate effectively in face to face situations. You will take the Speaking test with one or two other candidates.
Watch this tutorial before you start.
Check your answers as you do the test. Once the test has finished you will not be able to check them.
A guide to the exam, with advice on preparing for the exam, tips for exam day and useful links.
All candidates receive a Statement of Results, and if you are successful in the exam you will also receive a certificate.
Your Statement of Results is released online, approximately four to six weeks after the exam for paper-based exams, and two to three weeks after the exam for computer-based exams. The fastest way to get your results is to sign up to free online results service.
Cambridge Assessment send your certificate to your exam centre about three weeks after results are available. Your exam centre then sends it on to you.
If you took a paper-based exam, your certificate will be sent to your centre seven to nine weeks after the date of your exam.
If you took a computer-based exam, your certificate will be sent to your centre five to six weeks after your exam date.
Cambridge English Scale Score: 180–190, Grade/CEFR: Grade A, CEFR level: C1
Cambridge English Scale Score: 173–179, Grade/CEFR: Grade B, CEFR level: B2
Cambridge English Scale Score: 160–172, Grade/CEFR: Grade C, CEFR level: B2
Cambridge English Scale Score: 140–159, Grade/CEFR: Level B1, CEFR level: B1
The information is taken from Cambridge English official website. For more and up-to-date information please visit Cambridge English B2 First website.
Time Allowed: 1 hour 15 minutes
Number of parts: 7 parts
Length of texts: About 2,200 words to read in total.
Number of questions: 52
Marks: 40% of total
Texts may be from: Newspapers and magazines, journals, books (fiction and non-fiction), promotional and informational material.
What's in Part 1?
=> A text with some multiple-choice questions. Each question has four options (A, B, C or D) – you have to decide which is the correct answer.
What do I have to practise?
=> Vocabulary – idioms, collocations, shades of meaning, phrasal verbs, fixed phrases etc.
How many questions are there?
=> 8
How many marks are there?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
What's in Part 2?
=>A text in which there are some gaps, each of which represents one missing word. You have to think of the correct word for each gap.
What do I have to practise?
=> Grammar and vocabulary.
How many questions are there?
=> 8
How many marks are there?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
What's in Part 3?
=> A text containing eight gaps. Each gap represents a word. At the end of the line is a ‘prompt’ word which you have to change in some way to complete the sentence correctly.
What do I have to practise?
=> Vocabulary.
How many questions are there?
=>8
How many marks are there?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
What's in Part 4?
=> Each question consists of a sentence followed by a ‘key’ word and a second sentence with a gap in the middle. You have to use this key word to complete the second sentence so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence.
What do I have to practise?
=> Grammar and vocabulary.
How many questions are there?
=> 6
How many marks are there?
=> Up to 2 marks for each correct answer.
What's in Part 5?
=> A text with some multiple-choice questions. For each question, there are four options and you have to choose A, B, C or D.
What do I have to practise?
=> Reading for detail, opinion, tone, purpose, main idea, implication, attitude.
How many questions are there?
=> 6
How many marks are there?
=> 2 marks for each correct answer.
What's in Part 6?
=> A single page of text with some numbered gaps which represent missing sentences. After the text there are some sentences which are not in the right order. You have to read the text and the sentences and decide which sentence best fits each gap.
What do I have to practise?
=> How to understand the structure and development of a text.
How many questions are there?
=> 6
How many marks are there?
=> 2 marks for each correct answer.
What's in Part 7?
=> A series of statements followed by a text divided into sections or several short texts. You have to match each statement to the section or text in which you can find the information.
What do I have to practise?
=> Reading for specific information, detail, opinion and attitude.
How many questions are there?
=> 10
How many marks are there?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
Time Allowed: 1 hour 20 minutes
Number of parts: 2 parts
Number of questions: Part 1: one compulsory question, Part 2: one question from a choice of three
Types of task:, email, essay, letter, report, review.
What's in Part 1?
=> You’re given an essay title and two ideas clearly linked to the title. You write an essay giving your opinions about the title, using the ideas given. You must also add a third, different idea of your own linked to the title. The title will be a subject of general interest – you won’t need any specialised knowledge.
What do I have to practise?
=> Using language functions, such as evaluating, expressing opinions, hypothesising, justifying, persuading.
How many questions are there?
=> One compulsory question.
How much do I have to write?
=> 140–190 words
What's in Part 2?
=> You write a text from a choice of text types – article, email/letter, report or review. To guide your writing, you’ll be given information about context, topic purpose and target reader.
What do I have to practise?
=> Writing different types of text that could be included in the exam.
How many questions are there?
=> One task to be selected from a choice of three.
How much do I have to write?
=> 140–190 words
Time Allowed: About 40 minutes
Number of parts: 4 parts
Marks: 20% of total
Number of questions: 30
Recordings may be from: Monologues: answer phone messages, radio broadcasts and features, news, public announcements, stories and anecdotes, lectures and talks; or interacting speakers: conversations, interviews, discussions, radio plays.
What's in Part 1?
=> Eight short extracts from monologues or conversations between interacting speakers. There is one multiple-choice question for each extract, and you have to choose A, B or C.
What do I have to practise?
=> Listening for feeling, attitude, opinion, purpose, function, agreement, gist and detail.
How many questions are there?
=> 8
How much do I have to write?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
What's in Part 2?
=> A monologue (which may be introduced by a presenter) lasting approximately 3 minutes. You have to complete the sentences on the question paper with the missing information which you hear on the recording.
What do I have to practise?
=> Listening for specific information, stated opinion.
How many questions are there?
=> 10
How much do I have to write?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
What's in Part 3?
=> A series of five themed monologues of approximately 30 seconds each. On the question paper, you have to select five correct options from a list of eight possible answers.
What do I have to practise?
=> Listening for gist, attitude, opinion, purpose, feeling, main points and detail.
How many questions are there?
=> 5
How much do I have to write?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
What's in Part 4?
=> A conversation between two or more speakers of approximately 3–4 minutes. You have to answer some multiple-choice questions by choosing the correct answer from three options (A, B or C).
What do I have to practise?
=> Listening for attitude, opinion, detail, gist, main idea and specific information.
How many questions are there?
=> 7
How much do I have to write?
=> 1 mark for each correct answer.
Time Allowed: 14 minutes per pair of candidates
Number of parts: 4 parts
Marks: 20% of total
You have to talk: with the examiner with the other candidate on your own
What's in Part 1?
=> Conversation with the examiner. The examiner asks questions and you may have to give information about your interests, studies, career, etc.
What do I have to practise?
=> Giving information about yourself and expressing your opinion about various topics.
How long do I have to speak?
=> 2 minutes
What's in Part 2?
=> The examiner gives you two photographs and asks you to talk about them. You have to speak for 1 minute without interruption and the interlocutor then asks the other candidate to comment on your photographs for about 30 seconds.
The other candidate receives a different set of photographs and you have to listen and comment when they have finished speaking. The question you have to answer about your photographs is written at the top of the page to remind you what you should talk about.
What do I have to practise?
=> Talking on your own about something: comparing, describing, expressing opinions, speculating.
How long do I have to speak?
=> 1 minute per candidate
What's in Part 3?
=> Conversation with the other candidate. The examiner gives you some material and a task to do. You have to talk with the other candidate and make a decision.
What do I have to practise?
=> Exchanging ideas, expressing and justifying opinions, agreeing and/or disagreeing, suggesting, speculating, evaluating, reaching a decision through negotiation, etc.
How long do I have to speak?
=> 3 minutes (a 2-minute discussion followed by a 1-minute decision-making task)
What's in Part 4?
=> Further discussion with the other candidate, guided by questions from the examiner, about the topics or issues raised in the task in Part 3.
What do I have to practise?
=> Expressing and justifying opinions, agreeing and/or disagreeing.
How long do we have to speak?
=> 4 minutes