10–15 min
practice window
Short enough for daily IELTS diagnosis.
Fast IELTS diagnosis
Use this Speaking Part 2 mini mock to practice cue-card structure, examples, timing, and fluency without waiting for a full speaking session.
10–15 min
Short enough for daily IELTS diagnosis.
4 paths
Reading, Listening, Writing Task 2, Speaking Part 2.
1 next step
Route into full test, calculator, examples, or AI feedback.
Tool-first IELTS catalog
Cue card sprint
A quick cue-card practice flow for structure, fluency, and answer development under IELTS speaking pressure.
Part 2 · cue cards · fluency
Speaking
Practice Speaking Part 1, cue cards, and Part 3 follow-ups with a repair loop for fluency, vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation.
Parts 1–3 · cue cards · feedback loop
Score tool
Convert raw Reading and Listening scores and understand overall IELTS band rounding before choosing the next practice step.
Raw score conversion · overall band rules
Use a mini mock after a focused study block, before choosing tomorrow’s practice, or when you need to confirm whether a weak skill is improving. Do not use it as your only final exam preparation.
The point is not to collect attempts. The point is to choose the next action: full mock for baseline, band calculator for scoring, band examples for calibration, or writing/speaking evaluation for repair.
FAQ
Reading and Listening practice can be scored automatically from answers. Writing and Speaking need evaluation logic, so Hack Admission routes those attempts into dedicated feedback tools instead of pretending every skill is scored the same way.
Use a full mock when you need a baseline under exam timing. Use a mini mock when you only need a fast signal on one weak skill between study sessions.
No. Mini mocks are diagnostics. You still need full-length mock tests to build timing, stamina, and exam confidence.