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Plan Labelling Task

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The Plan Labelling Task is a question type in the IELTS exam where you identify and label places or features on a floor plan, building plan, site plan, or layout using information from a listening recording or reading passage.

You must place the correct word, letter, or number in the correct labelled space.

Where It Appears

The Plan Labelling Task most commonly appears in:

  • Listening test

It may also appear in some Reading-style formats depending on task design.

It is common in both IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training.

What It Tests

This task checks your ability to:

  • Understand layout descriptions
  • Follow directions accurately
  • Recognize rooms and facilities
  • Connect spoken information to a visual plan
  • Understand location language
  • Stay focused under time pressure

Common Types of Plans

You may label:

  • Office floor plans
  • School buildings
  • Library layouts
  • Museum plans
  • Park visitor centres
  • Conference venues
  • Shopping centres
  • Apartment layouts

Typical Instructions

You may see instructions such as:

  • Write the correct letter, A–F
  • Choose from the list below
  • Write ONE WORD ONLY
  • Label the plan

Always follow the instructions exactly.

Example (Listening)

Question:

Label the location of the reception desk.

Recording:

The reception desk is immediately inside the main entrance on the right.

Correct Answer:

The correct marked position on the plan.

Example Location Language

You may hear:

  • next to
  • opposite
  • beside
  • between
  • in the corner
  • on the right
  • on the left
  • at the end of the corridor
  • near the entrance
  • in the centre

Why It Matters

Plan Labelling Tasks are valuable because they test practical understanding of directions and layouts.

They reward candidates who can:

  • Visualize space clearly
  • Follow movement descriptions
  • Identify facilities quickly
  • Stay accurate under pressure

Common Mistakes Candidates Make

Confusing Map and Plan Orientation

Plans usually show indoor layouts, not streets or outdoor routes.

Missing Starting Point

If you lose the entrance or reference point, later answers become harder.

Left / Right Errors

Candidates reverse positions.

Ignoring Landmarks

Existing labelled rooms help orientation.

Panicking During Fast Audio

Stay calm and keep following the route.

High-Scoring Strategies

Study the Plan Before Audio Starts

Use preparation time to identify:

  • Entrance
  • Corridors
  • Rooms
  • Blank labels
  • Existing landmarks

Predict Possible Answers

Think of likely places such as:

  • office
  • café
  • toilet
  • classroom
  • storage room

Follow the Speaker’s Route

The speaker often explains movement step by step.

Use Fixed Reference Points

Doors, stairs, lifts, and entrances help orientation.

Keep Moving

If one answer is missed, continue listening for the next.

Listening Tips

  • Answers usually come in order.
  • Listen for movement phrases:
  • go through
  • turn left
  • straight ahead
  • opposite the stairs
  • beside the lift
  • Mark mentally where the speaker moves.

Reading Tips

If plan tasks appear with written material:

  • Scan for room names
  • Follow written directions carefully
  • Use landmarks to confirm answers

Why Many Candidates Find It Tricky

Because it combines:

  • Listening carefully
  • Understanding a visual layout
  • Tracking movement in real time

Quick Tips

  • Find the entrance first.
  • Use existing labels as anchors.
  • Listen for left/right carefully.
  • Do not stop after missing one answer.

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