Speaking Part Two is the second section of the Speaking test in the IELTS exam.
In this part, the candidate receives a task card (cue card) with a topic and several prompts. The candidate must speak alone on that topic for up to two minutes.
This section tests your ability to organize ideas and speak continuously.
Where It Appears
Speaking Part Two comes after:
- Speaking Part One
And before:
- Speaking Part Three
Time Length
Usually includes:
- 1 minute preparation time
- 1 to 2 minutes speaking time
- Short follow-up question(s) from examiner
What You Receive
You are given a cue card with:
- Main topic
- 3 to 4 guiding bullet points
- Final instruction: explain why / describe how you felt / etc.
You also receive paper and pencil for notes.
Example Cue Card
Describe a book you enjoyed reading.
You should say:
- what the book was
- when you read it
- what it was about
and explain why you enjoyed it.
What You Must Do
You need to:
- Speak continuously for up to two minutes
- Cover the prompts naturally
- Organize ideas clearly
- Use varied vocabulary and grammar
- Speak fluently with confidence
What Examiners Assess
Speaking Part Two contributes to your overall Speaking Band Score using:
- Fluency and Coherence
- Lexical Resource
- Grammatical Range and Accuracy
- Pronunciation
Common Problems Candidates Face
Stopping Too Early
Speaking only 30–40 seconds limits performance.
Memorized Stories
These sound unnatural and may not fit the topic.
Poor Organization
Ideas become random.
Panic During Preparation
Wasting the one-minute planning time.
Repetition
Using the same words again and again.
High-Scoring Strategies
Use the One-Minute Plan Wisely
Write quick keywords, not full sentences.
Follow a Clear Structure
Beginning → details → feelings/opinion.
Expand Each Bullet Point
Give examples or small stories.
Keep Speaking
If you finish one idea, add more detail.
Use Past, Present, Future Tenses Naturally
This shows range.
Strong Speaking Structure
Introduction
State what you chose.
Main Details
Answer the cue card prompts.
Personal Reflection
Why it mattered / how you felt.
Closing Sentence
Short final thought.
Useful Language
- I’d like to talk about…
- What I remember most is…
- One interesting thing was…
- The reason I chose this topic is…
- It had a big impact on me because…
- Overall, it was a memorable experience.
Example Opening
I’d like to talk about a book I really enjoyed called Atomic Habits, which I read about two years ago when I wanted to improve my daily routine.
Time Awareness
Aim to speak close to the full two minutes if possible.
Good pacing:
- Intro: 15 seconds
- Main points: 90 seconds
- Reflection: 15 seconds
Quick Tips
- Do not try to be perfect. Keep talking.
- Use notes only as reminders.
- If topic feels unfamiliar, invent a realistic answer.
- Stay calm and natural.
Why Strong Candidates Perform Well
Top scorers organize ideas quickly, speak smoothly for the full time, and add personal detail confidently.