DALF C2 Production Orale (Speaking) – Format and Preparation Guide 2026

The DALF C2 oral module is the pinnacle of French language assessment. It asks you to prepare and deliver a structured presentation on a complex topic, then defend your position in a sophisticated discussion with a jury. This guide covers the exact format, what examiners assess, and how to prepare effectively for the most demanding speaking test in French language certification.

→ Related: DALF C2 Production Ecrite (Writing) – Format and Preparation Guide 2026

→ Related: DALF C2 Comprehension de lOral (Listening) – Format and Preparation Guide 2026

DALF C2 Speaking Module – Exact Format

ComponentDetails
Module NameProduction Orale
Preparation Time30 minutes (with all documents — listening + reading + oral prep)
Presentation Duration10–15 minutes (monologue by candidate)
Discussion Duration10–15 minutes (jury questions and debate)
Total Oral Time~20–30 minutes with the jury
Documents Provided2–4 authentic French texts on a complex topic (same package as reading/listening)
Score25 points
Pass MarkMinimum 5/25; combined 25/50 for oral + writing

The Two Phases of the C2 Oral

Phase 1: The Presentation (10–15 minutes)

After 30 minutes of preparation, you deliver a structured, uninterrupted presentation to the jury. At C2, this is not a summary of the documents — it is a fully developed intellectual argument:

Presentation ElementExpectation at C2
IntroductionOpens with an observation or provocative question; introduces the thesis clearly
Structure3-part plan (explicitly announced): thesis → antithesis → synthesis
Document integrationSource documents are cited and analysed, not summarised
ArgumentationOriginal position developed and defended with evidence and nuance
Language qualityNear-native fluency, sophisticated vocabulary, complex syntax
DeliveryNatural, not read from notes; well-paced; no excessive hesitation

Phase 2: The Discussion (10–15 minutes)

The jury (2–3 examiners) will question your presentation, challenge your arguments, and introduce new angles. This phase tests:

Your ability to defend your position under intellectual pressure

Spontaneous production of complex French without preparation

Whether you can acknowledge counterarguments gracefully without abandoning your position

Vocabulary range and register even in unrehearsed responses

What Examiners Score

Assessment CriterionWeightWhat Is Being Measured
Coherence and argumentationHighIs the thesis clear? Is it defended logically? Are transitions smooth?
Lexical range and precisionHighIs vocabulary rich, precise, and C2-level?
Grammatical accuracy and complexityModerate-HighComplex structures used correctly (subjunctive, conditional, passive, etc.)
Fluency and natural deliveryModerateNatural rhythm; hesitation does not break comprehension
Interaction in discussionHighResponds to jury fully; asks for clarification if needed; holds position

The 30-Minute Preparation – How to Use It

Candidates who use the preparation period effectively consistently outperform those who write too much or freeze. Recommended allocation:

TimeActivity
0–10 minRead all documents once — identify the central theme, each author’s position, and key evidence
10–20 minBuild your oral plan: Introduction (thesis + problématique), Partie I, Partie II, Partie III, Conclusion. Write key phrases — NOT full sentences
20–28 minRehearse the presentation mentally — say each section in your head to check flow and timing
28–30 minNote 3–5 “discussion phrases” — responses you can use if the jury challenges you

Critical rule: Do not write out your presentation word for word. Candidates who read from notes are penalised for delivery and fluency. Your notes should be a skeleton — keywords and argument anchors, not sentences.

Discussion Phase – Language for Responding to the Jury

Prepare a repertoire of discussion phrases for the following situations:

SituationUseful French Phrases
Conceding a point but maintaining positionC’est une objection recevable, néanmoins… / Certes, mais il faut aussi considérer…
Asking for clarificationPourriez-vous préciser ce que vous entendez par… ?
Reinforcing your argumentComme je l’ai mentionné tout à l’heure… / Cela confirme, me semble-t-il, que…
Acknowledging complexityLa question est effectivement plus nuancée que…
Reformulating your positionSi je reformule ma thèse à la lumière de votre remarque…

Common C2 Speaking Errors

ErrorWhy It HappensFix
Presenting a summary of the documentsCandidates default to reporting rather than arguingBefore every paragraph: ask “What is MY position here?”
Abandoning the thesis under jury pressureCandidates change their view at the first challengeAcknowledge the objection; hold your position with nuance
Reading from full written notesOver-preparation of written scriptWrite only key words; practise speaking from structure
B2-level vocabulary at C2Candidates revert to safe, simple language under pressurePractise discussion with challenging vocabulary every day
No clear 3-part structurePresentation drifts topic to topicWrite the 3-part plan explicitly on your preparation sheet

Mock Oral Practice – How to Prepare Effectively

Finding a qualified C2 practice partner is the gold standard — ideally a French native speaker or a certified DALF examiner. But systematic solo practice is also effective:

1. Take a complex French news article. Prepare a 12-minute presentation. Record yourself.

2. Listen back and assess: Was the plan explicit? Did you argue or describe? Was vocabulary C2-level?

3. Write down 5 questions the jury might ask about your presentation. Answer each one aloud, unprepared.

4. Complete one full C2 mock oral (with languagetest.in materials) under real 30-minute prep conditions.

5. Repeat weekly in the 6–8 weeks before the exam.

Key Takeaway

DALF C2 Production Orale is the most intellectually demanding spoken French assessment. The examiners are looking for the same qualities in your speech that they look for in your writing: original argumentation, lexical precision, complex structure, and the ability to engage critically with ideas. Practise delivering arguments — not summaries — from your first C2 preparation session, and use structured mock practice to build the spontaneous discussion skills this exam demands.

References

1. CIEP – DALF C2 Official Guide – ciep.fr

2. France Éducation International – fdlf.fr

3. languagetest.in – DALF C2 Mock Tests

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