The TOEIC Listening section (Parts 1–4) accounts for half your total score — up to 495 points. This guide breaks down every part with strategies that work at every level.
Listening Section Overview
| Part | Name | Questions | Format |
|---|---|---|---|
| Part 1 | Photographs | 6 | Choose the sentence that best describes the photo |
| Part 2 | Question-Response | 25 | Choose the best response to a spoken question |
| Part 3 | Conversations | 39 | 3 questions per conversation; 13 conversations |
| Part 4 | Talks | 30 | 3 questions per talk; 10 short monologues |
Part 1: Photograph Strategies
Each photo has four spoken descriptions. Only one is fully accurate. Watch for these common traps:
- Descriptions that are partially true but use incorrect details (wrong verb tense, wrong subject)
- Words that sound similar to objects in the photo but describe something different (“He is reading” vs “He is leading“)
- Passive voice traps: “The table is being set” vs “The table has been set”
Part 2: Question-Response Strategies
Part 2 is the fastest-paced part. Strategies:
- Identify the question word (who/what/when/where/why/how) in the first second and lock onto answers that address it.
- Beware of “echo” traps — answers that repeat a key word from the question but don’t actually respond to it.
- Indirect answers (“I’m not sure — you could ask Mina”) are frequently correct. Don’t dismiss them.
Part 3: Conversation Strategies
Part 3 is where most high scorers make the biggest gains. Key tactics:
- Pre-read the three questions before the audio starts. You have ~8 seconds of “answer announcement” time between questions — use it to read ahead.
- Focus on purpose, problem, and next action — these are the three most common question types.
- The graphic-based questions (reading a chart alongside a conversation) require fast visual scanning. Practice this specifically.
Part 4: Talk Strategies
Part 4 talks include advertisements, announcements, voicemails, and news reports. The structure is predictable:
- The first sentence usually states the topic or purpose. Catch it.
- The last sentence often contains the call-to-action or conclusion — another frequently tested item.
- Numbers (prices, dates, room numbers) are very commonly tested. Write them down as you hear them.
How Many Questions Can You Miss?
For a 400/495 Listening score, you can miss approximately 25–30 questions. Focus your effort on Parts 3 and 4 — they have the most questions and the biggest score impact.
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