DELF B1 is the intermediate milestone in French language certification. Its listening module — Compréhension de l’Oral — tests whether you can understand spoken French in everyday contexts: radio reports, conversations, interviews, and announcements. This guide breaks down the exact format, task types, and a focused preparation strategy.
→ Related: DELF A1 Comprehension de lOral (Listening) – Format, Tips, and How to Pass 2026
→ Related: How to Use Mock Tests to Pass DELF B1 – The Complete Strategy Guide 2026
DELF B1 Listening Module – Exact Format
| Component | Details |
| Module Name | Compréhension de l’Oral |
| Duration | 25 minutes (plus reading time before each document) |
| Number of Documents | 3 audio documents |
| Audio Plays | Document 1: played once; Documents 2 & 3: played twice |
| Question Format | Multiple choice, True/False, short written answers, matching |
| Maximum Score | 25 points |
| Pass Mark | Minimum 5/25; overall 50/100 to pass DELF B1 |
| Audio Type | Radio reports, interviews, announcements, everyday conversations |
The 3 Documents – What You Will Hear
| Document | Source Type | Length | Question Focus |
| Document 1 | Short announcement or practical information (phone message, radio announcement) | 1–2 minutes | Specific facts: who, what, when, where, how much |
| Document 2 | Radio report or interview on a general topic (culture, society, technology) | 2–4 minutes | Global understanding + specific information |
| Document 3 | Longer interview or discussion between 2+ people on a topic | 3–5 minutes | Opinions, attitudes, detailed comprehension |
At B1 level, French is spoken at a natural but clear pace. Standard French accent is used. You will hear: everyday vocabulary, some common idiomatic expressions, and a range of sentence structures. No strong regional accents or highly technical vocabulary.
Task-by-Task Strategy
Document 1 – Short Announcement (1 play only)
This is played only once. You must capture key information on the first listen:
→ Read the questions before the audio plays — use all available reading time
→ Focus on numbers, names, dates, and locations — these are almost always tested
→ Write brief notes as you listen — even a single word can jog your memory for the answer
Documents 2 & 3 – Radio Report / Interview (2 plays)
Use the two plays differently:
| Play | Strategy |
| First play | Listen for global comprehension — what is the topic? What is the speaker’s main position? Do not try to answer questions yet |
| Between plays | Read all questions carefully; mark which ones you are unsure about |
| Second play | Listen specifically for the information each question needs; fill in answers |
What B1 Listening Questions Test
| Question Type | Description | How to Answer |
| True/False/Not mentioned | Statement matches audio, contradicts it, or isn’t addressed | Only mark True/False if clearly in audio — “Not mentioned” if absent |
| Multiple choice | 3 options; one correct based on audio content | Eliminate options with words audio didn’t use in the claimed context |
| Short written answer | Write a brief phrase or number from the audio | Use words from audio; paraphrase if the question says “in your own words” |
| Matching | Connect a person or topic to a statement | Statements follow audio order — work sequentially |
Listening Comprehension Traps at B1
| Trap | How It Catches Candidates | Avoidance Strategy |
| Distractor words | Audio uses a word that appears in a wrong answer option | Listen to the full sentence, not just keywords |
| Opinion vs. fact confusion | Speaker reports someone else’s view — not their own | Track who is speaking and whose opinion it is |
| Single-play penalty | Missing a detail in Document 1 cannot be recovered | Full attention + note-taking on first play is essential |
| Number mishearing | Dates, prices, ages — easy to confuse 15 and 50, for example | Write numbers as you hear them; verify with context |
Scoring and Minimum Thresholds
| Module | Points Available | Minimum to Pass |
| Compréhension de l’Oral | 25 | 5 (20% of module score) |
| Compréhension des Écrits | 25 | 5 |
| Production Écrite | 25 | 5 |
| Production Orale | 25 | 5 |
| Overall Total | 100 | 50 (and ≥5 in each module) |
Failing any single module below 5/25 means failing the whole exam — even if your total score is above 50. This makes consistent preparation across all four modules essential.
How to Build Your B1 Listening Ability
| Activity | Frequency | Purpose |
| Listen to Journal en Français Facile (RFI) | Daily, 10–15 min | B1-appropriate pace; real news topics |
| Watch French TV5Monde with French subtitles | 3–4x per week | Connects audio to written French |
| Complete timed DELF B1 listening mocks | 2–3x per week | Builds exam-specific speed and task strategy |
| Listen to Easy French YouTube clips | 3x per week | Street French at natural speed with transcripts |
| After every listening practice: read the transcript | After every session | Identifies what you misheard and why |
Key Takeaway
DELF B1 listening is very passable with consistent targeted practice. The audio is clear, the topics are everyday, and the question types are predictable. The key discipline is reading questions before audio plays, listening globally on the first pass, and using the second play for specific answer confirmation. Build daily French listening habits and run regular mock tests on languagetest.in to arrive at your exam fully prepared.
References
1. CIEP – DELF B1 Official Guide – ciep.fr
2. RFI Journal en Français Facile – rfi.fr/fr/jff
3. TV5Monde – apprendre.tv5monde.com
4. languagetest.in – DELF B1 Mock Tests

