7 Most Common TOEIC Mistakes (and How to Fix Each One)

After analysing hundreds of TOEIC practice sessions, the same errors appear over and over. These seven mistakes collectively account for the difference between a 650 and an 800+ score. Here is how to identify and fix each one.

Mistake 1: Not Pre-Reading Part 3 & 4 Questions

The problem: Listening to Part 3–4 audio without knowing what questions are coming forces you to process everything at once — an impossible cognitive load.

The fix: Use the 8 seconds between the answer-number announcements to read the next set of three questions. After 2 weeks of practice, this becomes automatic.

Mistake 2: Spending Too Long on Part 5

The problem: Test-takers agonise over individual Part 5 questions, running 60–90 seconds on one question and destroying their Part 7 time budget.

The fix: Hard-cap Part 5 at 30 seconds per question. If you cannot identify the answer in 30 seconds, mark your best guess and move on. With practice, most Part 5 questions become 15-second decisions.

Mistake 3: Reading Part 7 Passages Before Looking at the Questions

The problem: Reading the full passage first wastes 2–3 minutes on information that may not be tested.

The fix: Read the questions, then scan the relevant section of the passage. Only read the full passage for “overall purpose” or “NOT mentioned” questions.

Mistake 4: Falling for “Echo” Traps in Part 2

The problem: TOEIC Part 2 answer choices that repeat a word from the question are almost always wrong — but test-takers select them because they sound familiar.

The fix: When you hear a word repeated in an answer choice, treat it as a red flag rather than a signal of relevance.

Mistake 5: Guessing on Unknown Vocabulary in Part 5

The problem: Unfamiliar words lead to random guessing, even though the sentence structure often points clearly to the correct part of speech.

The fix: If you don’t know a word, use part-of-speech logic. The blank is usually a noun, verb, adjective, or adverb — the surrounding sentence structure tells you which. Eliminate options that are the wrong part of speech first.

Mistake 6: Ignoring the Graphs and Tables in Part 3–4

The problem: Newer TOEIC tests include graphic-based questions (a conversation + a chart or table). Test-takers who have not practised this format waste 20–30 seconds orienting themselves.

The fix: In your prep, specifically practice looking at the graphic during the gap between questions and audio. Identify the two most likely data points that could be tested.

Mistake 7: Not Taking Full-Length Timed Practice Tests

The problem: Drilling individual parts improves skills but does not build the stamina and time-management instincts needed for the full 2-hour test.

The fix: Take at least two full-length timed mock tests before test day. Reviewing your results under test conditions — identifying why each wrong answer was wrong — is the highest-leverage study activity you can do.

Practise with full-length, AI-graded TOEIC mock tests — blueprint-accurate, instant scoring, ₹275–₹499 per mock.
→ Start your free TOEIC practice on languagetest.in

Ready to practice?

Buy a Mock Test Follow on LinkedIn

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Buy a Mock Test Follow on LinkedIn