The Comprehension des ecrits (Reading) section of the TEF Canada is a 50-question fixed-format test completed in 60 minutes. Unlike the adaptive TCF Canada, all TEF Canada candidates answer the same questions in the same sequence — which means raw speed, vocabulary breadth, and question-type strategy are the determining factors. For CLB 7, you need approximately 207–233 out of 300. This guide covers the complete format, question distribution, and the strategies that reliably reach CLB 7.
TEF Canada Reading – Fast Facts
| Feature | Details |
| Section name | Comprehension des ecrits |
| Questions | 50 questions |
| Duration | 60 minutes |
| Average time per question | 72 seconds — fast paced |
| Format | Fixed difficulty — multiple choice, 3 options per question |
| Scoring | 0–300 points |
| CLB 7 threshold | Approximately 207–233 out of 300 |
| CLB 7 approximate correct answers | 35–40 out of 50 |
CLB Score Chart for TEF Canada Reading
| CLB Level | TEF Canada Reading Score |
| CLB 4 | 121–150 |
| CLB 5 | 151–180 |
| CLB 6 | 181–206 |
| CLB 7 | 207–233 |
| CLB 8 | 234–251 |
| CLB 9 | 252–270 |
| CLB 10 | 271–300 |
TEF Canada Reading – Text Types and Question Distribution
| Level | Text Type | Examples | Questions |
| Basic (A2–B1) | Short everyday texts, notices, simple messages | Supermarket notice, short social media post, brief public announcement | 10–15 |
| Intermediate (B1–B2) | Articles, emails, factual reports | News summary, professional email, healthcare information leaflet | 20–25 |
| Advanced (B2) | Analytical articles, opinion pieces, institutional documents | Newspaper editorial, government policy summary, business correspondence | 10–15 |
The Speed Challenge: 72 Seconds Per Question
TEF Canada reading is a test of speed as much as comprehension. With 50 questions in 60 minutes, you have an average of 72 seconds per question — and longer texts at the advanced level will demand proportionally more time, meaning you must work faster on shorter, simpler texts.
1. Skim before you read. For each text, read the title and first sentence, then jump directly to the questions. Go back to the text only to confirm answers. Reading the full text before looking at questions wastes time on content that may not be tested.
2. Budget time by text complexity. Short A2-level texts: 30–40 seconds per question. Medium B1–B2 texts: 60–75 seconds per question. Long B2 analytical texts: up to 90 seconds per question. Stick to this budget strictly.
3. Never leave a blank. TEF Canada has no negative marking. A random guess from 3 options gives a 33% chance of being correct. A blank gives 0%. Always mark something.
Question Types and Strategies
| Question Type | What It Tests | Strategy |
| Main idea / purpose | What is this text about? Why was it written? | Title + first paragraph + last sentence; purpose is almost always framed in one of these |
| Specific detail | What number / name / date / place is mentioned? | Scan for the specific type of information; do not read the full text linearly |
| Vocabulary in context | What does this word or phrase mean in this text? | Look at the sentence before and after the word; eliminate options that break the sentence’s logic |
| Author’s opinion or tone | Is the author positive, negative, or neutral about X? | Look for evaluative adjectives and tone words: “il est regrettable”, “heureusement”, “sans aucun doute” |
| Inference | What can we conclude from this text? | Combine 2 pieces of information from the text; do not infer beyond what is written |
Canadian French Vocabulary for Reading
TEF Canada reading texts reflect Canadian life, institutions, and society. These topics recur across the advanced reading section:
| Topic | Key Reading Vocabulary |
| Immigration and residency | Permis de sejour temporaire, residence permanente, parrainage familial, demandeur d’asile, statut de refugie |
| Healthcare | Assurance-maladie, CLSC, dossier medical electronique, prestataire de soins, medecin traitant |
| Employment and labour law | Convention collective, conge de maternite, indemnite de depart, heures supplementaires, syndicat |
| Environment and policy | Bilan carbone, objectifs climatiques, energies renouvelables, transition energetique, developpement durable |
| Education | Cegep, universite francophone, droits de scolarite, formation continue, bourse d’etudes |
TEF Canada vs TCF Canada Reading Comparison
| Aspect | TEF Canada Reading | TCF Canada Reading |
| Questions | 50 | 29 |
| Duration | 60 minutes | 60 minutes |
| Format | Fixed — all candidates same questions | Adaptive — difficulty adjusts per answer |
| Speed requirement | 72 seconds average per question | ~2 minutes average per question |
| Options | 3 per question | 4 per question |
| Best for | Test-takers with strong reading speed and broad vocabulary | Test-takers with strong precision reading who can hold focus on fewer, harder questions |
TEF Canada reading preparation should combine daily French reading (Radio-Canada, La Presse, L’Actualite) with timed mock test practice. The goal is to develop reading speed at B2 level — not just comprehension — so that 72 seconds per question feels comfortable. languagetest.in provides full 50-question TEF Canada reading mock tests with CLB score conversion and question-type error breakdown to support this preparation.
References: TEF Canada official: lefrancaisdesaffaires.fr | La Presse: lapresse.ca | Radio-Canada: ici.radio-canada.ca | languagetest.in TEF Canada reading preparation
Each post reviewed by the languagetest.in research team.
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