TOEFL Speaking Score Estimator
Speak for 30-90 seconds and get an estimated TOEFL iBT Speaking score (0-30) across all three official ETS criteria — free, instant, no signup.
How It Works
Sample topics
"Describe a goal you have for the future." / "Talk about a skill that is important to learn." / "Describe a place that is important to you." Aim for 45-90 seconds of connected speech — the same length as a real TOEFL independent task response.
Your recording is processed securely and never shared.
Why use this TOEFL Speaking Estimator?
ETS Rubric-Based
Scored on the same three dimensions ETS raters use: Delivery, Language Use, and Topic Development — converted to the official 0-30 scale.
Dimension-Level Feedback
Each of the three ETS dimensions gets its own score (0-4) and explanation, so you know exactly what to work on.
Free Practice Tool
Practice unlimited times before your test. No signup, no cost — just speak and get feedback.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is the TOEFL iBT Speaking section scored?
Official TOEFL iBT Speaking tasks are rated on three dimensions by trained ETS human raters: Delivery (clarity, pace, fluency), Language Use (grammar and vocabulary), and Topic Development (coherence, relevance, detail). Each dimension is scored 0-4. Scores across tasks are averaged, then scaled to a 0-30 section score. Our estimator uses this same rubric on your recording.
How long should I speak?
At least 30 seconds, ideally 45-90 seconds. In the real TOEFL Independent task you are expected to speak for about 45 seconds. Longer responses give the AI more material to assess all three criteria.
Is this an official TOEFL test?
No. This is a free AI-powered practice estimator based on official ETS rubrics. It is not affiliated with or certified by ETS. Use it to practice, identify weaknesses, and track progress between test attempts.
How accurate is the estimate?
The estimator applies the published ETS rubric criteria consistently and gives useful directional feedback. However, AI scoring and human rater scoring can differ. Treat this as a practice benchmark — use official practice tests from ETS for the most accurate prediction of your real score.
