IELTS Speaking Band 7 Tips — Part 2: How to Speak for 2 Full Minutes
Most students run out of things to say at 45 seconds. These 8 IELTS speaking band 7 tips for Part 2 give you a complete system — from note-taking to storytelling to tense accuracy — so you speak fluently for the full time.
Applying IELTS speaking band 7 tips to Part 2 requires a different approach than Part 1. Part 2 gives you one minute to prepare and two minutes to speak. Unlike Part 1, nobody is asking you questions. You are the only one talking. For two whole minutes. Alone.
The students who do well in Part 2 are not the ones with the best English. They are the ones with a clear system — a method for turning a blank cue card into a structured, flowing, two-minute talk. These 8 strategies give you that system, consistent with the official IELTS speaking assessment criteria.
These 8 IELTS speaking band 7 tips cover the full Part 2 process — before you speak, while you speak, and the specific accuracy areas that separate Band 6 from Band 7+.
The fix: You are not writing a script. You are leaving yourself signposts. Three words per bullet point is enough. The words trigger the memory — the memory produces the speech. Writing full sentences is the trap that turns preparation time into panic time.
The cue card already gives you a structure — it has 3–4 bullet points guiding what to cover. Your job in the minute is to decide one keyword per bullet point and add an opening and a closing idea. That is five notes total. That is all you need.
- where the place is
- when you went there
- what you did there
- and explain why it was memorable to you
- Read the cue card completely first — all bullet points — before writing a single word. Understand the full shape of what you need to cover.
- Write 2–3 keywords per bullet point. Not sentences. Words that will trigger your memory when you glance down.
- Decide your opening line in your head — not on paper. "I'd like to talk about a trip I took to Japan a couple of years ago." Simple. Direct. Ready.
- In the last 10 seconds, decide your tense. Most cue cards are past events. Lock in: I'm speaking in past tense. This prevents mid-speech tense confusion.
The reason Part 2 is called a "long turn" is that it should feel like a turn in a conversation — not a list of answers to invisible questions. The best Part 2 responses have the rhythm of a story. They set a scene, they develop it, they arrive somewhere meaningful. The examiner follows without having to work.
Think of the cue card bullet points not as separate questions but as chapters in a short story. The opening places the listener in the world. The middle builds the picture. The ending gives it meaning.
- Always open with a scene-setting sentence — not "I am going to talk about..." but "I'd like to describe..." followed immediately by the who/where/when.
- In the middle section, cover the bullet points but add a feeling or reaction to each one. "We visited temples" is a fact. "We visited temples and I was struck by how quiet and meditative the atmosphere was" is a story.
- Plan your closing before you start speaking — the last bullet point on most cue cards asks "why" or "how you felt." This is designed to be your emotional close. Give it weight.
Two minutes is the standard for Part 2. The examiner will stop you if you go over — but they will not extend the time if you stop early. Every second under two minutes is a second where you were not demonstrating your English. You cannot score marks for words you did not say.
The good news is that two minutes is not as long as it feels in a silent exam room. At natural speaking speed, two minutes is approximately 250–280 words. The issue is never really about having too little to say. It is about not knowing how to expand what you have.
- After every fact, add a reaction: "...which I found really interesting", "...which surprised me", "...which I hadn't expected at all."
- After every reaction, add a small detail or memory that supports it. This is the expand part of notes → expand.
- Use the closing bullet point (usually "why it was important to you") as a full paragraph — not one sentence. This is where most students are most brief and where they should be most expansive.
- Practise with a timer. Aim for 1 minute 30 seconds in your first session. Build to 2 minutes over practice sessions rather than forcing it on day one.
In Part 2, linking words do a specific job — they guide the listener through your talk so they always know where you are in the story. Without them, a two-minute talk sounds like a series of isolated sentences. With them, it sounds like a flowing, coherent narrative. This directly affects your Coherence and Cohesion score.
The key is to use them at natural transition points — when you move from one bullet point to the next, when you add a supporting detail, when you contrast two ideas. Not at the start of every sentence, which sounds mechanical.
The fix: Wandering off topic feels like expanding. It is not. It is a sign that you have left your notes behind. One quick glance at your notes every 20–30 seconds keeps you on track without breaking your flow.
The cue card is your contract with the examiner. It tells them exactly what your talk should cover. If your talk does not cover those points — even if it is fluent and grammatically strong — the Task Achievement score suffers. Every sentence you say should connect back to one of the bullet points.
- Keep your notes visible during the talk. Glance at them at each transition point — "moving on to what I did there" — then look up and speak.
- If you notice you are saying something that does not connect to the cue card, use "Anyway, coming back to..." to redirect yourself. Examiners do not penalise self-correction — they reward it.
- Treat each bullet point as a chapter. When a chapter is complete, move to the next one. Do not revisit a chapter you have already covered.
There is a widespread misunderstanding about vocabulary in IELTS Speaking. Students believe they need to use impressive, advanced words. The examiner is not looking for the most sophisticated vocabulary. They are looking for a range of vocabulary used accurately.
Using "serene" correctly is worth more than using "epistemological" incorrectly. Precision and variety — across simple, mid-level, and contextually-appropriate words — is what Lexical Resource rewards.
- After each practice talk, identify the words you repeated most — "nice", "good", "interesting". These are your targets. Find 3 alternatives for each one and use them next session.
- Learn vocabulary in clusters around common cue card topics — places, people, events, objects, habits. Five well-chosen words per topic adds up quickly across a few weeks of practice.
- Do not use a word you are not sure about. One wrong word in a confident sentence costs more than a simpler word used correctly. Precision first, range second.
Part 2 cue cards almost always fall into one of two tense categories — past events or future plans. The moment you see the cue card, you know which tense your talk lives in. The problem is that students begin in the right tense and drift out of it — switching to present when they get excited about a detail, or using future when they should be past. These errors directly affect Grammatical Range and Accuracy.
| Cue card topic type | Primary tense | Watch out for |
|---|---|---|
| Describe a place you visited | Past simple + past continuous | Slipping into present: "The temple is beautiful" → should be "was beautiful" |
| Describe a person you admire | Present simple (if still living) · Past simple (if past relationship) | Mixing past and present for the same person inconsistently |
| Describe something you would like to do | Would + infinitive · Future with "would like to" | Using present or past tense — "I go to..." instead of "I would go to..." |
| Describe a skill you learned | Past simple + past perfect ("I had never...") | Dropping into present mid-explanation: "you have to..." instead of "you had to..." |
| Describe a plan or goal | Future simple · "I'm planning to..." · "I hope to..." | Speaking in present as if it is already happening |
- In your preparation minute, identify your tense immediately — write "PAST" or "FUTURE" at the top of your notes as a visual anchor.
- Practise past tense narration separately — tell stories about past experiences out loud daily. The fluency of your past tense determines how well it holds up under speaking pressure.
- If you catch yourself in the wrong tense mid-talk, correct it immediately: "...it is — sorry, it was absolutely stunning." Self-correction earns marks. Ignoring it loses them.
- Record your practice talks and listen specifically for tense. Hearing yourself switch tense trains you to catch it in real time.
This is the single skill that makes the biggest practical difference in Part 2 — and the one that is most often done incorrectly. The problem is not that students do not take notes. It is that their notes are either too detailed (full sentences that get read back) or too sparse (a single word that triggers nothing when they glance at it under pressure).
The right note is a trigger word with an expansion direction. The keyword reminds you of the memory. The expansion direction tells you what to do with that memory — describe it, react to it, compare it, explain why it matters.
The expansion from each keyword follows the same simple pattern: what it was → what I noticed → how I felt about it → one specific detail. That four-step expansion on a single keyword is 20–25 seconds of natural, flowing speech. Applied to five keywords, that is your full two minutes.
- Take a random cue card topic. Set a timer for 1 minute. Write only keywords — 3 words maximum per bullet point. Then speak for 2 minutes using only those notes.
- After the talk, identify which keywords triggered the most expansion — and which ones you went blank on. Blank keywords are usually too generic. Replace them with more specific ones next time.
- Practise the expansion pattern — what · noticed · felt · specific detail — on non-IELTS topics first. Describe your last meal, your last trip, your last interesting conversation. The pattern works on anything.
- Do this for 10 different cue card topics before your exam. By the 10th, the keyword-to-expansion reflex will be fast enough to feel natural.
IELTS Speaking Band 7 Tips for Part 2 — All 8 at a Glance
Review before every Part 2 practice session.
| Tip | The mistake it fixes | The result |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Use prep time to organise | Writing sentences → reading them back | Keywords that trigger natural speech |
| 2. Storytelling flow | Answering invisible questions → list of facts | A coherent beginning, middle, and end |
| 3. Speak for 2 full minutes | Stopping at 50 seconds — nothing left to say | Expanding every point with reactions and details |
| 4. Linking words | Isolated sentences with no connections | A flowing, guided narrative the examiner can follow |
| 5. Stay relevant | Wandering off into unrelated stories | Every sentence connects back to a cue card bullet |
| 6. Vocabulary range | Repeating "nice", "good", "interesting" | Varied, precise vocabulary at the right register |
| 7. Tense accuracy | Drifting between past and present mid-talk | Consistent, deliberate tense from start to finish |
| 8. Notes + expansion | Either too much (script) or too little (blank) | Keywords with expansion direction — 20 sec per note |
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about IELTS Speaking Part 2.
The tips tell you what to do. The course trains you to do it automatically.
Put these IELTS speaking band 7 tips into practice with our free mock test — all 4 modules, questions curated by IELTS tutors, instant band score and breakdown. Then explore the full Speaking Masterclass for every Part 1, 2, and 3 formula and timed practice drills.