True False Not Given IELTS Trick – The Complete Strategy Guide

📖 IELTS Reading Strategy

True False Not Given IELTS Trick — The Complete Strategy Guide

Most students find True easy, False manageable, and Not Given a lottery. This guide gives you the true false not given IELTS trick that ends the guessing — a clear, repeatable decision system for all three.

10 min read · Updated March 2026 · By Turbo IELTS

True, False, Not Given is consistently rated as the hardest question type in IELTS Reading. Students who understand English perfectly still get these wrong — not because their English is weak, but because they are not applying the right decision rules.

The true false not given IELTS trick is simpler than most students expect: True, False, and Not Given each have a specific, logical definition. Once you understand all three precisely — and follow one golden rule — the question type becomes completely predictable. This guide gives you all five strategies with real examples for each, consistent with the approach recommended by the official IELTS preparation guidance.

⭐ Golden Rule — Read This Before Anything Else
Only use what the passage says. Never use what you know.
Your real-world knowledge is irrelevant. Your opinions are irrelevant. Even if you know for a scientific fact that a statement is true — if the passage does not say it, the answer is Not Given. The examiner is not testing whether you know facts. They are testing whether you can read a passage accurately. This rule alone is responsible for more wrong answers than any other mistake in IELTS Reading.
TRUE
The passage contains direct evidence that confirms the statement — in the same or paraphrased words
FALSE
The passage contains direct evidence that contradicts the statement — partly or completely
NOT GIVEN
The passage does not provide enough information to confirm or deny the statement either way

Work through all five strategies in order. Each one builds on the last — and together they give you a complete decision system for every True, False, Not Given question you will ever face.

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True False Not Given IELTS Trick 1: TRUE — Direct Evidence, Often Paraphrased
The passage confirms the statement — but rarely uses the exact same words
TRUE

A TRUE answer means the passage explicitly confirms what the statement says. The evidence is direct — not implied, not suggested, not assumed. However, the passage will almost never use the exact same words as the question. This is the key trap for TRUE answers — students look for the exact wording and don't find it, so they mark Not Given when the answer is actually True.

The technique is paraphrase matching: find the relevant part of the passage, then check whether the meaning of the statement matches the meaning of what the passage says — even if the words are different.

📄 Passage says
"The construction of the new bridge was completed ahead of schedule, despite the challenging weather conditions that engineers faced during the winter months."
❓ Statement says
The bridge was finished earlier than planned, even though conditions were difficult.
✓ TRUE "Completed ahead of schedule" = "finished earlier than planned" — different words, same meaning. "Challenging weather conditions" = "conditions were difficult". Both parts match.
How to identify TRUE
  • Find the section of the passage that deals with the same topic as the statement.
  • Check every part of the statement — all of it must be confirmed, not just one part.
  • Look for synonyms and paraphrases — "increased" might become "grew", "difficult" might become "challenging".
  • If the passage confirms the meaning but uses different vocabulary, the answer is still TRUE.
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True False Not Given IELTS Trick 2: FALSE — Half-True Statements and Direct Opposites
The passage contradicts the statement — completely or in part
FALSE

A FALSE answer means the passage provides evidence that directly contradicts the statement. This contradiction can be total — the passage says the exact opposite — or it can be partial, where part of the statement is true but another part is wrong. Either way, the answer is FALSE.

The most dangerous FALSE trap is the half-true statement. It starts with something the passage confirms, which relaxes your attention, then sneaks in a detail that the passage actually contradicts. Students mark TRUE because they spotted the first correct part and stopped reading carefully.

📄 Passage says
"The new policy was introduced in January and initially applied only to large companies with more than 500 employees."
❓ Statement says
The policy was introduced in January and applied to all businesses from the start.
✗ FALSE "January" is correct — but "all businesses" contradicts "large companies with more than 500 employees". The statement is half-true, which makes it FALSE overall.
📄 Passage says
"Unlike previous models, the new device consumes significantly less energy during operation."
❓ Statement says
The new device uses more energy than the models that came before it.
✗ FALSE Direct opposite. The passage says "less energy" — the statement says "more energy". Clear contradiction.
⚠️
Watch for these FALSE signal words in the passage: "however", "but", "unlike", "contrary to", "only", "never", "not", "instead". These words often signal that what follows contradicts what came before — or contradicts the statement.
How to identify FALSE
  • Read the full statement carefully — all parts, not just the beginning.
  • Find the relevant passage section and check every detail against every part of the statement.
  • If even one part of the statement contradicts the passage, the answer is FALSE — even if other parts are correct.
  • Look for quantity words — "all", "some", "most", "only" — these are often the part that is wrong in a half-true statement.
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Pro tip from Turbo IELTS
The hardest distinction in True False Not Given IELTS questions is NOT between True and False — most students can spot a direct contradiction. The hardest distinction is between False and Not Given. Ask: does the passage give me evidence to say the statement is wrong? If yes — False. If the passage simply doesn't address it — Not Given.
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True False Not Given IELTS Trick 3: NOT GIVEN — The Keyword Trap
The keyword appears in the passage — but the specific claim has no evidence
NOT GIVEN

Not Given is the answer students most often get wrong — and the reason is almost always the same: they see a keyword from the statement appear in the passage and assume the topic is covered. But the examiner deliberately puts keywords in the passage without providing evidence about the specific claim in the statement.

Not Given means: the passage mentions the topic, but does not give you enough information to say whether the statement is true or false. You cannot confirm it AND you cannot contradict it. The information simply is not there.

⚠ How the Not Given keyword trap works
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The keyword is present: The statement mentions "solar panels" — and you find "solar panels" in the passage. Your brain says "found it!" and you start matching.
But the specific claim has no evidence: The statement says "solar panels reduced costs by 40%". The passage mentions solar panels were installed — but says nothing about percentage cost reduction. There is no information to confirm or deny the 40% claim.
📄 Passage says
"The university launched a new solar panel installation programme across its campus buildings as part of its sustainability initiative."
❓ Statement says
The university's solar panel programme reduced energy costs by 40%.
? NOT GIVEN The passage confirms solar panels were installed — but gives no information about cost reductions or percentages. You cannot say this is true or false. It is Not Given.
Use this decision process for every Not Given check
Can I find the relevant section of the passage that covers this topic?
No → NOT GIVEN immediatelyYes → continue
Does the passage give specific information about the exact claim in the statement?
No → NOT GIVENYes → decide True or False
How to identify NOT GIVEN
  • Find the relevant passage section. If you cannot find one — Not Given immediately.
  • If you find the section, ask: does it give specific evidence about the claim? If not — Not Given.
  • The keyword appearing in the passage does not mean the claim is covered. It is a trap. Verify the specific claim, not just the topic.
  • If you are spending more than 90 seconds looking and still cannot find evidence — it is almost certainly Not Given. Move on.
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True False Not Given IELTS Trick 4: Never Use Outside Knowledge
What you know in the real world is irrelevant. What the passage says is everything.
Critical Rule

This is the rule that is most often stated and most often broken under exam pressure. When you are reading quickly and you see a statement that you know to be true from your general knowledge or education — your brain wants to mark it TRUE immediately.

Do not do this. If the passage does not confirm it, the answer is Not Given. Every time. No exceptions.

📄 Passage says
"The Amazon rainforest plays a critical role in regulating regional climate patterns and supporting biodiversity across South America."
❓ Statement says
The Amazon rainforest produces 20% of the world's oxygen.
? NOT GIVEN You might know this fact is true. But the passage does not mention oxygen production or any percentage. The answer is Not Given — not True. Your knowledge does not count.
⚠️
This trap is most dangerous when the passage is about science, history, or geography — topics where educated students have strong background knowledge. The more you know about a subject, the harder it is to ignore your knowledge and stick to the passage.
How to apply this rule
  • Before answering, ask yourself: "Can I point to the exact sentence in the passage that proves this?" If not — Not Given.
  • Treat every passage as if you are reading it in a language you do not know. The words mean exactly what they say — nothing more.
  • If you find yourself thinking "well, everyone knows that..." — stop. That thought is the trap.
  • You must be able to physically underline the evidence in the passage. If you cannot underline it, it is not there.
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True False Not Given IELTS Trick 5: Similar Words ≠ Same Meaning
Words that look related can carry completely different meanings in context
Advanced

Paraphrasing goes both ways. In Strategy 1 we learned that different words can mean the same thing — which makes an answer TRUE. But the reverse is also true: similar-looking words can mean different things — which can make an answer FALSE or NOT GIVEN depending on what the passage says.

This is called conceptual matching, and it is what separates Band 6 and Band 7 readers. At Band 6, students match surface words. At Band 7, students match the underlying meaning — the concept being expressed — not just the vocabulary.

Word in statement Word in passage Are they the same? Why it matters
increasedimproved❌ Not alwaysSomething can increase in quantity without improving in quality — e.g. "costs increased" ≠ "costs improved"
majoritymany❌ Not the same"Majority" means more than 50%. "Many" could be 30%. Conceptually different even though they sound similar.
replacedsupplemented❌ Opposite"Replaced" means old thing gone. "Supplemented" means added alongside. These are conceptually opposite.
rareuncommon✓ Same conceptBoth mean "not frequent" — this is genuine paraphrasing. Same concept, different words.
mandatoryencouraged❌ Not the same"Mandatory" = required. "Encouraged" = optional but recommended. A statement saying mandatory when the passage says encouraged is FALSE.
halvedreduced❌ Not necessarily"Halved" means reduced by exactly 50%. "Reduced" means any decrease. If the statement says halved but the passage just says reduced — Not Given.
How to apply conceptual matching
  • When you find a matching section in the passage, do not stop at word-level matching. Ask: does the passage mean exactly what the statement claims?
  • Pay particular attention to quantity words — "all", "most", "some", "half", "doubled", "tripled" — these carry precise meanings that are easy to swap in a trap.
  • Watch for degree words — "slightly", "significantly", "completely", "gradually" — a small change is not the same as a large one.
  • Watch for obligation words — "must", "should", "may", "can", "encouraged to" — these have entirely different meanings and are frequently used to create FALSE traps.
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More strategies in the full course
The strategies in this article cover the foundations. The Turbo IELTS Reading Masterclass goes further — with trap identification for every True, False, Not Given sub-type, timed drills using real passage formats, and band-level analysis of why Band 5, 6, 7 and 8 readers make different decisions on the same question.
Explore the full Reading Masterclass →

Quick Reference

True False Not Given IELTS — Complete Decision Guide

Use this every time you answer a True, False, Not Given question.

Answer Signal in passage Watch out for
TRUEPassage confirms the statement — same meaning, often paraphrased wordsAssuming it's Not Given because exact words don't match — check meaning, not just vocabulary
FALSEPassage contradicts the statement — directly or in one specific detail (half-true)Half-true statements — the first part matches so you stop reading. Always check every part.
NOT GIVENPassage mentions the topic but gives no specific evidence about the claimKeyword trap — seeing a topic word and assuming the claim is covered. Verify the specific claim.
Golden RuleUse ONLY the passage — never your own knowledge or assumptionsScience, history, geography topics where you have strong background knowledge — ignore it all
Concept MatchSimilar words can mean different things — always match meaning, not surface wordsincreased ≠ improved · majority ≠ many · mandatory ≠ encouraged · replaced ≠ supplemented

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about True, False, Not Given in IELTS Reading.

False means the passage directly contradicts the statement — it says the opposite or provides evidence that proves it wrong. Not Given means the passage does not provide enough information to confirm or deny the statement. The keyword may appear in the passage, but there is no concrete evidence about the specific claim in the question.
Only use information from the passage. Never use your own knowledge, common sense, or what you know to be true in the real world. If the passage does not say it, it is Not Given — even if you know for a fact it is true. The examiner is testing whether you can read, not whether you know facts.
Not Given means the passage does not give you enough information to say whether the statement is true or false. The keyword from the question might appear in the passage — this is a deliberate trap. But if the specific claim in the question has no direct evidence in the passage, the answer is Not Given.
The IELTS exam uses paraphrasing, but some words look similar while carrying different meanings. For example, "increased" and "improved" seem similar but are conceptually different — something can increase without improving. Always match the concept and meaning, not just the surface word. This is called conceptual matching.
A half-true statement is one where part of the statement matches the passage but another part contradicts it. The answer is False — not Not Given — because the passage gives you evidence to identify that the statement as a whole is incorrect. If even one part of a compound statement is contradicted by the passage, the answer is False.
Go beyond the basics

Master every question type. Not just True, False, Not Given.

This article covers the five core strategies. Take our free IELTS mock test — all 4 modules, questions curated by IELTS tutors — and see exactly where your Reading score stands right now. Then explore the full Masterclass for every question type from Band 5 to Band 8.

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