Does IELTS Speaking assess your accent?
You don’t need to hide or change your natural accent to do well in IELTS.
IELTS is an international test, and your examiner is trained to understand your accent, wherever in the world you're from. They will match your speaking pace and proficiency.
What matters more is clarity.
In other words, don’t make the examiner guess whether you said “thinking” or “sinking”, or whether you love a sweet treat (dessert) or a dry place (desert).
If you’re worried about your accent hurting your pronunciation, this guide will walk you through practical steps to improve your IELTS Speaking score.
Does IELTS Speaking mark your accent?
Accents are not marked or scored separately in the IELTS Speaking test. What the test grades instead is your pronunciation.
How is IELTS Speaking marked?
IELTS examiners will score you based on the following IELTS Speaking band descriptors:
Fluency and coherence
Lexical resource
Grammatical range and accuracy
Pronunciation
Know more about each IELTS Speaking band descriptor.
How is pronunciation assessed in IELTS?
Out of these band descriptors, pronunciation accounts for 25% of your overall score.
But how is pronunciation assessed anyway?
When examiners assess pronunciation, they are not judging how perfect or native-like your accent sounds. They are listening to how clear and easy your speech is to understand.
Specifically, they listen for:
Clear pronunciation of words and sounds
Intelligibility - Whether your meaning is clear from start to finish, even if you have a strong accent.
Natural intonation and rhythm - speaking with natural pitch, stress, and flow so your words are easy to understand.
Correct word and sentence stress
Pronunciation in IELTS Speaking: Why does it matter more than accent?
In IELTS Speaking, what matters most is intelligibility.
This simply means how easy it is for a listener to understand you.
Pronunciation plays a big role in intelligibility.
Studies show that word stress and rhythm have a strong impact on how well listeners understand non-native English speakers, sometimes more than small grammar or vocabulary mistakes.
Pronunciation vs accent: What’s the difference?
Your accent is your unique and natural way of speaking. It is shaped by your first language, or the place where you came from.
Pronunciation is the way you say individual word sounds, stress words, and use rhythm so others can understand you.
Do accents affect pronunciation?
Yes, your accent can sometimes affect the way you pronounce words.
It can also influence stress, intonation, and rhythm.
For example, some native Japanese speakers often confuse /r/ and /l/ because Japanese does not clearly distinguish these sounds.
Many Spanish-speaking English learners struggle with English vowel length and may pronounce ship and sheep similarly, because Spanish has fewer vowel contrasts than English.
This is where IELTS preparation comes in.
You don’t need to adopt a new accent. You just need to adjust the parts of your speech that affect your ability to be understood.
By focusing on clearer sounds, better stress, and more natural rhythm, you can improve your pronunciation even if your accent stays the same.
Poor vs. good pronunciation in IELTS
At lower bands, speech may sometimes be difficult to understand.
Sounds may be unclear. Stress and intonation may be flat or inconsistent. This can make the examiner work harder to follow what you’re trying to say.
At higher bands, pronunciation supports communication.
If you have good pronunciation, your individual words are clear. You emphasise important words. Your intonation helps show meaning, and your speech has a natural rhythm.
Even if your accent is strong, your message is easy to understand.
In short, pronunciation is assessed by how well it helps the examiner understand you.
Your pronunciation is effective when the examiner can follow your ideas clearly.
You can compare how pronunciation is graded at different bands in this detailed IELTS Speaking band score explanation.
How to improve your pronunciation in IELTS Speaking
The primary goal of the IELTS Speaking test is clear communication. Here are some ways you can improve this.
Pronounce individual sounds clearly (words and phonemes)
Clear pronunciation starts with individual sounds. These sounds are called phonemes.
Phonemes are the small sound units that make up words.
Some pronunciation problems happen because certain English sounds do not exist in your first language. What matters is being aware of these sounds and practising them.
Common areas to watch:
Vowel sounds that sound too similar
Consonant sounds like v and w
Dropping final consonants, especially t, d, and s
Example:
WORD: “fas” (unclear)
WORD: “fast” (clear)
Another example:
WORD: “wet” (when you mean “vet”) (unclear)
WORD: “vet” (clear)
Watch our video on Words and Phonemes and learn how to pronounce individual sounds clearly.
Slow down when you speak
Speaking too fast often causes unclear sounds and missing word endings. Slowing down helps your words come out fully.
Example:
Too fast: “IstudiedengineeringbecauseIlikeit”
Clear pace: “I studied engineering because I like it.”
Use correct word stress
Word stress means giving more emphasis to one syllable in a word. That syllable is said louder, longer, and with a slightly higher pitch than the others.
If you stress the wrong syllable, the examiner may not understand you at first. In some cases, the meaning of the word can change completely.
Examples:
DESert (dry place)
desSERT (sweet food)
Correct word stress helps the examiner understand you without confusion.
Watch our video on Word Stress and Patterns to learn how to emphasise syllables when you speak.
Use sentence stress to show meaning
Sentence stress means emphasising certain words more than others when you speak.
Sentence stress helps the examiner follow your ideas more easily. It adds emotion and intention to your speech. Without it, your speaking can sound flat, robotic, or unclear.
Example: Showing emotion
“I’m so excited to be here today.”
Adding stress to the word “so” shows strong excitement, not just mild interest.
Use natural intonation
Intonation is the rise and fall of your voice. It helps show meaning and attitude.
Simple patterns to remember:
Falling intonation for statements and WH-questions.
Rising intonation for yes/no questions.
Rising then falling intonation for lists.
Natural intonation makes your speech easier to follow.
Use rhythm instead of speed
Speaking fluently isn’t about speaking faster; it’s about using the right rhythm. In English, some words are given more stress, while others are shortened.
What this means:
Nouns, verbs, and adjectives are stressed or given emphasis.
Small words like “to,” “and,” “a” support the sentence but are not the focus. So you can soften them when you speak.
What to do:
Do not try to talk too quickly.
Focus on making important words stand out.
Drop sounds in consonant clusters (elision)
Elision means leaving out a sound to make speech easier.
It’s when you don’t pronounce a specific sound to make your speech sound smoother.
This often happens with t and d sounds between other consonants.
Example:
“handbag” → “hanbag”
The consonant d is between the other consonants n and b.
When too many consonants come together, pronouncing every sound can slow you down and make your speech feel forced. When you drop one sound, it helps your speech flow more smoothly and naturally.
Practice pronouncing words with elision.
Chunk your speech into groups
Chunking means grouping words that belong together. This helps the listener follow your ideas.
Example:
Clear chunking: “After dinner, / we went to see a movie / and then had ice cream.”
Unclear chunking (too many pauses): “After dinner, / we / went / to / see / a / movie / and / then / had / ice / cream.”
Avoid pausing after every word or speaking without pauses at all.
Practical tools to improve pronunciation for IELTS
Still need more confidence in IELTS Speaking? You don’t have to practise on your own!
There are many tools you can use to learn better and to make your practice more interactive.
1. YouTube
You can browse through IELTS by IDP’s YouTube channel and learn from:
IELTS Speaking sample answers (band comparisons)
2. IELTS by IDP app
The IELTS by IDP app is a free all-in-one application where you can book, prepare, and access your IELTS results.
Here, you can access:
Preparation materials
150+ learning articles
App-exclusive courses
Bonus: IELTS by IDP app-exclusive preparation courses
When you download the IELTS by IDP app, you get access to free trial courses, including:
Macquarie University IELTS Preparation Course, which includes:
Practice questions with model answers
A sample Band 9 Task 2 Writing essay
16 expert-guided tutorials
E2 Language Guided IELTS Short Course, which includes:
Practice materials and live classes
An IELTS score estimator
Guided overviews of Speaking, Reading, Listening, and Writing
Sample responses and video lessons
Book your IELTS test with IDP and get free unlimited access to an IELTS Preparation Course of your choice.
Being understood matters more than your accent
Our final advice: Your accent isn’t a big deal.
What matters more is clear pronunciation, natural intonation that shows emotions, and correct word stress so your meaning is never confusing.
If the examiner can understand you easily, then your Speaking score takes care of itself.
And if you ever need more practice, you can use any of the tools we have mentioned above to improve your Speaking skills.
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