Most candidates think Band 7 requires “better English.”
It doesn’t.
It requires control.
If you’re scoring 6.0 or 6.5, you likely already have enough language (ie, VOCABULARY). What you lack is consistency across the four scoring criteria:
- Fluency and Coherence
- Lexical Resource
- Grammatical Range and Accuracy
- Pronunciation
Use this checklist to diagnose yourself honestly.
1. Fluency & Coherence
Band 6 pattern:
- You can speak at length, but hesitation breaks your flow.
- You pause mid-sentence to search for grammar.
- You restart sentences when they become complex.
- You overuse fillers (“so…”, “and…”, “like…”).
- Coherence is sometimes lost due to repetition or self-correction.
Band 7 requirement:
- You can produce long turns without noticeable effort.
- Hesitation may occur, but it does not damage coherence.
- Discourse markers are used flexibly and appropriately.
- Ideas are logically sequenced.
Diagnostic Questions
- Do I pause before grammar structures (e.g., conditionals, relative clauses)?
- Do I abandon sentences halfway through?
- Do I rely on “and” to connect everything?
- Does my answer have a clear internal structure (point → example → explanation)?
Quick Test
Record a 2-minute Part 2 answer.
Count:
- Mid-sentence restarts
- Long pauses (>2 seconds)
- Fillers
If your speech rhythm breaks every 10–15 seconds, you’re still at Band 6.
2. Lexical Resource
Band 6 pattern:
- Vocabulary is sufficient but sometimes vague.
- Word choice may be inappropriate but meaning is clear.
- Paraphrasing works most of the time.
- You repeat safe words (“important,” “good,” “thing”).
Band 7 requirement:
- Vocabulary is used flexibly to discuss a range of topics.
- Some less common or precise items appear naturally.
- Collocation awareness begins to show.
- Paraphrasing is effective when needed.
Diagnostic Questions
- Do I repeat the same adjective three times in one answer?
- Do I use “very + adjective” instead of a precise word?
- When I don’t know a word, can I explain around it smoothly?
Quick Test
Take a transcript of your answer.
Highlight repeated words.
If the same 5–7 words dominate your speech, lexical flexibility is limiting you.
Band 7 does not require fancy vocabulary.
It requires precision and control.
3. Grammatical Range & Accuracy
This is where most 6.5 candidates collapse.
Band 6 pattern:
- Mix of simple and complex structures.
- Complex sentences frequently contain errors.
- Errors rarely block communication, but they are frequent.
Band 7 requirement:
- A range of structures used flexibly.
- Error-free sentences are frequent.
- Complex structures are controlled despite some errors.
Diagnostic Questions
- Do my conditionals break down?
- Do I mismanage verb tense when telling stories?
- Do I attempt complex sentences but simplify midway?
- Are basic errors still present (articles, third person -s, prepositions)?
Quick Test
Count grammatical errors per minute of speech.
If there is a noticeable error every 1–2 sentences, you are still in Band 6 territory.
Band 7 does not mean perfection.
It means error density is clearly reduced.
4. Pronunciation
This is the most misunderstood criterion.
It is not about accent.
It is about control of phonological features .
Band 6 pattern:
- Chunking is inconsistent.
- Rhythm may be uneven.
- Stress and intonation work occasionally, but not sustained.
- Mispronunciations cause occasional lack of clarity.
Band 7 requirement:
- Positive Band 6 features are present.
- Greater consistency in rhythm and stress.
- Speech is easily understood throughout.
- Accent does not significantly reduce intelligibility.
Diagnostic Questions
- Do I speak in flat tone?
- Do I run all words together without natural chunking?
- Do listeners ask me to repeat?
- Do I stress content words clearly?
Quick Test
Record yourself reading a short paragraph.
Then record yourself speaking spontaneously.
If your spontaneous speech loses rhythm and chunking, that’s your Band 6 ceiling.
The Real Difference Between 6.5 and 7
Band 6 says:
You can communicate.
Band 7 says:
You can control communication.
The jump is not about learning new grammar.
It is about:
- Reducing hesitation
- Reducing error density
- Increasing structural control
- Improving rhythm consistency
Final Self-Assessment
If you:
- Frequently restart sentences → Fluency issue
- Repeat vague vocabulary → Lexical issue
- Collapse in complex sentences → Grammar issue
- Sound flat or rushed → Pronunciation issue
Then you know where to focus.
Most candidates try to improve everything at once.
That is inefficient.
Identify the dominant weakness.
Fix that first.
