Practise real IELTS General Training (IDP / British Council) interview rounds with an AI interviewer that adapts to your answers — 4 mock interviews across 3 roles, modelled on real candidate reports from 2024 to 2026. Each ends with a published rubric and a transcript-backed scorecard, so you know exactly what to fix before the real thing.
A two-minute long-turn monologue on the cue card 'Describe an important journey that was delayed', calibrated to the band 6.5 threshold Indian General Training applicants need. Meera, a certified IELTS examiner, runs the full one-minute preparation, the timed long turn, and a rounding-off question exactly as on test day. You walk away with a transcript-backed scorecard naming the bullet you skipped and the band feature you did not reach.
A four to five minute IELTS General Training Speaking Part 1 interview on your current job and your daily routine, run at the band 6 bar that most first-attempt Indian PR and visa applicants need to clear. Priya, a certified IELTS examiner, opens with the identity check, then asks short Work and Daily Routine questions and moves on briskly without coaching. You leave with a transcript-backed scorecard naming the exact answers where you stopped at one line or slipped out of present simple.
A four to five minute Part 3 abstract discussion on saving and spending money, run at the IELTS General Training band 7 bar. Priya Nair, a certified IELTS examiner, asks roughly five questions, mixes scripted probes with impromptu follow-ups, and challenges one-sided answers to make you extend your reasoning. You leave with a transcript-backed scorecard naming the exact answer that stayed at band 6 because it had no reason, example, or discourse marker.
A four to five minute IELTS Speaking Part 3 discussion on work and money, the abstract phase where a 6.5 becomes a 7 for Canada Express Entry CLB 9. Priya, a certified examiner with eight years on the IDP panel in India, asks broad follow-ups and challenges every flat opinion. You leave with a transcript-backed scorecard naming the exact answer that stayed at one sentence when it needed five.