TOEFL Preparation Timeline: How Long to Study (2026)

Written by an admissions expert10 min readKey Takeaways1. Factors that determine your timeline2. Realistic score improvement expectations3. The 4-week TOEFL plan (starting score ~95)4. The 8-week TOEFL plan (starting score 80–90)5. The 12-week TOEFL plan (starting score 70–85)6. The 6-month TOEFL plan (starting score below 75)TOEFL Preparation Timeline: How Long to Study (2026) “How long…

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By Adam Girsault

Updated on June 22, 2026

Written by an admissions expert
10 min read

Key Takeaways

  • 1. Factors that determine your timeline
  • 2. Realistic score improvement expectations
  • 3. The 4-week TOEFL plan (starting score ~95)
  • 4. The 8-week TOEFL plan (starting score 80–90)
  • 5. The 12-week TOEFL plan (starting score 70–85)
  • 6. The 6-month TOEFL plan (starting score below 75)

TOEFL Preparation Timeline: How Long to Study (2026)

“How long do I need to prepare for the TOEFL?” is one of the most common questions from international applicants. The honest answer depends on three things: your starting level, your target score, and how many hours per week you can commit. This article walks through realistic TOEFL preparation timelines at different levels, with sample study plans for 4-week, 8-week, 12-week, and 6-month preparations.

The timeline rule

There’s no universal “right” amount of preparation time. A student starting at 75 aiming for 100 needs different preparation than a student starting at 95 aiming for 105.


1. Factors that determine your timeline

Your starting score:

  • Take a diagnostic practice test before anything else
  • Your current level is your baseline
  • The gap between current and target determines the time needed

Your target score:

  • 80 for general admission at many universities
  • 90 for stronger programs
  • 100 for top-tier universities
  • 105+ for Ivy League competitiveness

Your English background:

  • Have you studied in English before?
  • Have you lived in an English-speaking environment?
  • How strong is your general English base?

Your weekly study time:

  • 5 hours per week: slow progress
  • 10 hours per week: moderate progress
  • 15–20 hours per week: fast progress
  • 25+ hours per week: intensive progress (risk of burnout)

Your learning style:

  • Some students absorb material quickly
  • Others need more repetition
  • Self-study vs guided learning affects pace

2. Realistic score improvement expectations

Based on consistent, targeted practice, here’s what you can expect at different preparation lengths.

Per 4 weeks of focused prep (10–15 hours/week):

  • 3–7 point improvement (modest but steady)

Per 8 weeks of focused prep (10–15 hours/week):

  • 7–12 point improvement

Per 12 weeks of focused prep (10–15 hours/week):

  • 10–15 point improvement

Per 24 weeks (6 months) of focused prep:

  • 15–25 point improvement

Caveats:

  • Improvement slows at higher bands (going from 100 to 110 is harder than 75 to 85)
  • Improvement is section-dependent (Reading and Listening improve faster than Speaking)
  • Motivation and consistency matter more than raw time

3. The 4-week TOEFL plan (starting score ~95)

For students already near their target score who need a quick refresh.

Weekly structure (10 hours per week):

Days 1–2 (Reading focus):
– 2 hours of reading practice (Official Guide + TPO)
– Review common question types

Days 3–4 (Listening focus):
– 2 hours of listening practice
– Note-taking drills
– Focus on lecture-style content

Days 5–6 (Speaking and Writing):
– 1 hour speaking practice (all 4 tasks)
– 1 hour writing practice (integrated and academic discussion)

Day 7:
– 1 full practice test every 2 weeks
– Review results

What to expect:
– 3–5 point improvement
– Best outcome: confirming readiness for test day

Suitable for:
– Students who scored 90+ on a diagnostic
– Students with tight application deadlines
– Students aiming for 95–105 targets


4. The 8-week TOEFL plan (starting score 80–90)

For students who need meaningful improvement before the real test.

Week 1: Diagnostic and familiarisation

  • Take a full TPO practice test
  • Identify your weakest section
  • Start daily practice routine
  • Familiarise yourself with question types

Week 2: Reading foundations

  • 45 minutes of Reading practice daily
  • Learn all question types
  • Build academic vocabulary (Academic Word List)

Week 3: Listening foundations

  • 45 minutes of Listening practice daily
  • Note-taking drills
  • Exposure to academic lecture content

Week 4: Speaking and Writing foundations

  • 30 minutes of Speaking practice daily (recorded)
  • 2 integrated writing tasks
  • 2 academic discussion tasks
  • Take a mid-point practice test

Week 5: Section integration

  • Mixed daily practice
  • Full section timed practice every other day
  • Refine strategies based on practice results

Week 6: Focus on weaknesses

  • 60% of time on weakest section
  • Full practice test late in the week
  • Begin refining exam pacing

Week 7: Polish

  • Full practice test early in the week
  • Targeted drilling on specific weaknesses
  • Review strategy notes

Week 8: Test day prep

  • Light practice only
  • One final diagnostic
  • Rest the last 2–3 days before the real test

What to expect:
– 7–12 point improvement
– Realistic target for students starting at 80–90


5. The 12-week TOEFL plan (starting score 70–85)

For students with a moderate gap to close.

Weeks 1–2: Foundations

  • Diagnostic test
  • Familiarisation with all sections
  • Basic grammar and vocabulary refresh

Weeks 3–4: Reading and Listening

  • Intensive Reading practice
  • Intensive Listening practice
  • Vocabulary building

Weeks 5–6: Speaking

  • Task-by-task practice
  • Daily recorded speaking
  • Feedback from a tutor or AI assessment
  • Second practice test

Weeks 7–8: Writing

  • Integrated writing practice
  • Academic discussion practice
  • Essay feedback

Weeks 9–10: Integration

  • Full section practice
  • Third practice test
  • Targeted improvement on weaknesses

Weeks 11–12: Polish and test day

  • Final practice test
  • Review notes
  • Light practice in the final week
  • Rest before test day

What to expect:
– 10–15 point improvement
– Realistic path from 75 to 90, or 80 to 95


6. The 6-month TOEFL plan (starting score below 75)

For students needing significant English improvement before targeted TOEFL prep.

Months 1–2: General English foundation

  • Grammar review (intermediate level)
  • Vocabulary building (basic academic vocabulary)
  • Daily reading and listening in English
  • Light TOEFL familiarisation

Months 3–4: TOEFL-specific preparation begins

  • Reading section focused work
  • Listening section focused work
  • Basic speaking and writing practice
  • First practice test at the end of month 3

Months 5: Intensive TOEFL preparation

  • All four sections in balance
  • Multiple practice tests
  • Feedback on Speaking and Writing

Month 6: Polish and test

  • Final refinement
  • Rest and test day execution

What to expect:
– 15–25 point improvement
– Realistic path from 65 to 90, or 70 to 95


7. Daily time commitment

How many hours per day does each plan require?

4-week plan: 1.5–2 hours per day (intensive)

8-week plan: 1–1.5 hours per day

12-week plan: 1 hour per day

6-month plan: 30–60 minutes per day with occasional longer sessions

Consistency matters more than intensity. One hour every day beats seven hours once a week.


8. Section-specific time estimates

How long does it take to improve each section significantly?

Reading:

  • Fastest to improve (1–4 weeks for noticeable progress)
  • Responds well to vocabulary building and question-type drills
  • Can improve by 3–5 points in 4 weeks of focused practice

Listening:

  • Moderate speed (3–6 weeks for noticeable progress)
  • Requires accent familiarisation and note-taking practice
  • Can improve by 3–5 points in 6 weeks of focused practice

Writing:

  • Slower to improve (4–8 weeks for noticeable progress)
  • Requires feedback from a tutor or teacher
  • Can improve by 3–4 points in 8 weeks with good feedback

Speaking:

  • Slowest to improve (6–12 weeks for noticeable progress)
  • Requires spoken practice and feedback
  • Can improve by 3–4 points in 8–12 weeks of focused practice

Strategy implication: Start Speaking and Writing practice early; Reading and Listening can be fast-tracked later.


9. When to take your first practice test

Take a diagnostic TPO test in week 1 of preparation. This gives you:

  • Your current level
  • Your weakest section
  • A baseline to measure progress
  • Familiarity with the test format

Don’t skip the diagnostic. Many students start studying without knowing where they stand, which leads to wasted effort on the wrong priorities.


10. Signs you need more preparation time

You’re not ready if:

  • Your practice test scores are 10+ points below your target
  • You’re inconsistent (scores vary widely from test to test)
  • You haven’t mastered the question types
  • You’re running out of time on Reading or Listening
  • Your Speaking and Writing feel rushed and unstructured

You’re ready if:

  • Your practice test scores are consistently at or near your target
  • You can complete sections without running out of time
  • You feel confident in your strategies
  • You can manage test day stress

11. Common timeline mistakes

Mistake 1: Underestimating the time needed.

“I’ll study for 2 weeks” is usually not enough unless you’re very close to your target.

Mistake 2: Overestimating how fast Speaking improves.

Speaking takes 2–3 months to improve meaningfully. Don’t assume you can fix it in 2 weeks.

Mistake 3: Starting without a diagnostic.

You can’t plan preparation effectively without knowing your starting point.

Mistake 4: Inconsistent practice.

Sporadic preparation is far less effective than steady daily practice.

Mistake 5: Over-practising your strong sections.

Practicing Reading when your weakness is Speaking feels productive but doesn’t move your score.

Mistake 6: Not building rest days into the plan.

Burnout is real. Plan 1 rest day per week to stay fresh.

Mistake 7: Taking the test before you’re ready.

Rushing the test wastes the test fee and delays your application. Better to delay a few weeks for a confident attempt.


12. When to register for the real test

Register your real TOEFL test date about 6–8 weeks in advance. This gives you:

  • A firm deadline to work towards
  • Enough time to retake if needed
  • Availability at your preferred test centre

Don’t register before you’ve taken a diagnostic. You need to know your realistic timeline first.


13. What to do if you fall behind schedule

If 4 weeks in, you’re not progressing at the expected pace:

Step 1: Assess honestly.

Are you actually studying the hours you planned? Consistency issues are common.

Step 2: Identify what’s not working.

Are you practising efficiently? Reviewing mistakes? Targeting weaknesses?

Step 3: Adjust your plan.

  • Add hours if possible
  • Refocus on weakest sections
  • Consider getting feedback (tutor, course, or IELTS Progress Check)

Step 4: Consider postponing.

If your progress is far behind, postponing your test date is better than a weak attempt.


14. FAQ

Can I prepare for the TOEFL in 2 weeks?

Only if you’re already scoring near your target. Otherwise, 2 weeks is too short for meaningful improvement.

How long to go from 80 to 100?

Typically 2–3 months of focused preparation (10–15 hours per week).

How long to go from 100 to 110?

At that level, improvement is slower. 2–3 months with targeted practice on weak areas.

Is it better to prepare intensively for a short time or moderately for a long time?

Moderate preparation over a longer period usually works better. Intensive preparation risks burnout.

Can I prepare while working full-time?

Yes, but expect slower progress. Plan for 1–1.5 hours per day and 12+ weeks of preparation.

How many practice tests should I take?

4–6 full practice tests over 8 weeks is typical. More isn’t always better.

When should I stop practising before the test?

Light practice only in the final 2–3 days. Focus on rest and review.

Should I take the test multiple times?

Many students retake once or twice. Universities accept your highest score in most cases.


15. Your TOEFL timeline action plan

  1. Take a diagnostic TPO practice test (week 1)
  2. Identify your starting level and weakest section
  3. Set a realistic target score based on your universities’ requirements
  4. Estimate your timeline using the plans in this article
  5. Register for the real test 6–8 weeks before your application deadline
  6. Follow a daily practice routine with rest days
  7. Take practice tests every 2–3 weeks to track progress
  8. Adjust your plan based on actual progress
  9. Rest before test day
  10. Send scores directly from ETS to your target universities

Not sure how much time you need to reach your target? Book a free strategy call and we’ll assess your level and build a realistic preparation plan.

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Adam Girsault Author
About Adam Girsault

With a Bachelor's (LLB) from UCL and Assas, and the Grande Ecole program at HEC Paris, Adam has over 10 years of experience in education and student mentoring. Passionate about helping students achieve their academic dreams, he co-founded Your Dream School to guide students through university admissions and interview preparation for top global institutions.

Our Quality CommitmentThis article is written and fact-checked by our team of admissions consultants, graduates of HEC Paris, UCL, and other top institutions. All information is verified against official university sources.
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