CELPIP-General: the whole format, one sitting
CELPIP-General is Canada's everyday-English test for permanent residence and citizenship — all four skills in a single computer-delivered session, under three hours. This is the part-by-part map: what you'll see, how long you get, and where the format itself catches people out. Verified July 6, 2026.
What CELPIP-General is — and who takes it
CELPIP (Canadian English Language Proficiency Index Program) is a fully computer-delivered test ofeveryday Canadian English — not academic English. You take it to prove language ability for IRCC purposes: economic-class permanent residence (including Express Entry) and, in the case of CELPIP-General LS, citizenship. The "General" test we cover here measures all four skills and is the one used for PR.
The defining feature: Listening, Reading, Writing and Speaking all happen in one sitting, in that order, with no separate speaking appointment on another day. Plan for a session under three hours. Because everything is on-screen, the test doubles as a typing-and-reading-on-a-monitor test — worth internalising before you book.
The four sections, part by part
| Section | What's in it | Questions | Time |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Listening | 6 parts: Problem Solving, Daily Life Conversation, Information, News Item, Discussion, Viewpoints | ~38 | ~46–55 min |
| 2. Reading | 4 parts: Correspondence, Reading to Apply a Diagram, Information, Viewpoints | ~38 | ~43–56 min |
| 3. Writing | 2 tasks: Task 1 = write an email; Task 2 = respond to survey questions (~150–200 words each) | 2 tasks | ~53 min |
| 4. Speaking | 8 tasks: Giving Advice, Personal Experience, Describing a Scene, Making Predictions, Comparing & Persuading, Difficult Situation, Expressing Opinions, Unusual Situation | 8 tasks | ~15–20 min |
Official format, verified July 6, 2026 — see the CELPIP-General test-format pages oncelpip.ca (sources below). Question counts and timings are the published approximations; the exact totals vary slightly between test versions.
Timing and navigation quirks
Listening audio plays once
Each Listening part is played a single time — there's no replay. You typically preview the questions, hear the audio once, then answer. This rewards note-taking and staying with the recording rather than pausing to second-guess an earlier answer.
Reading lets you review — Listening doesn't
Within the Reading section you can move back and forth and revisit your answers before the section ends. Listening doesn't work that way (the audio is gone once it's played), so treat the two sections with different tactics: bank Reading review time, but commit on Listening in the moment.
Writing is a hard ~53 minutes across two tasks
You get roughly 53 minutes for both writing tasks combined, so budget it — losing track on the Task 1 email leaves you rushing the Task 2 survey response. An on-screen word count helps you land each answer around the 150–200-word target.
Speaking is prep-then-record-once, eight times
Each of the 8 speaking tasks gives you a short preparation window, then records your answer once — there's no re-record. You're speaking to the computer, not an interviewer, and the clock is visible. The eight-task structure is a lot of context-switching in 15–20 minutes, which is exactly why people who haven't rehearsed the task types run out of things to say.
How it's scored, and what a good score looks like
Every skill is reported on the CELPIP Level scale, 3 to 12 (plus "M"for minimal proficiency, the band below 3). There are no half-levels. The scale is the friendliest of any IRCC test because it maps 1:1 to CLB — a Level 9 in a skill is CLB 9 in that skill, with no conversion table.
- Listening and Reading are scored automatically from your answers.
- Writing is marked by trained human raters on four dimensions:content/coherence, vocabulary, readability, and task fulfilment.
- Speaking is human-rated on content, vocabulary, fluencyand pronunciation.
For most Express Entry candidates the target is Level 9 in all four skills (CLB 9), and your lowest skill is what counts — IRCC never averages. The jump from Level 8 to Level 9 is the classic wall, and it's about developed content — elaborated, well-organised answers — far more than grammar. We break the scale down further in theCELPIP score decoder.
What trips people up
- Expecting academic English. CELPIP is everyday Canadian English — emails to a landlord, workplace scenarios, community decisions. Studying for an academic test (or reaching for "impressive" formal vocabulary) works against you here.
- Typing speed matters. Both writing tasks are typed under time pressure, and slow, hunt-and-peck typing quietly costs you words and checking time. Practise on a keyboard, on a screen, not on paper.
- The diagram-reading part surprises people. "Reading to Apply a Diagram" asks you to pull information from a visual (a schedule, a map, a form) rather than prose — a format many candidates have never rehearsed until test day.
- Eight speaking tasks is a lot. Very few people expect eight distinct prompts, each with its own short prep and a single recording. Knowing the eight task types cold — and having a way into each — is most of the battle.
- Raters reward fully developed answers. Because human raters score Writing and Speaking on developed content, a complete-but-thin answer caps out. Covering every part of the prompt and elaborating one level deeper is what separates Level 9 from Level 8.
Practise this format
Feel the real screens before you pay for a sitting: CELPIP practiceruns in replicas of the actual test interface across all four skills, with the writing and speaking task types laid out the way test day presents them. When you're ready to rehearse the full one-sitting experience under time, sit the full CELPIP mock.
Related guides:CELPIP score decoder (levels, "M", the 8→9 wall) ·CELPIP writing guide (Task 1 email & Task 2 survey, dimension by dimension) ·Which English test for Canada? (CELPIP vs IELTS vs PTE Core).
Sources
CELPIP-General test format, section structure, task types and scoring (Levels 3–12 with "M", mapping 1:1 to CLB) per the official celpip.ca test-format and scoring pages, verified July 6, 2026. CLB equivalence per IRCC's language-test charts. Rater dimensions are CELPIP's published performance standards.