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TOEFL Score Guide: What Every Score Means for University Admission

TOEFL Score Guide: What Every Score Means for University Admission
TOEFL Score Guide

TOEFL Score Guide: What Every Score Means for University Admission

A score of 87 opens very different doors than a score of 100. This guide decodes the full 0-120 range - with CEFR equivalences, per-section scoring, university minimums by country, and exactly how to close the gap between your current score and your target.

Updated: April 2026 Reading time: 10 min Total range: 0-120
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TOEFL score report with 0-120 scale

Your TOEFL score report contains three layers of information: your total score (0-120), your four section scores (0-30 each), and - if you have taken the test before - your MyBest Scores profile. Understanding all three is important because many universities evaluate section minimums independently, not just your total.

How the 0-120 Score Is Built

Reading 0-30 + Listening 0-30 + Speaking 0-30 + Writing 0-30 = Total 0-120. Each section is weighted equally. There is no penalty for wrong answers - your raw score is the number of correct responses, then converted to the scaled score.

1. TOEFL Score Bands - Full Breakdown

0-31
Below A2 - Not Accepted

No university or institution accepts this score for academic admission. Equivalent to beginner-elementary English level.

32-57
A2-B1 - Not Accepted for Degree Programmes

Some ESL programmes and intensive English programmes accept 32+. Degree programmes universally require higher. CEFR: A2 to B1.

57-79
B2 - Community Colleges, Pathway Programmes

US community colleges often accept 61-79. Some universities with conditional admission or English support programmes. Undergraduate admission is limited at this range.

80-90
B2+ - Many Universities (Undergraduate)

Meets the minimum for a broad range of US, Canadian, and European universities at undergraduate level. This is the most commonly targeted "entrance band" for students from North Africa applying abroad.

90-99
C1 - Most Universities (Graduate)

Required for most graduate programmes at US top-100, UK Russell Group, and major Canadian universities. Competitive for undergraduate admission at selective institutions.

100-109
C1+ - Competitive Universities

Required for competitive graduate programmes, top-ranked business and law schools, and most elite US and UK institutions. Often the threshold for scholarship consideration.

110-120
C2 - Ivy League and Top Research Universities

Required or strongly preferred by Harvard, MIT, Stanford, Yale, Princeton, and equivalent global research universities. Also required for many English-language teaching and academic positions.

2. Per-Section Scoring (0-30 Each)

Many universities publish minimum section scores alongside their total score requirements. A total of 95 where Speaking is 18 may not meet a graduate programme's Speaking minimum of 23, even though the total looks competitive.

Section Score Level What It Indicates
24-30 Advanced Fully functional at university level in this skill
20-23 High Intermediate Generally competent with some gaps; meets most minimums
16-19 Intermediate Noticeable limitations; may not meet graduate programme minimums
10-15 Low Intermediate Significant limitations; unlikely to meet academic admission thresholds
0-9 Below Threshold Does not demonstrate university-level proficiency in this skill

Typical Section Score Minimums by Programme Type

Programme Type Reading Listening Speaking Writing
US Undergraduate (state univ.) 18 17 16 17
US Graduate (general) 22 22 22 22
UK Undergraduate 18 17 17 17
UK Postgraduate (Russell Group) 24 22 22 24
Teaching Assistant (US) 22 22 26 22
Medical / Nursing (USA) 24 24 26 24
Section Minimums Can Be Decisive

A student with a total of 102 but a Speaking score of 19 may be rejected by a graduate programme requiring Speaking 22, despite the strong total. Always check section minimums for your specific target programme, not just the total score requirement published on the main admissions page.

3. University Requirements by Country

Country / Institution Type Minimum Total Competitive Score Notes
USA - Community College 61 79 Varies widely; some accept 45+ with support programmes
USA - State University 79 90 Most require 79-80 minimum; competitive programmes higher
USA - Top 50 University 90 100 Graduate programmes often require 100+
USA - Ivy League / MIT / Stanford 100 110 Most accepted applicants exceed 110
UK - General Universities 72 90 IELTS more common; TOEFL widely accepted
UK - Russell Group 90 100 Oxford/Cambridge typically require 100-110
Canada - University of Toronto/UBC 89 100 McGill 90+; section minimums apply
Canada - Other Major Universities 86 95 Check individual faculty requirements
Germany (English programmes) 87 95 TU Munich, LMU: 88-95 typical
Netherlands (English programmes) 80 90 Delft, Utrecht, Amsterdam: 80-90 typical
Australia - Group of Eight 79 90 Most prefer IELTS but accept TOEFL
North Africa Context

Students from Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Egypt most commonly target French grandes écoles (for which TOEFL may be required for English-language tracks), Canadian universities (which actively recruit from North Africa), and US universities on scholarship programmes. Canadian requirements typically start at 86-90; US scholarship programmes often require 90-100.

4. MyBest Scores - How Superscoring Works

ETS introduced MyBest Scores to combine your highest sub-scores from all TOEFL sittings within the past 2 years. This is not automatic - it only appears on your score report as an additional profile. You still send individual test scores to universities.

Test Sitting Reading Listening Speaking Writing Total
Test 1 (October) 26 22 20 22 90
Test 2 (December) 24 24 23 23 94
MyBest Score 26 24 23 23 96

In this example, the MyBest Score of 96 is 6 points higher than the best single-test score of 94. This matters for institutions that accept MyBest - your profile becomes more competitive without additional test preparation.

Is MyBest Right for You?

If you are 5-10 points below your target and have already taken the test once, taking it a second time with focused preparation on your weak sections is often more efficient than trying to improve all four sections at once. The section you improved will combine with your previous best from the other sections, often closing the gap faster than a full retest preparation.

5. How to Improve Your TOEFL Score

Identify Your Score Gap First

The most efficient preparation starts with knowing exactly which sections to prioritise. A student 10 points below target who has strong Reading and Listening but low Speaking and Writing should spend 70% of their preparation time on Speaking and Writing specifically - not general English improvement.

Current Score Target Score Preparation Approach Estimated Time
60-70 80 Intensive language foundation + format practice 3-4 months
70-80 90 Mixed language and format-specific practice 2-3 months
80-90 100 Targeted weak-section work + full mock tests 6-10 weeks
90-100 110 Advanced vocabulary, Speaking fluency, Writing precision 8-12 weeks

The Most Improvable Sections

  • Reading (+5-8 points): Question types are highly predictable. 2 weeks of daily question-type practice (10 questions per type) produces measurable gains quickly.
  • Listening (+4-7 points): Note-taking skill is the fastest lever. Practise abbreviation systems and identifying lecture structure signals. 30 minutes daily for 3-4 weeks produces consistent improvement.
  • Writing (+4-6 points): Template mastery for Task 1 and academic language for Task 2. Teachers who review your actual writing accelerate improvement significantly.
  • Speaking (+3-5 points): The slowest section to improve because it requires both language accuracy and real-time performance. Live feedback from a qualified teacher is more effective than self-study for Speaking improvement above the 20-mark threshold.
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Read also: TOEFL Practice Tests - taking a scored diagnostic test before planning your preparation is the most reliable way to identify which sections need the most work.

6. Your TOEFL Score Report - What to Expect

Scores are released within 4-8 days of your test date (for test centre and Home Edition). You receive an email notification when your scores are available in your ETS account. You can then designate up to 4 free score sends to institutions; additional sends cost $20 per institution.

  • Scores remain in your ETS account for 10 years, but are only reportable to institutions for 2 years from the test date.
  • You can choose which scores to send - you do not have to send all sittings.
  • Score cancellation is available within 72 hours after the test, before scores are released.
  • Score reinstatement is possible within 60 days after cancellation, for a fee.
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Frequently Asked Questions

The TOEFL iBT is scored on a scale of 0-120. Each of the four sections (Reading, Listening, Speaking, Writing) is scored 0-30. Your total score is the sum of all four section scores. There is no minimum passing score set by ETS - each institution sets its own minimum requirement, which typically ranges from 61 for community colleges to 110+ for Ivy League universities.
TOEFL iBT scores are valid for 2 years from the test date. After 2 years, ETS will no longer report your scores and institutions will not accept them. If your scores have expired, you must retake the test. The 2-year validity starts from the test date, not from when you receive your score report.
MyBest Scores (also called superscoring) combines your highest sub-scores from all valid TOEFL sittings in the past 2 years. For example, if you scored Reading 28 in one test and Speaking 26 in another, your MyBest profile would show both peak scores. Many universities now accept MyBest Scores - always check with each institution individually. MyBest does not replace your individual test scores; it appears as an additional profile on your score report.
US university requirements vary widely by institution and programme. Community colleges typically require 61-79. Regional state universities commonly require 79-90. Top 100 US universities generally require 90-100. Competitive Ivy League and research universities (Harvard, MIT, Stanford) typically require 100-110+. Always check the specific requirement for your target department - engineering and science programmes often have different thresholds than humanities.
You can take the TOEFL as many times as you wish. However, you must wait at least 3 days between test sittings. ETS sends your scores automatically to institutions you designate - you can choose which scores to send if you have taken the test multiple times. With MyBest Scores, taking the test 2-3 times can strategically build your strongest possible score profile.

Know Your Target. Close the Gap.

Direct English Live helps you identify exactly which sections are holding your score back and builds a structured preparation plan to reach your target - from B1 through C1.

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