If you're choosing between LanguageCert IESOL and IELTS for a UK visa or university offer, this guide compares them across acceptance, scheduling, price, turnaround and difficulty — with a decision checklist for both routes.
1. Both are UKVI-approved SELT tests
LanguageCert International ESOL (IESOL) and IELTS for UKVI are both Secure English Language Tests (SELT) approved for UK visas. At the most basic question — "will the Home Office accept this?" — there is no difference between the two. The four real differentiators are scheduling, price, turnaround and how the test feels.
2. Scheduling and availability
IELTS is delivered by the British Council and IDP through hundreds of test centres worldwide. Sessions run several times a month, but you typically commit weeks in advance and travel to a specific venue.
LanguageCert has grown its centre network rapidly in recent years and added an at-home online option with a proctor over webcam. The home test is almost always available within 24–72 hours of booking, which is invaluable if you're working full time or live far from major cities.
3. Price
Public 2026 fees (approximate, USD-equivalent):
- IELTS UKVI: about £196 (~US
LanguageCert IESOL B1/B2/C1: about £140–170 (~US80–215)
LanguageCert Online: same price as in-centre, but you skip the travel
LanguageCert is about 25–35% cheaper. Across two or three retakes the gap becomes significant.
4. Score turnaround
- IELTS paper-based: ~13 days
- IELTS computer-delivered: 3–5 days
- LanguageCert in-centre: ~7 working days
- LanguageCert Online with priority option: results in 48 hours
For applicants chasing a deadline (UK September intake closing in July, for example), the 48-hour LanguageCert pathway can be a lifesaver.
5. Test feel and difficulty
IELTS is well-known and predictable. Most candidates struggle with two specific spots: the gap-fill in Listening, and the unfamiliar Part 2 topics in Speaking.
LanguageCert IESOL has fewer items but is denser. Writing requires shorter texts but at a more precise register. Speaking is recorded with a real examiner over video, divided into four parts.
If you only need B2, LanguageCert tends to feel friendlier; if you target C1 or higher, both demand the same long preparation.
6. When to choose which
Choose LanguageCert when:
- Your target university or visa route explicitly accepts it
- You need fast results and at-home options
- You're cost-conscious and only need B1–B2
Choose IELTS when:
- The institution does not list LanguageCert on its accepted-tests page
- You're going to a country other than the UK as well (IELTS has the widest global recognition)
- You already have IELTS materials and a study habit built around them
7. Action steps
- Read your target programme's English-language requirements page line by line. Don't book before you confirm.
- Use our score converter to translate one test's score to the other on a CEFR scale.
- Take our 10-question CEFR test to see your starting level (L1 / L2 / L3), then plug it into a study plan.
Choosing a test is choosing a path, not a difficulty level — at the same CEFR rung the outcomes are equivalent. The only question is which path costs you less time and money.