How Soon Can I Retake Each English Test?

Each English test has its own retake rules. Some let you book again the next day; others impose 30-day minimums. Here's the practical calendar for IELTS, PTE, DET, LanguageCert, Password, TOEFL, TOEIC and Cambridge.

Retake · Calendar

1. The retake rules (2026 standard)

TestMinimum gapMaximum attempts per yearNotes
IELTSNone officialUnlimitedTest centre availability is the bottleneck
PTE AcademicNone officialUnlimitedReservations open immediately after results
Duolingo English Test30 daysUp to 3 in any 30-day windowHard rules; system enforces
LanguageCert IESOLNoneUnlimitedRecommended 14+ days between attempts
Password Skills PlusNoneUnlimitedSame calendar
TOEFL iBT3 daysUnlimitedBut 3-day enforced minimum
TOEIC L&RNoneUnlimitedSome Asian markets impose corporate-program restrictions
Cambridge B2 FirstNoneUnlimitedSessions limited to 3 / year practical

2. The smart-retake question

Faster retake ≠ better outcome.

Studies of self-reported community data suggest:

  • Same-month retakes (within 7 days): modest improvement on average (+0.1–0.3 IELTS bands)
  • 3–4 week retakes: largest average improvement (+0.5–0.7)
  • 2–3 month retakes: diminishing returns

The right pace is roughly:

  • Listening / Reading score gaps: 3–4 weeks of focused work
  • Writing score gaps: 4–6 weeks
  • Speaking score gaps: 4–8 weeks

3. When to retake immediately

The few cases where same-week retake makes sense:

  • You had a technical issue (mic failed, audio cut out) — most tests offer free re-sitting
  • You misread the section timing and ran out of time on a section
  • Your score is off your trajectory in ways that suggest test-day issues

In these cases, contact the test provider first — sometimes a free re-sitting is available.

4. The DET 30-day rule

DET strictly enforces 30 days between paid attempts, and 3 attempts per 30-day window. The 30-day window starts from your most recent attempt date.

The rule exists because DET's adaptive scoring depends on your unfamiliarity with the format. Repeated attempts within a short window degrade scoring reliability.

5. The cost of repeated retakes

TestPer-sitting cost3-retake total (typical)
IELTS UKVI~£196~£588
PTE Academic~£170~£510
DET~£59~£177
LanguageCert IESOL~£155~£465
Password Skills Plus~£89~£267
TOEFL iBT~£190~£570

For budget-constrained applicants, DET and Password offer the lowest retake costs.

6. The institutional view

Most universities accept your highest score, not your average. So retaking carries upside without downside, as long as you're past the minimum gap and you've done genuine improvement work.

But: some scholarship programmes require "first attempt" scores. If you're in that category, prepare carefully for your first sitting.

7. The strategic retake calendar

Best practice 60-day cycle:

  • Week 1: Take test attempt #1
  • Weeks 2–5: Focused 60 min/day prep on the section that scored lowest
  • Week 6: Take test attempt #2
  • Weeks 7–9: Continued focused work if needed
  • Week 10: Take attempt #3 if necessary

This pattern, applied to IELTS, typically delivers +1.0–1.5 bands over 60 days for B1–B2 candidates.

8. The plateau warning

If your retake score is identical to your first attempt within ±0.1, you've hit a plateau. Don't retake immediately. Instead:

  • Re-take our 10-question CEFR test to confirm starting level
  • Reassess your study method
  • Take a one-week break from English entirely
  • Then return for 4 weeks of focused work in a different mode (different listening source, different writing prompt style)

Plateaus often break with method variety, not more of the same.