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PTE Read Aloud

Read Aloud looks like the easiest task in PTE Academic — a short paragraph appears, you read it out loud. It is also the task where careful students quietly lose the most points, because it's marked on three things at once and it feeds two of your section scores.

6–7questions in the test
~35sto prepare
40sto record
≤60words per text
The thing most people miss: Read Aloud is an integrated task — it counts towards your Speaking score AND your Reading score. Because there are 6–7 of them, it's one of the highest-value tasks in the whole exam. Getting good at Read Aloud lifts two sections at once.

How Read Aloud is actually scored

Three separate traits. You can be perfect on one and still lose the mark on another.

Content

Did you say the words on screen, in the right order? Every word you skip, add, or replace costs content. Machine scoring compares what you said to the exact text.

Oral Fluency

Smooth, natural, even pace. Hesitations, restarts, and long pauses all cut fluency — even when every word is technically correct.

Pronunciation

How clearly each word is produced. It's not about having a "native" accent — it's about each sound being recognisable.

Accent myth, cleared up: PTE does not require an Australian, British or American accent. It requires intelligibility. An Indian, Nepali, Filipino or Vietnamese accent is completely fine — the machine cares whether each word is clear, not where you're from.

The 5 mistakes that cost the most points

1. Restarting when you stumble

This is the big one. You misread a word, so you go back and say it again properly — and your fluency score drops further than the original slip ever would have.

✓ Fix: never go back. Mispronounce one word and keep moving. A smooth read with one wrong word beats a stop-start read with none.

2. Freezing on a hard word

You hit a word like "epistemological" and pause to work it out. In the real exam the microphone closes after about 3 seconds of silence and submits what you've said so far — mid-sentence.

✓ Fix: attempt it and move on. A rough guess said fluently scores better than silence.

3. Speaking too fast (or too slow)

Rushing blurs your pronunciation and makes you swallow word endings. Going too slow reads as hesitation and hurts fluency.

✓ Fix: aim for roughly 140–160 words per minute — a confident news-reader pace. Below ~100 wpm sounds hesitant; above ~175 wpm your words start smearing together.

4. Wasting the preparation time

Most people just stare at the text. The prep time exists so you can spot the traps before the microphone opens.

✓ Fix: scan for long/unfamiliar words, numbers and names — decide how you'll say them now, so you don't freeze later.

5. Ignoring punctuation

Reading in a flat monotone with no phrasing costs you on fluency and prosody. Commas and full stops are your breathing plan.

✓ Fix: small pause at a comma, slightly bigger at a full stop, and let your pitch drop at the end of a sentence.

How to practise Read Aloud properly

Reading tips doesn't fix pronunciation. Hearing yourself does.

Here's the honest problem with practising Read Aloud alone: you cannot hear your own mistakes. Your brain knows what you meant to say, so it hears the correct word — even when the microphone recorded something else. That's why people practise for weeks and get the same Speaking score.

The fix is feedback at the word level. On The PTE Master, when you finish a Read Aloud:

Hear your own pronunciation, word by word

Try Read Aloud free — record one passage and see exactly which words let you down.

Try it free — no sign-up

Common questions

How is PTE Read Aloud scored?
On three traits: Content (the right words, in order), Oral Fluency (smooth, even pace) and Pronunciation (each word clearly produced). It feeds both your Speaking and Reading scores.
Does Read Aloud count towards Reading?
Yes — it's an integrated task contributing to both Speaking and Reading. With 6–7 of them in the test, it's one of the highest-leverage tasks you can improve.
Should I restart if I make a mistake?
No. Restarting damages Oral Fluency more than the original mistake did. Keep going and finish smoothly.
How fast should I speak?
Roughly 140–160 words per minute — steady and natural. Under ~100 wpm reads as hesitant; over ~175 wpm your pronunciation blurs.
What if I pause too long?
In the real exam the mic closes after about 3 seconds of silence and submits what you have. Freezing on one word can end your recording early.
Do I need a native accent?
No. PTE scores intelligibility, not accent. Clear, well-formed sounds matter; where you're from doesn't.

Keep going

The PTE Master is an independent practice platform and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Pearson. "PTE Academic" is a trademark of its owner. Task formats and timings reflect the current PTE Academic test — always check the official Pearson materials for the definitive format before test day. Last updated: 16 July 2026.