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Gotostudy TeamGotostudy Team/June 03, 2026

IELTS Listening Multiple Choice: How to Practice This Official Question Type

A practical guide to IELTS Listening multiple choice questions, based on official sample task formats and focused on distractors, notes, and review.

IELTS Listening Multiple Choice: How to Practice This Official Question Type

IELTS Listening multiple choice is an official question type. IELTS official sample pages include both one-answer and more-than-one-answer multiple choice tasks for Listening, and the Listening test is the same for Academic and General Training.

Use official IELTS sample materials for real practice:

  • IELTS Academic sample test questions
  • IELTS General Training sample test questions

This article does not copy protected IELTS questions. It explains how to practice the task without wasting official samples.

Why multiple choice feels harder than gap filling

In gap filling, you listen for a word or number. In multiple choice, you listen for meaning.

The options are often close to each other. One answer may use the same words as the audio but mean the wrong thing. Another answer may sound unlikely at first, then become correct after the speaker explains or corrects themselves.

That is why "I heard this word" is not enough.

Read the options before the audio

Before listening, do not try to memorize every option. Instead, mark what each option means.

Ask:

  • What are the options actually comparing?
  • Is the difference about reason, result, opinion, time, or priority?
  • Which option sounds too strong?
  • Which option depends on a small condition?

This prepares your ear for the decision, not just the topic.

Watch for distractors

IELTS Listening often includes tempting wrong answers. A speaker may mention one idea, reject it, then choose another. They may also discuss several possibilities before giving the final decision.

When reviewing, write the exact reason the wrong option was tempting. For example:

  • same keyword, different meaning
  • first idea changed later
  • speaker agreed with part of it, not all of it
  • option was too general
  • option was not the final decision

This kind of review is more useful than just checking the answer key.

Practice one recording twice

Use this routine:

  1. First listen under test conditions.
  2. Check the answer, but do not read the transcript yet.
  3. Listen again and pause after the relevant section.
  4. Only then read the transcript.
  5. Write why the correct answer wins.

If you read the transcript too early, you train reading more than listening.

Where Gotostudy fits

At gotostudy.net, you can paste your Listening mistake log, allowed transcript notes, and option comparisons into a study guide. Then you can ask an AI Tutor to quiz you on distractors and create flashcards for phrases like "changed his mind," "decided against," or "not the main reason."

Use Gotostudy for review, not for copying official tests into a tool.

Bottom line

IELTS Listening multiple choice rewards careful decisions. Read the options for meaning, listen for changes, and review why each wrong answer sounded attractive.