IELTS Reading True / False / Not Given: How to Practice This Real Question Type
A practical guide to IELTS Reading True, False, and Not Given questions using official sample task logic without copying protected passages.

IELTS Reading True / False / Not Given is one of the most frustrating official question types because it punishes guessing.
IELTS official sample resources include Reading question types such as True / False / Not Given and Yes / No / Not Given. This article does not copy a protected IELTS passage or question set. Use the official IELTS sample pages for actual practice:
What the task really asks
The problem is not only vocabulary. You must decide whether the statement:
- agrees with the passage
- contradicts the passage
- is not stated in the passage
"Not Given" does not mean "probably false." It means the passage does not give enough information.
Why learners lose marks
Common mistakes include:
- matching keywords without checking meaning
- using outside knowledge
- treating "not mentioned" as "false"
- missing qualifiers such as some, most, always, rarely, and only
- ignoring comparison words
The test rewards exact reading, not general memory.
A better review method
For every wrong answer, write three short notes:
- What words in the question changed the meaning?
- Which line in the passage proves or fails to prove the statement?
- Why was my first answer tempting?
This turns a mistake into a reading habit.
Practice with sentence pairs
Before doing full passages, practice with short sentence pairs. Look for small meaning changes:
- all vs some
- cause vs result
- started vs became popular
- more than vs less than
- possible vs proven
These small words decide the answer.
Where Gotostudy fits
At gotostudy.net, you can turn your IELTS Reading mistake log into a study guide, ask an AI Tutor to quiz you on True / False / Not Given logic, and save repeated trap patterns as flashcards.
The best input is not a copied official passage. It is your own explanation of why you missed the question.
Bottom line
True / False / Not Given questions become easier when you stop guessing and start proving. Find the exact evidence, watch small words, and keep a mistake log.
