Complete Guide to NEW TOEFL Listening (2026 Update)
Table of Contents
Introduction to TOEFL Listening
The TOEFL Listening section measures your ability to understand conversations and talks in academic and campus life contexts. The updated section (starting January 21, 2026) features a multistage adaptive format and diverse task types that reflect real-world listening situations.
Section Structure
- Duration: Approximately 29 minutes
- Number of Items: 47 questions total
- Format: Multistage adaptive (difficulty adjusts based on performance)
- Task Types: 4 distinct question formats
- Accents: Speakers use accents from North America, the United Kingdom, and Australia
Key Changes of the Updated Listening Section
The adaptive format personalizes your test experience by adjusting difficulty based on your performance in the first stage, providing a more accurate and efficient assessment of your listening abilities.
The content includes:
- Academic lectures and talks
- Campus conversations (student-to-student, student-to-staff)
- Public announcements
- Real-world interactions from modern campus life
What the Listening Section Measures
The Listening section evaluates your ability to:
- Understand main ideas and important details in spoken English
- Comprehend a range of grammatical structures in natural speech
- Understand formal and informal language, including idioms and colloquial expressions
- Make inferences from implied information
- Recognize speaker purposes and attitudes
- Understand vocabulary in academic and everyday contexts
- Follow connections between ideas across speaker turns
- Predict future actions based on spoken information
Complete List of NEW TOEFL Listening Question Types (With Examples)
The TOEFL Listening section is designed to assess how well you understand spoken English in academic settings. It includes two conversations and three lectures. You will answer a total of 28 questions: each conversation has five questions, and each lecture has six. The questions test your ability to understand main ideas, details, the speaker’s purpose, and attitude, as well as how information is organized and connected.
Listen and Choose a Response
You hear a short question or statement forming the first part of a brief exchange on campus life topics. You then read four possible responses and select the most appropriate one.
Format: Audio only for the question/statement (not shown on screen); four written response options to choose from.
What It Measures:
- Understanding common vocabulary and formulaic phrases
- Comprehension of simple grammatical structures and question patterns
- Recognition of socially appropriate responses
- Ability to distinguish English phonemes and intonation patterns
- Inferring implied meaning, speaker role, or context
Sample Question 1
You hear: “Didn’t I just see you in the library an hour ago?”
Choose the best response:
A. As a matter of fact, I was returning a book.
B. Yes, you can find it in the reference section.
C. I don’t think I’ll have enough time to do that.
D. Actually, I think I can get there a little earlier.
Explanation: This question requires understanding both the literal meaning and appropriate conversational response. The speaker is asking a yes/no question about whether they saw the listener at the library. Option A appropriately confirms the observation (through the affirmative phrase “as a matter of fact”) and provides relevant additional information about why they were there. Option B incorrectly interprets the question as asking for location directions. Option C responds as if declining a suggestion or request. Option D responds as if discussing future plans to go somewhere. The correct answer acknowledges the sighting and naturally extends the conversation.
Answer: A (As a matter of fact, I was returning a book.)
Sample Question 2
You hear: “I’m thinking of switching my major from biology to environmental science. Do you think that’s a good idea?”
Choose the best response:
A. The biology building is on the north side of campus.
B. Environmental science combines several disciplines really well.
C. I already submitted my application last week.
D. You should return those books to the library soon.
Explanation: The speaker is seeking advice/opinion about changing majors. A good response should address the question being asked – whether it’s a good idea. Option B provides relevant input by highlighting a positive aspect of environmental science, which appropriately contributes to the decision-making conversation. Option A mishears or ignores the question, providing location information instead. Option C talks about the responder’s own application, not addressing the speaker’s question. Option D is completely unrelated. Understanding the speaker’s purpose (seeking advice) and responding appropriately is key.
Answer: B (Environmental science combines several disciplines really well.)
Sample Question 3
You hear: “Hey, I heard the cafeteria is serving that amazing chocolate cake today. Want to grab some after class?”
Choose the best response:
A. No thanks, I’m trying to cut back on sweets.
B. The chocolate was on sale at the grocery store.
C. I think the class starts at two o’clock.
D. Yes, I heard about that amazing professor too.
Explanation: This is an invitation to go get cake together. The appropriate response should either accept or decline the invitation. Option A politely declines and provides a reasonable explanation, which is natural in conversation. Option B misinterprets “chocolate cake” as just “chocolate” and shifts to grocery shopping. Option C focuses on “class” timing but doesn’t address the invitation. Option D confuses “amazing chocolate cake” with “amazing professor,” showing miscomprehension. The correct response demonstrates understanding of the social context (an invitation) and responds appropriately.
Answer: A (No thanks, I’m trying to cut back on sweets.)
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Listen to a Conversation
You listen to a short conversation between two speakers on everyday or campus life topics (dining, social activities, education, services, etc.). You then answer 2 questions about the conversation.
What It Measures:
- Identifying main ideas and basic context
- Understanding important details
- Comprehending various grammatical structures in speech
- Understanding vocabulary including idiomatic and colloquial expressions
- Inferring meaning from implicit information
- Recognizing speaker purposes
- Making predictions about future actions
- Following idea connections across speaker turns
Conversation Sample 1
Narrator: Listen to a conversation.
Woman: Need anything from the supermarket?
Man: Huh? Aren’t we getting ready to go see that play in a few minutes?
Woman: That’s tomorrow.
Man: Oh. Wow, I’d forget my head if it wasn’t screwed on… Guess I don’t need to change my clothes after all.
Woman: So, you weren’t planning to prepare dinner?
Man: No, but I can. What do you want?
Woman: Just something light and healthy. So, can you go shopping instead?
Man: Yeah, sure. How about salmon and salad? Want anything else?
Woman: No, that’s good. Thanks!
Question 1: What does the woman imply that she was about to do?
A. See a play
B. Change her clothes
C. Go shopping
D. Eat dinner
Explanation: The woman’s opening line “Need anything from the supermarket?” indicates she was about to go shopping and was offering to pick up items for the man. Later she says “can you go shopping instead?” confirming she was originally planning to go. Option A (see a play) is tomorrow, not now. Option B refers to what the man was considering, not the woman. Option D (eat dinner) is a future need, not what she was about to do. The key is recognizing that her offer and later statement about going “instead” reveals her initial plan.
Answer: C (Go shopping)
Question 2: What will the man probably do next?
A. Get ready to see a play
B. Go to the supermarket
C. Cook salmon and salad
D. Change his clothes
Explanation: The conversation progresses with the woman asking the man to go shopping instead of her, and he agrees (“Yeah, sure”). They then discuss what to buy (salmon and salad). The natural next action is for the man to go shopping. Option A is incorrect because the play is tomorrow. Option C (cooking) would come after shopping. Option D (changing clothes) was something he considered when he thought the play was today, but he now says he doesn’t “need to change” since the play isn’t happening now. Understanding the conversational flow and agreement helps predict the next logical action.
Answer: B (Go to the supermarket)
Conversation Sample 2
Narrator: Listen to a conversation.
Male Student: Hi, Dr. Strangelove. I wanted to ask about extending the deadline for the research paper.
Female Professor: Is there a specific reason you need more time?
Male Student: Well, I’ve been having trouble accessing some of the sources in the library database. The system has been down for the past three days.
Female Professor: I heard about those technical issues. Several students mentioned it. Tell you what – I’ll extend the deadline by one week for everyone in the class. That should give the IT department time to fix things.
Male Student: That would be great, thank you!
Female Professor: Just make sure you’re using that extra time productively. And if you’re still having database problems after a few days, come see me and we’ll figure out alternative sources.
Question 1: Why does the student go to see the professor?
A. To report a problem with the library
B. To request more time to complete an assignment
C. To ask for help finding research sources
D. To complain about technical difficulties
Explanation: The student’s opening statement explicitly states his purpose: “I wanted to ask about extending the deadline for the research paper.” While he mentions database problems, that’s the reason for his request, not his primary purpose in visiting. Option A is incorrect because he’s not reporting the problem to the professor as a complaint or for her to fix – he’s using it as justification for an extension. Option C is partially related but he’s not asking for help finding sources yet. Option D mischaracterizes his intent; he’s not complaining but explaining his situation to support his extension request.
Answer: B (To request more time to complete an assignment)
Question 2: What does the professor suggest the student should do if he continues to have problems?
A. Wait for the IT department to fix the database
B. Use only printed materials instead of online sources
C. Visit her office to discuss other options
D. Submit the paper with whatever sources he has found
Explanation: The professor says: “if you’re still having database problems after a few days, come see me and we’ll figure out alternative sources.” This is a clear instruction to return for help if problems persist. Option A (waiting for IT) is mentioned but not suggested as what the student should do. Option B is not mentioned. Option D contradicts the professor’s offer to help find alternatives. The phrase “come see me” and “we’ll figure out” indicates collaborative problem-solving, making C the correct answer.
Answer: C (Visit her office to discuss other options)
Conversation Sample 3
Narrator: Listen to a conversation.
Female Student 1: Are you going to the career fair next Thursday?
Female Student 2: I’m not sure yet. Are you?
Female Student 1: Definitely! I’m graduating in May, so I really need to start making connections with employers. Plus, I heard some companies are conducting on-the-spot interviews.
Female Student 2: Really? I didn’t know that. I’m only a sophomore, so I figured it wasn’t really for me yet.
Female Student 1: Actually, it’s a great time to start networking. Even if you’re not looking for a job right now, you can learn about internship opportunities and make good impressions for the future.
Female Student 2: Hmm, that’s a good point. What time does it start?
Female Student 1: Ten AM in the student center, but I’d get there early. It gets crowded by eleven.
Question 1: Why is the first student planning to attend the career fair?
A. She needs to find an internship for the summer
B. She wants to help her friend find a job
C. She is graduating soon and needs employment connections
D. She wants to learn what companies offer on-the-spot interviews
Explanation: The first student explicitly states: “I’m graduating in May, so I really need to start making connections with employers.” This directly explains her motivation. Option A is incorrect because she’s graduating (looking for post-graduation employment), not seeking an internship. Option B has no support in the conversation. Option D mentions something she heard, but it’s not her primary reason for attending – it’s additional information she shares to encourage her friend.
Answer: C (She is graduating soon and needs employment connections)
Question 2: What does the first student suggest about attending the career fair early?
A. The best companies arrive first
B. On-the-spot interviews are only in the morning
C. It becomes very busy later
D. Registration closes by eleven o’clock
Explanation: The student says “I’d get there early. It gets crowded by eleven.” The word “crowded” directly indicates that many people will be there, making it busy. Options A and B are not mentioned or implied. Option D confuses “crowded by eleven” with registration closing, which isn’t stated. Understanding the inference that arriving early helps avoid crowds is key to answering correctly.
Answer: C (It becomes very busy later)
Listen to an Announcement
You listen to a short academic-related announcement (40-85 words) that might occur in a classroom, at a school event, or as a broadcast message. You then answer questions about it.
What It Measures:
- Identifying main ideas and basic context of short messages
- Understanding important details
- Comprehending varied grammatical structures in spoken announcements
- Understanding formal and informal vocabulary
- Inferring meaning from implicit information
- Predicting future actions based on announcements
- Recognizing the purpose of the message
Announcement Types:
- Schedules and timetables
- Directions and locations
- Rules and regulations
- Student achievements and recognitions
- Event information
Sample Announcement 1
Narrator: Listen to an announcement in a classroom.
Man: Good afternoon, everyone. I am excited to inform you that Dr. Cynthia Palmer, a renowned expert in environmental science, will be giving a guest lecture next Monday at 2 P.M. in Waldman Auditorium. Dr. Palmer will discuss the latest advancements in sustainable energy solutions and their impact on global climate change. Due to her popularity and the high interest in her work, I highly recommend arriving early to secure a seat.
Question: What is the announcement about?
A. A guest lecture
B. A different location for a class
C. Requirements for a class
D. A new university science course
Explanation: The announcement explicitly states that “Dr. Cynthia Palmer…will be giving a guest lecture.” The entire announcement provides details about this special lecture event (who, when, where, and what topic). Option B is incorrect because Waldman Auditorium is the location of the special lecture, not a new location for regular classes. Option C is wrong as no course requirements are mentioned. Option D is incorrect because this is a single guest lecture, not information about a new course being offered. The key is identifying the main purpose of the announcement from its opening statement.
Answer: A (A guest lecture)
Sample Announcement 2
Narrator: Listen to an announcement at a campus event.
Woman: May I have everyone’s attention, please? We’ll be starting the awards ceremony in about ten minutes. I’d like to remind all award recipients to please make your way to the front row – we’ve reserved those seats for you. Also, we ask that everyone please silence their cell phones during the presentations. Photography is permitted, but please refrain from using flash as it can be distracting to our speakers. Thank you for your cooperation!
Question 1: What does the speaker ask everyone to do?
A. Move to the front row
B. Turn off their phones
C. Stop taking photographs
D. Wait ten minutes before leaving
Explanation: The speaker says “we ask that everyone please silence their cell phones during the presentations.” This is a request directed at all attendees. Option A is incorrect because only award recipients (not everyone) are asked to move to the front row. Option C is wrong because photography is actually permitted, just without flash. Option D misinterprets the statement that the ceremony will start in ten minutes. The word “everyone” in the question is key to distinguishing between instructions for all attendees versus specific groups.
Answer: B (Turn off their phones)
Question 2: What can be inferred about flash photography during the event?
A. It is completely prohibited
B. It may disturb the presenters
C. It is required for official photos
D. It will be used only for award recipients
Explanation: The speaker explains that flash should not be used because “it can be distracting to our speakers.” The word “distracting” indicates disturbance or interference. Option A is incorrect because photography itself is allowed – only flash is restricted. Options C and D are not supported by the announcement. This requires understanding the inference: the reason given for the restriction (distraction) implies potential disturbance.
Answer: B (It may disturb the presenters)
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Sample Announcement 3
Narrator: Listen to an announcement on campus radio.
Man: This is a reminder for all students living in campus housing. The annual fire safety inspection will take place this Thursday, October 15th, between 9 AM and 5 PM. Inspectors will need to access all dorm rooms, so please make sure your room is accessible during this time. You don’t need to be present, but any prohibited items like candles, hot plates, or space heaters must be removed before the inspection. Rooms found with violations will face a fine of fifty dollars and possible disciplinary action. If you have questions, contact the Housing Office at extension 4-2-3-5. Thank you.
Question 1: What is the main purpose of this announcement?
A. To inform students about new housing rules
B. To notify students about a safety inspection
C. To advertise fire safety equipment
D. To explain how to contact the Housing Office
Explanation: The announcement’s primary purpose is stated immediately: “The annual fire safety inspection will take place this Thursday.” Everything else provides supporting details about the inspection. Option A is incorrect because the rules mentioned aren’t new; they’re existing regulations being enforced during inspection. Option C is wrong as no equipment is being advertised. Option D is too minor; contact information is provided but isn’t the main purpose. Identifying the central message versus supporting details is crucial.
Answer: B (To notify students about a safety inspection)
Question 2: What must students do before the inspection?
A. Be present in their rooms
B. Contact the Housing Office
C. Remove certain prohibited items
D. Pay a fifty-dollar fee
Explanation: The announcement explicitly states “any prohibited items like candles, hot plates, or space heaters must be removed before the inspection.” This is a clear requirement. Option A is contradicted by “You don’t need to be present.” Option B is only if students have questions, not a requirement for all. Option D (the fine) is a consequence for violations, not something students must do beforehand. Understanding the difference between requirements, options, and consequences is essential.
Answer: C (Remove certain prohibited items)
Listen to an Academic Talk
You listen to a short academic talk or lecture (100-250 words) and answer 4 questions about it. Topics span various academic fields but don’t require background knowledge.
What It Measures:
- Understanding main and supporting ideas
- Comprehending a range of grammatical structures in academic discourse
- Making inferences from spoken information
- Recognizing organizational features of talks
- Understanding uncommon, colloquial, or idiomatic vocabulary in context
- Following complex academic arguments
Subject Areas:
- History
- Art and music
- Life science
- Physical science
- Business and economics
- Social science
Sample Academic Talk 1
Report a question
Narrator: Listen to part of a talk in a biology class.
Male Professor: Today I want to talk about an interesting survival strategy used by certain animals called aposematism. Aposematism is when an animal advertises its toxicity or danger through bright, conspicuous coloring. Think about poison dart frogs with their brilliant blue, yellow, or red skin. These colors essentially say “Don’t eat me – I’m poisonous!”
Now, you might wonder why this works. Wouldn’t bright colors make these animals more visible to predators? That’s actually the point. Predators learn through experience. A bird that tries to eat a brightly colored toxic insect will get sick. That bird remembers the experience and associates those bright colors with danger. From then on, it avoids anything with similar coloring. The conspicuous colors make the animal more memorable, which is exactly what’s needed for this learned avoidance to work effectively.
Interestingly, some non-toxic species have evolved to mimic the appearance of toxic ones – a phenomenon called Batesian mimicry. A harmless butterfly species might evolve similar bright colors to a poisonous species. Predators that have learned to avoid the poisonous species will also avoid the mimic, even though it’s actually harmless. It’s like wearing a warning sign you haven’t earned, but it works because predators can’t tell the difference.
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Sample Academic Talk 2
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Narrator: Listen to a talk on a podcast about psychology.
Man: Did you see that new thriller movie that came out last week? I did and loved it. The action, the plot twists… I was totally captivated. Time just flew by. Not a single thought occurred to me that was unrelated to the movie. What I experienced is what psychologists call hard fascination. Hard fascination means intense focus and concentration. Whether it’s TV programs, video games… hard fascination is all too easy to come by in this modern world.
There’s another type of fascination—soft fascination. There’s still effortless attention, meaning that no special effort is required for you to stay focused, but there’s still room for other thoughts. When I take a walk in the park and look at the flowers and trees, for example, I might be thinking in the back of my mind about my dinner plans.
Now, one thing to know is hard fascination causes mental fatigue. The mind is so intensely focused that it gets tired fast. What follows mental fatigue? You might find yourself easily distracted, irritable, and stressed. Soft fascination, in contrast, engages a different part of the brain—the DMN, or Default Mode Network, which soothes the mind and helps combat mental fatigue. So next time you feel like your mind is on overload, turn off the TV, put down your phone. Take a walk, or simply sit and stare at the clouds.
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