Why This TOEFL Speaking Practice Is Different
Most TOEFL Speaking pages only explain the task types. This page is built around practice: you can warm up with listen-and-repeat drills, answer interview-style prompts, review your transcript, and use AI feedback to see what to fix before your next attempt.
The topic bank includes 40 speaking topic sets covering familiar academic and personal themes. That gives learners enough variety to stop memorising one answer and start building flexible response habits for test day.
How to Use the 40 TOEFL Speaking Topics
Pick one topic, record a timed answer, then check whether your response has a clear first sentence, a reason, an example, and a natural closing point. If the answer feels too short, add one specific detail. If it feels messy, simplify the structure before trying harder vocabulary.
For learners in Vietnam, China, Korea, and Japan, the biggest improvement usually comes from reducing hesitation and making the first sentence clearer. The AI feedback is designed to make those weak points visible quickly.
TOEFL Speaking Score Skills to Build
High-scoring TOEFL Speaking answers are easy to follow. They combine clear organisation, accurate grammar, natural pacing, and enough development to answer the prompt fully. Practise the same topic twice: first for ideas, then again for fluency and pronunciation.
Use this page with the TOEFL Speaking templates page when you need structure, and the full TOEFL Speaking practice page when you want exam-style timed tasks.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many TOEFL Speaking topics can I practise here?
English AIdol includes 40 TOEFL interview-style topic sets, plus AI speaking practice for timed responses and feedback.
What makes a TOEFL Speaking answer score higher?
A stronger answer has a clear opening, organised reasons, specific examples, controlled grammar, and fluent delivery without long pauses.
Can AI feedback help with TOEFL Speaking?
Yes. AI feedback can review transcript clarity, fluency, pronunciation patterns, grammar, vocabulary, and whether your answer develops the topic enough.