IELTS Paper-Based Exam Discontinued: What Indian Students Need to Know in 2026
The IELTS paper-based test is ending globally by mid-2026, marking a major shift to computer-delivered formats. Millions of applicants in India are affected by this change, where paper tests are still popular but offer faster results and more flexibility. In this post, we’ll cover the timeline, reasons, differences, and preparation tips to help you adapt seamlessly.

Official Announcement and Timeline
IELTS Partners (British Council, IDP, and Cambridge) announced that paper-delivered tests will stop from mid-2026, with exact dates varying by market. In Canada, the last paper test is June 27, 2026, and India is expected to follow a similar timeline, possibly extending to September due to high demand.
Up until June 27, 2026, paper tests will be held in cities like Gurugram, Indore, and Kollam on June 6, 13, 20, and 27. Reservations for seats should be made three to four weeks in advance through IDP or British Council websites. Post-mid-2026, all Listening, Reading, and Writing will be on computer, while Speaking stays face-to-face.
This phased rollout started in regions like Vietnam (March 2025), building to a worldwide computer-only era. The change has no effect on the current paper’s results, which remain valid for two years.
Why? Key Reasons Behind Discontinuation
According to IELTS research, the move is based on test-takers’ increased satisfaction with computer tests. Computer formats deliver results in 1-5 days versus 13 for paper, enabling quicker visa or university applications.
With more test dates (up to seven days per week), efficiency rises while security rises dramatically (no physical papers to leak). For academic tests, computer-exclusive features like One Skill Retake (retake one section) are available. Amid rising demand in India (over 1 million tests yearly), this scales capacity better.
Environmentally, it cuts paper use, aligning with digital trends. Security for the test and speedier processing outweigh nostalgia for paper.
Paper vs Computer
The same skills are tested in both formats, with the same content, difficulty, and 0 to 9 band scoring. How do they compare?
| Aspect | Paper-Based IELTS | Computer-Based IELTS |
|---|---|---|
| Results Time | 13 days | 1-5 days ieltsidpindia+1 |
| Test Dates | Fixed (48 dates/year, Thu/Sat) | More flexible, 3x/day, 7 days/week |
| Writing | Handwritten, no spell-check | Typed, word count visible, editable |
| Reading | Manual transfer, no copy-paste | Side-by-side view, copy-paste answers |
| Listening | Handwrite while listening | Type on screen, replay audio |
| Navigation | Flip pages manually | Highlight, underline, easy review |
| Availability | Limited seats, ending mid-2026 | More centers, post-2026 standard |
Computer suits fast typists; paper favors handwriting comfort. Scores are equivalent, accepted everywhere.
New “Writing on Paper” Option for Transition
To ease the switch, IELTS introduces “Writing on Paper” in select markets like India and China. You take the computer tests for Listening and Reading, but you handwrite Task 1/2 on paper—the scores match the full computer tests. For those who prefer to write with a pen, this hybrid makes the experience more individualized. Availability: After the announcement, check IDP/British Council for India confirmation. ideal bridge until digitalization is complete by late 2026.
Preparation Tips for Computer-Based IELTS
Acquaint yourself with the user interface by taking official, free mock tests. Increase your typing speed by aiming for 30-40 WPM and typing entire essays with spell-check enabled. Listening/Reading: Practice clicking while audio plays; use highlighting tools.
Writing: Time yourself typing Task 1 (20 min) and Task 2 (40 min); focus on structure.
Speaking: Record responses; it’s unchanged (face-to-face).
Take full online practice tests with timers; manage stress by deep breathing and section timing. Resources include British Council apps and the IDP computer familiarization test. Daily 30-minute sessions are helpful if you are weak at typing. For India, centers in Delhi, Mumbai, etc., offer computer practice slots—book early.
For more details read this article.Book mark our website for more updates.
Join us on Facebook
Follow us on Instagram
Subscribe on Youtube
We are on Pinterest Now.



