What the TEF really wants to check

The examiner wants to see if you can:

  • communicate a clear message
  • follow specific instructions
  • use the correct register (formal / semi-formal)
  • organize your ideas logically
  • use functional grammar (not perfect, but effective)
  • convince, request, explain, propose, complain…

This is a communication skill, not a literary exercise.


Structure of the test

There are 2 compulsory tasks.

Task A — Functional message (≈ 60–80 words)

You must write a practical message:

  • email
  • note
  • announcement
  • message to a service
  • request for information
  • complaint
  • reservation
  • invitation

Goal: to transmit information clearly


Task B — Opinion text (≈ 120–150 words)

You must respond to a situation:

  • article
  • forum message
  • social debate
  • neighborhood problem
  • public situation

Goal: to give your opinion + justify it + propose solutions


The winning method (very important)

Many candidates fail because they write “like in school.”

The TEF requires a method.


Step 1 — Read the instructions like a detective

You must identify:

  • Who is writing?
  • To whom?
  • Why?
  • What you must absolutely include

Every word in the instructions is a mandatory requirement.


Step 2 — Make a mini plan (30 seconds)

Task A

Always follow this model:

  1. Greeting
  2. Why you are writing
  3. Important information
  4. Request / expected action
  5. Polite closing

Task B

Always follow this model:

  1. Introduction (react to the situation)
  2. Clear opinion
  3. Argument 1 + example
  4. Argument 2 + example
  5. Proposal / solution
  6. Conclusion

Step 3 — Use the TEF “magic phrases”

Examiners love to see:

  • Je me permets de vous écrire… (I am writing to you…)
  • Suite à votre message… (Following your message…)
  • Je souhaite obtenir des informations… (I would like to obtain information…)
  • En ce qui concerne… (Regarding…)
  • À mon avis… (In my opinion…)
  • Il est important de… (It is important to…)
  • Il serait préférable de… (It would be preferable to…)
  • Pour conclure… (To conclude…)

These expressions show a B2/C1 level, even with simple grammar.


Step 4 — Respect the word count

  • Too few = penalty
  • Too many = penalty
  • Aim to stay within the required range

What causes loss of marks

  • Going off topic
  • Forgetting part of the instructions
  • No structure
  • No connectors
  • Incorrect register (too informal)
  • No conclusion in Task B

What earns high marks

  • Very well-organized text
  • Logical connectors
  • Formal expressions
  • Clear ideas
  • Full respect of the situation

Golden rule

Do not write what you think. Write what the instructions require.