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TELC B1 Time Management: How to Finish Every Section

The exact time allocation strategy for every part of the TELC B1 exam — how to avoid running out of time and what to do when you get stuck.

10 March 20254 min read

Running out of time is the most common reason people fail the TELC B1 exam. Not lack of German ability — poor time management. Here's the exact strategy to finish every section.


The TELC B1 Time Overview

SectionTotal timeQuestionsTime per question
Reading + Language Elements90 min~35~2.5 min
Listening~30 min21Fixed (audio-paced)
Writing30 min1 taskFull 30 min

The listening section is audio-paced — you can't control the time there. Reading and writing are where time management makes or breaks your score.


Reading Section — 90-Minute Breakdown

Most candidates spend too long on Teil 3 (the long article) and run out of time for Sprachbausteine. Work backwards from the end.

Recommended allocation:

PartTimeNotes
Lesen Teil 112 min5 short texts, ~2.5 min each
Lesen Teil 215 minHeading matching, scan paragraphs
Lesen Teil 320 minLong article, true/not mentioned/false
Sprachbausteine 115 minFirst gap-fill
Sprachbausteine 210 minSecond gap-fill
Review18 minCheck uncertain answers

Total: 90 minutes exactly.


The 3-Minute Rule

Never spend more than 3 minutes on a single question. If you're stuck:

  1. Mark the question with a small dot in the margin
  2. Move to the next question immediately
  3. Return during the review period at the end

A question you skip is not a question you've failed — it's a question on pause. A question you obsess over for 6 minutes while 5 other questions go unanswered is where the real damage happens.


Writing Section — 30 Minutes Is Less Than You Think

30 minutes for 150–200 words sounds generous. It isn't. Here's where the time actually goes:

TaskTime
Read the scenario and understand all 4 required points2 min
Plan your structure (brief outline, not full sentences)3 min
Write the letter/email18 min
Re-read and correct errors7 min

The critical step most candidates skip: the 3-minute plan. Candidates who write immediately often realise at minute 20 that they missed one of the 4 required points. By then there's no time to restructure properly. Three minutes of planning saves ten minutes of panic — and more importantly, it saves the 5 marks you'd lose from a missing point.


What to Do If You're Running Behind

In the reading section: if you reach the Sprachbausteine with less than 20 minutes left, answer all the gaps you're confident about first, then guess the rest. Any answer is better than blank — there's no penalty for incorrect answers.

In the writing section: if you have 5 minutes left and haven't addressed all 4 points, write brief sentences covering the missing points — even if they're grammatically simple. Covering all 4 points (Kommunikation) is worth 15 marks; leaving a point out entirely is the single biggest source of writing score loss.


Practice Makes Timing Automatic

The only way to internalise time management is to practise under real time pressure. In preparation mode without a timer, your brain never learns the rhythm. The ticking clock in the real exam creates a different cognitive environment entirely.

Take at least 3 full mock exams with all timers running before your real exam. Each one trains your internal clock — by the third mock, you'll instinctively know how far through a section you should be at any given moment. That instinct is genuinely valuable on exam day.

Start a timed TELC B1 mock exam →


Common Time Traps

Trap 1: Re-reading the same sentence multiple times If you've read something twice and still don't understand it, move on. Spending 5 minutes on one sentence is never worth it. A question you skip and guess costs you 1 mark. Five minutes you don't have costs you much more.

Trap 2: Checking answers you're already confident about During review time, focus only on the questions you marked. Don't re-read questions you answered confidently — research consistently shows re-reading tends to make people change correct answers to incorrect ones.

Trap 3: Perfectionism in writing A grammatically perfect letter that only addresses 3 of 4 required points scores worse than a slightly imperfect letter that addresses all 4. Every time. Kommunikation is the highest-value criterion — don't sacrifice it for polish.

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