Free IELTS Reading Test 10
Three Academic passages: Geography History, Nutrition, Economics Psychology.
- ModuleReading
- Set#10
- Passages3
- Words2,980
- Passage 1Geography History
- Passage 2Nutrition
- Passage 3Economics Psychology
Three passages
This set's question mix — Matching Information, True / False / Not Given, Note Completion — covers most of the patterns examiners cycle through. If you've drilled the types in isolation, this is the integration test.
- Passage 1 · Geography History
The Power of Maps: How Cartography Shaped the World
8 paragraphs · 970 words
Matching Information · True / False / Not Given
- Passage 2 · Nutrition
Nutrition Science: Rethinking What We Eat
8 paragraphs · 990 words
Note Completion · Yes / No / Not Given
- Passage 3 · Economics Psychology
The Paradox of Choice: Why More Is Less
8 paragraphs · 1,020 words
Matching Headings · Multiple Choice (single answer) · Summary Completion
Question types you'll see
- Matching Information
- True / False / Not Given
- Note Completion
- Yes / No / Not Given
- Matching Headings
- Multiple Choice (single answer)
- Summary Completion
How the practice works
Strict mode plays through with no replay or pause — the test-day pressure cooker. Take it cold to see where you actually stand.
Continue exploring
Where to go from here
More practice
All Reading tests
Browse the full library of free IELTS Readingtests. Pick the next one when you're ready.
Open library →Switch module
Listening Test 10
Same set number in the Listening library — different skill, similar pacing.
Try Listening Test 10 →Methodology
How the Reading analysis works
How we score the test, what each band means, and how to read your analysis.
Read the breakdown →
About IELTS Reading
Test 10.
Question not listed here?
Drop us a message. We're happy to help.
60 minutes for three Academic passages with 40 questions in total, the same as test day. Strict mode locks the timer; Breath mode lets you pause and revisit the passage as you learn.
Three Academic passages drawn from a mix of disciplines — sciences, humanities, and applied fields — written for a general reader. You don't need subject-specific knowledge; the answers always live in the text.
No. The page above lists passage topics, word counts, and question types so you can pick a set that fits where you are. The passages, questions, and answer key only appear once you start a saved practice session.