TOEIC Speaking Writing Score Calculator - Speaking and Writing scaled scores to total and level

Use this TOEIC speaking writing score calculator to add your Speaking and Writing section scores, see each section's share of 200, and read the matching proficiency level on your certificate.

Updated: July 12, 2026 • Free Tool

TOEIC Speaking Writing Score Calculator

Your Speaking section scaled score from the certificate, from 0 to 200.

Your Writing section scaled score from the certificate, from 0 to 200.

Results

Total Score
0
Speaking % of Max 0%
Writing % of Max 0%
Overall % of Max 0%
Speaking Level 0
Writing Level 0
Overall Level 0

What Is TOEIC Speaking Writing Score Calculator?

The TOEIC speaking writing score calculator turns the two section numbers on your ETS score report into one clear total and a proficiency level. Most test takers receive a Speaking scaled score and a Writing scaled score that each run from 0 to 200, yet the number that matters most to an employer or university is the combined total out of 400. This tool does that addition for you and shows how much of each section's maximum you reached.

  • Use case: Reading your score report: paste the two section scores to confirm the printed total and each section's strength.
  • Use case: Comparing job requirements: see whether your combined total meets a posted TOEIC Speaking and Writing cutoff before you apply.
  • Use case: Tracking study progress: re-enter new section scores after each practice test to watch the total and level move.
  • Use case: Explaining results to others: share a total out of 400 and a level that a recruiter or admissions officer already recognizes from the TOEIC program.

The TOEIC Speaking and Writing test measures productive English through a separate computer-delivered paper, and ETS reports the results on two independent 0 to 200 scales. Because the scale is not a simple percentage of questions correct, many people are unsure how their two numbers relate to the headline total.

This calculator keeps the math transparent: it adds the sections, expresses each as a share of 200, and maps the sum to the proficiency level printed alongside your score. That makes it easy to explain your result in a cover letter or interview without guessing at the conversion.

A practical example helps: a candidate with 150 on Speaking and 150 on Writing reaches 300, which is the upper-intermediate band. Seeing the running total as you type is faster than reaching for a calculator and removes the risk of a small arithmetic slip on application day.

Once you have the total, the level label gives you a shared vocabulary with the people reviewing your application. Upper-intermediate, advanced, and proficient each carry a clear expectation, so you can describe your English ability in the same terms an employer already uses.

Like the TOEIC Listening and Reading score calculator, this tool turns separate section results into one reported total that colleges and employers can compare at a glance.

How TOEIC Speaking Writing Score Calculator Works

The calculator uses the official scoring structure published by ETS, where each section contributes an equal 200 points to a 400 maximum. You enter the two scaled scores exactly as they appear on the certificate, and the tool derives the total, the section percentages, and the proficiency level.

Total = Speaking Scaled (0-200) + Writing Scaled (0-200) | Section % = Section / 200 * 100 | Overall % = Total / 400 * 100
  • Speaking Scaled: The Speaking section score printed on the certificate, from 0 to 200.
  • Writing Scaled: The Writing section score printed on the certificate, from 0 to 200.

ETS states the Speaking and Writing sections each report 0 to 200 scaled points and combine into a total of 0 to 400. The TOEIC speaking writing score calculator relies on that official structure, so the addition performed here mirrors the score report exactly rather than estimating from raw answers.

Each section is then mapped to its own proficiency level using the ETS Speaking and Writing score guide bands, and the combined total is mapped to an overall band so you can read your standing at a glance.

Source: ETS publishes the TOEIC Speaking and Writing scoring structure at ets.org/toeic/test-takers/speaking-writing/about.html; each section reports a 0 to 200 scaled score that combines into a 0 to 400 total (see also the TOEIC summary on Wikipedia).

Example: 150 Speaking and 150 Writing

Total = 300 (Upper-Intermediate), with balanced 75% section scores and an Upper-Intermediate Writing level.

Key Concepts Explained

A few terms recur on every TOEIC Speaking and Writing score report. Understanding them helps you read the calculator output and explain it to others. If you are weighing English exams, the IELTS score calculator shows how a nine-band scale differs from the TOEIC 0 to 200 section scores.

Scaled score

The 0 to 200 number ETS prints for each section after equating correct answers across test forms, so different exam versions stay comparable.

Combined total

The sum of the two 0 to 200 section scores, reported on the 0 to 400 scale that employers and universities usually quote for the Speaking and Writing paper.

Proficiency level

The Novice through Proficient band that ETS assigns to each section and to the combined total using the official Speaking and Writing score guide.

Score guide bands

The fixed scaled-score ranges for each level, which differ slightly between the Speaking section and the Writing section on the TOEIC score report.

Knowing the band edges matters because the same total can carry a different label depending on whether it came mostly from Speaking or from Writing. The Speaking and Writing sections use slightly different cut points, so a score that lands in Upper-Intermediate on one section can fall into Basic or Intermediate on the other, and the combined total is judged by its own band rather than by either section.

When you read your certificate, the level printed next to each section reflects its own band set, while the combined total receives a third, separate band. The calculator reproduces all three so the output matches what ETS prints, not an approximation.

How to Use This Calculator

Follow these steps to turn your certificate into a finished total and proficiency level in under a minute. To compare two ETS English exams, the TOEFL score converter shows how the iBT speaking and writing scales relate to a single reported total.

  1. 1 Locate your section scores: Find the Speaking and Writing scaled scores on your official TOEIC Speaking and Writing score report.
  2. 2 Enter the Speaking score: Type the Speaking number (0 to 200) into the first field.
  3. 3 Enter the Writing score: Type the Writing number (0 to 200) into the second field.
  4. 4 Read the results: Note the total out of 400, the section percentages, and the proficiency levels shown below the inputs.
  5. 5 Compare to your target: Check the overall level against the cutoff a school or employer lists for the Speaking and Writing paper.

Benefits of Using This Calculator

A small tool removes the guesswork from a score report that uses an unfamiliar scale.

  • Benefit: Immediate total confirmation: verify the printed total without doing the addition by hand.
  • Benefit: Clear level mapping: see the proficiency band that accompanies your total on the official report.
  • Benefit: Section balance view: the percentage breakdown shows whether Speaking or Writing is your stronger skill.
  • Benefit: Application-ready numbers: present a total out of 400 and a level that employers and universities recognize.

Because the calculator works only from the scaled scores, it stays consistent with every version of the exam. You get a defensible number you can quote in applications without reconstructing the equating process yourself.

Re-running it after each practice test also gives you a quick sense of momentum: a 40-point move in the total is meaningful, while a single section shifting by ten points shows where to focus your next study session.

Keeping the two section percentages side by side also makes a weak spot obvious: if your Speaking sits at 40 percent while Writing is near 80 percent, the report points clearly to the part of the exam worth more practice before a retake. For a writing-only view, the TOEFL iBT Writing score calculator grades the essay rubric on the same style of scale used across ETS writing tasks.

Factors That Affect Your Results

The total and proficiency band depend on a short list of things worth keeping in mind when you interpret the output.

Section balance

Because each section contributes up to 200, a weak Speaking score can pull the total down even if Writing is near perfect.

Test form equating

Scaled scores already correct for form difficulty, so two different exam dates remain comparable in the total.

Employer cutoff

A posted requirement such as 300 often maps to upper-intermediate, but some roles ask for a specific section minimum rather than just the total.

  • This calculator uses scaled scores, not raw correct counts, so it cannot estimate a score you have not yet received from ETS.
  • Proficiency bands shown follow the ETS Speaking and Writing score guide; your certificate remains the authoritative document for formal use, and accepted levels still vary by institution.

ETS maps TOEIC Speaking and Writing results to proficiency levels from Novice to Proficient, which is why the band you see in this TOEIC speaking writing score calculator matches the one on a valid report. Accepted levels still vary by employer, so always check the specific cutoff for the role you want.

The two section percentages also tell a story the single total hides. A 300 total could come from balanced 150s or from a 200 on one section paired with a 100 on the other, and the second case signals a clear skill gap a hiring manager may notice during a speaking task. Because accepted levels vary by employer, the Duolingo English Test score converter shows how another adaptive English exam reports comparable proficiency bands.

Source: the TOEIC program aligns its scores with the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages published by the Council of Europe (CEFR).

TOEIC speaking writing score calculator combining section scores into a total and proficiency level
TOEIC speaking writing score calculator combining section scores into a total and proficiency level

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How is the TOEIC Speaking and Writing score calculated?

A: Your score report shows a Speaking scaled score and a Writing scaled score, each from 0 to 200. The total score is simply the two added together, giving a range of 0 to 400. This calculator performs that addition and also shows each section as a percentage of its 200 maximum.

Q: What is the score range for TOEIC Speaking and Writing?

A: Each section runs from 0 to 200, and the combined total runs from 0 to 400. A perfect paper is 200 on Speaking and 200 on Writing, which produces a 400 total and the Proficient band.

Q: What proficiency levels are reported on the TOEIC Speaking and Writing test?

A: ETS groups each section and the combined total into seven proficiency bands: Novice, Elementary, Basic, Intermediate, Upper-Intermediate, Advanced, and Proficient. The Speaking and Writing sections share the same seven-band framework, but their cut points differ slightly, so the combined total receives its own overall band rather than averaging the two.

Q: How are the Speaking and Writing sections weighted into the total?

A: The two sections are weighted equally. Each contributes up to 200 points, so the combined total is their straight sum out of 400. No section counts for more than the other in the official total.

Q: Is the TOEIC Speaking and Writing score the same scale as Listening and Reading?

A: No. The Listening and Reading paper reports two 5 to 495 sections and a 10 to 990 total, while Speaking and Writing reports two 0 to 200 sections and a 0 to 400 total. The two papers use different scales and must not be added together.

Q: What is a strong TOEIC Speaking and Writing score for a job application?

A: Many employers that ask for the Speaking and Writing paper look for a total around 300 or higher, which sits in the upper-intermediate band. Some roles also set a minimum on one section, so check the exact cutoff before you apply.