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Arabic B2

Arabic B2 Test — Upper-Intermediate Level

25 questions · 25 min · CEFR B2 · Upper-Intermediate

Free to take. Test your Arabic at B2 level: grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension. Get your official certificate for just €8 (incl. EU VAT).
25
Questions
25 min
Duration
B2
Upper-Intermediate
€8
€8 (incl. EU VAT)

What You Get

Take the Arabic B2 Test — Free →

No registration required to take the test

What B2 Means for Arabic

Arabic B2 is the upper-intermediate level of the CEFR framework, where you can participate in detailed discussions on topics within your professional field, follow extended Arabic speech on abstract subjects, and write clear texts explaining viewpoints on current issues. At this level, you handle Modern Standard Arabic with enough fluency to have spontaneous conversations with native speakers without strain on either side. You understand the main ideas in complex texts on both concrete and abstract topics, including technical discussions in your area of specialization.

B2 marks a significant shift in your relationship with Arabic. You move beyond survival communication and structured learning scenarios into real professional and academic territory. A B2 speaker can watch Arabic news broadcasts and understand most content, read newspaper articles on contemporary problems where writers adopt particular attitudes, and produce detailed text on a wide range of subjects. You can defend a viewpoint on a topical issue, giving the advantages and disadvantages of various options in Arabic with reasonable precision.

What You Can Do at B2

Who Needs Arabic B2

International development professionals working with Arabic-speaking populations need B2 for positions with NGOs like Mercy Corps, the International Rescue Committee, or CARE International in field offices across the Middle East and North Africa. Political analysts and foreign service officers often require B2 Arabic for assignments in embassies or consulates in countries like Jordan, Egypt, or Morocco. Translation agencies hiring for Arabic to English work typically set B2 as their minimum threshold for freelance positions.

Graduate programs in Middle Eastern Studies at universities such as Georgetown, SOAS, or the American University in Cairo often require B2 Arabic for admission or as an exit requirement. The European Union lists B2 as the minimum language requirement for certain positions involving Arabic-speaking regions. Journalists covering the MENA region for international news organizations typically need B2 to conduct interviews and understand local media sources without constant translation support.

Examinizer vs ALPT/CIMA

The Arabic Language Proficiency Test (ALPT) and the Certificate in Modern Arabic (CIMA) are internationally recognized exams that universities and employers accept as official proof of Arabic proficiency. These tests require registration fees between $150 and $300, scheduled testing dates at approved centers, and weeks of waiting for results. Examinizer provides an immediate online alternative that costs less and delivers instant results with a downloadable certificate.

Our B2 certificate is not officially accredited and will not satisfy university admissions requirements or government visa applications that specifically request ALPT or CIMA scores. However, employers reviewing CVs for positions requiring Arabic skills, companies assessing internal language abilities, and individuals tracking their own progress find Examinizer certificates useful for demonstrating current proficiency levels. Many users take our test as preparation before investing in official examination fees.

How the Examinizer Test Works

You answer 25 questions that adapt to your responses, calibrated across the full CEFR range so the test can pinpoint B2 accurately whether you land above or below it. There is no registration required to start. You get your level immediately after the last question, and if you want a record of it, the PDF certificate with a verification QR code arrives by email within 30 seconds of payment, for €8 (incl. EU VAT).

Common Questions About the Arabic B2 Test

Reaching B2 in Arabic typically requires 600 to 750 classroom hours for English speakers, according to Foreign Service Institute estimates. Arabic is classified as a Category IV language, meaning it takes considerably longer than Romance languages. If you study 10 hours per week, expect three to four years to reach B2. Intensive programs can compress this timeline. Students with prior knowledge of Arabic script or related Semitic languages often progress faster. Your timeline also depends on how much you practice outside formal study, particularly listening to Arabic media and conversing with native speakers.

This B2 test focuses on Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), the formal variety used in news broadcasts, literature, and formal writing across the Arab world. MSA is what most learners study in academic settings and what CEFR proficiency levels traditionally reference. The test does not assess specific dialects like Egyptian, Levantine, or Gulf Arabic. If you primarily speak a dialect but have limited MSA exposure, you may find certain sections challenging, as the vocabulary and some grammatical structures differ. Most jobs and academic programs requiring Arabic B2 certification expect MSA proficiency.

At B2, you should handle Arabic newspaper opinion pieces, magazine articles on social issues, business correspondence, and straightforward technical documents in your field. The test includes passages where authors express clear viewpoints on topics like environmental policy, technological change, or cultural debates. You will encounter some specialized vocabulary but not highly technical jargon outside context. Texts run between 300 and 500 words and assume you can understand implicit meaning, not just literal content. Literary Arabic with classical constructions or highly specialized academic writing typically sits above B2 level.

You can include an Examinizer B2 certificate on your CV or job applications as evidence of your proficiency level, and many employers will accept it as a credible indication of your abilities. However, some organizations, particularly government ministries, large multinational corporations, or competitive positions, may require scores from officially accredited tests like ALPT or CIMA. Smaller companies, startups, and positions where Arabic is helpful but not the primary job function usually accept alternative certifications. The best approach is to list your Examinizer result on your CV and be prepared to demonstrate your Arabic skills in interviews if requested.

B2 speakers handle most professional and social situations competently but still make noticeable errors and occasionally search for words. C1 speakers produce fluent, spontaneous Arabic with rare hesitation and understand virtually everything they hear or read, including implicit meanings and cultural nuances. At B2, you can discuss your work and interests in detail. At C1, you can present complex subjects to Arabic-speaking audiences, write professional reports with sophisticated structure, and understand regional dialects with some exposure. The jump from B2 to C1 typically requires another 200 to 300 study hours plus substantial immersion or professional use of Arabic in demanding contexts.