Choose a Arabic test type
Every test below adapts to your answers and covers the full CEFR scale. Pick a skill to focus on, or take the general placement test if you just want your overall level.
Choose your level
Already know roughly where you stand? Jump straight to a level-specific Arabic test.
Why test your Arabic?
Working in the Gulf region
Gulf employers increasingly value working Arabic even in English-speaking offices, and a certificate gives HR teams a fast reference point when Arabic isn't the primary job requirement but is a clear advantage.
Studying Modern Standard Arabic
Arabic study often splits between Modern Standard Arabic and spoken dialects, and a level check on MSA fundamentals helps you see how your formal study is progressing.
Cultural and religious study
Many learners study Arabic for its role in classical texts and regional culture, and an honest level check helps set realistic goals for the years-long path most learners expect.
How the test works
- 1. Answer 25 adaptive questions that adjust to your level as you go, no registration required.
- 2. Get your CEFR level instantly at the end, from A1 to C2, with a detailed score breakdown.
- 3. Optionally buy the official PDF certificate for €8 (incl. EU VAT), delivered by email within 30 seconds.
No registration required to take the test
Common questions about the Arabic test
The test adapts question difficulty to your answers, so it converges on your real CEFR level within 25 questions rather than giving a rough guess. It won't replace an official exam for visa or university purposes, but it gives an accurate read on where you currently stand in Arabic.
No. You can start the test immediately without creating an account. Registration is only needed if you want to save your result history or purchase a certificate afterward.
The test itself is free. If you want an official PDF certificate with a verification QR code, it costs €8 (incl. EU VAT) and arrives by email within 30 seconds of payment.
Most people finish in about 25 minutes. The test has 25 adaptive questions covering grammar, vocabulary, and reading comprehension, and it ends as soon as it has pinpointed your level.
Examinizer's Arabic test focuses on Modern Standard Arabic (MSA), the standardized form taught in schools and used in media, formal writing, and most official contexts. It does not assess spoken regional dialects like Egyptian, Gulf, or Levantine Arabic, which differ enough from MSA that a separate assessment would be needed.