Blog
TOEIC vs CEFR: what's the difference and which do you need?
TOEIC measures practical workplace English. CEFR is a scale, not a test. Here's when each matters and how they relate to each other.
How to prove your English level online without IELTS
Four ways to prove your English level online. IELTS alternatives that cost under €20 and take under 30 minutes. What employers actually accept.
Skills to test before a job application
Language, computer, and professional skills employers check before interviews. Which ones have certificates and how to get them in under an hour.
Business English for companies: what level do employees actually need?
B2 is not always enough. What Business English level means for different roles, how to test it, and when general proficiency falls short.
How to check your child's English level at home
Four ways to find out your child's English level without leaving home, including a free online test with instant CEFR result.
English test for kids online: what parents need to know
What to look for in an online English test for kids, how CEFR results are reported, and what a Young Learner certificate is worth.
Cambridge Young Learners vs online tests: which is right for your child?
Cambridge YLE costs €80-150 and requires a test centre. Free online alternatives give instant results. Here is when each makes sense.
Young Learner English certificate: what it is and who needs one
A Young Learner English certificate shows a child's CEFR level. Who issues them, what they're worth, and how to get one in 20 minutes.
What CEFR level should my child be at? An age guide
CEFR levels for children by age: what A1, A2, and B1 mean for a 7-year-old versus a 13-year-old, and how to find out where your child stands.
What are CEFR levels? A1 to C2 explained
CEFR divides language ability into six levels: A1 to C2. Learn what each level means, which level employers expect, and how to test yours for free.
B1 vs B2 English — what's the actual difference?
B1 is where you get by. B2 is where you can actually work. Here is what separates the two levels in practice, with real workplace examples.
What CEFR level do employers expect?
Most job postings say B2 or C1 but rarely explain what that means. Here is what employers actually expect by role type, and what to do if your level does not match.
C1 vs C2 — do you really need C2?
Most jobs that claim to require C2 would accept a strong C1. Here is what separates the two top CEFR levels and when C2 is genuinely necessary.
How to test your English level — 5 free methods
From quick placements to full CEFR assessments — five ways to find your English level for free, with an honest look at how accurate each one is.
Free English proficiency test online — complete guide
How free English tests work, what CEFR levels mean, how results compare to IELTS and TOEFL, and where to get a certificate employers can verify.
Business English vs General English — which test to take?
They measure different skills and suit different situations. Here is how they compare and which one to attach to a job application.
How accurate are online English tests?
Accurate for reading and grammar, not for speaking or writing. Here is what they measure well, where they fall short, and when the result is reliable enough to use.
English test for university admission — what you need
Most programmes require B2 or C1. Here is which tests universities accept, what scores you need, and how to prepare.
English test for work visa — what level do you need?
UK, Canada, Australia, EU — what English level each country requires for work visas and which tests immigration authorities accept.
How to add a language certificate to your CV
Where to place it, how to format the CEFR level, whether employers check it, and how to add it to LinkedIn.
How to add a language certificate to LinkedIn
Step-by-step: where to put it, what to write in each field, and how to add a verification link so recruiters can check it instantly.