Exam vs. test: what's the difference
"Test" and "exam" often get used interchangeably, but an exam usually implies a more formal, higher-stakes assessment, the kind of thing you'd study for and take seriously. Examinizer's French exam follows that spirit: 25 adaptive questions across grammar, vocabulary, and reading, scored against the same CEFR scale used internationally.
| Exam | Cost | Time | Booking |
|---|---|---|---|
| Examinizer | Free, €8 for certificate | 15-25 min | None, instant |
| IELTS / TOEFL / Goethe | $150-350 | 2-4 hours | Weeks in advance |
When is an online exam enough, and when do you need the official version? For CVs, personal tracking, or an employer that just wants a quick level check, the online exam works well. For visas, university admissions, or immigration points systems, you'll need the accredited exam a government or institution specifically names.
How it works
- 1. Start the free test, no registration required.
- 2. 25 AI-adaptive questions. Difficulty adjusts in real time.
- 3. Instant CEFR result. Certificate from €8.
No registration required to take the test
Other French tests
French by CEFR level
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Common questions
No. Examinizer is not an accredited exam board, so this exam works for employers, CVs, and personal tracking, but not for visa applications, immigration points, or university admissions that require a named accredited exam like IELTS or Goethe.
Most people finish in 15 to 25 minutes, compared to 2 to 4 hours for a traditional accredited exam like IELTS or TOEFL.
The test itself is free. A downloadable PDF certificate with a verification QR code is available afterward for €8 (incl. EU VAT).
Most people finish in 15 to 25 minutes. The AI-adaptive format means the test ends as soon as it has an accurate read on your level.