Master the IELTS Pie Chart

Pie charts always illustrate proportions or percentages. You will usually be given two or three pie charts to compare across different years or different countries.

Key Strategies for Pie Charts

🥧 It’s All About Shares The entire pie always equals 100%. Your focus is on who has the largest and smallest slices.
🔍 Look for Changes If there are two pies from different years, note which slice grew the most and which shrank.
🔗 Linking Data Combine smaller slices into groups if there is too much data (e.g., “The remaining three sectors accounted for 15%”).

Essential Vocabulary for Proportions

Describing Fractions

  • 75%: exactly three quarters.
  • 49%: just under a half, nearly half.
  • 34%: approximately a third, just over a third.
  • 20%: exactly a fifth.

Describing Sizes

  • the largest proportion
  • a significant majority
  • a tiny fraction
  • a minor segment

The Standard 4-Paragraph Structure

1. Introduction

  • Paraphrase the prompt (e.g., “The pie charts display the breakdown of…”).

2. Overview

  • Identify the largest sector overall.
  • Identify any major shifts between the charts (if multiple).

3. Detail Paragraph 1

  • Focus on the largest and most significant slices.
  • Compare how they changed over time or between the charts.

4. Detail Paragraph 2

  • Focus on the smaller, less significant slices.
  • Group very small categories together.
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Pro Tip: Variety is Key Don’t just use percentages. If a slice is 25%, write “a quarter.” If a slice is 10%, write “one in ten.” Switching between numbers and words shows high lexical control.

Pie Chart: Practice Tests

Click on a test below to view the full prompt and sample answers.

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