TOEIC Score Goal Calculator

Estimate your TOEIC score gap, weeks remaining, and study intensity before test day.

FreeNo loginBrowser-basedReviewed 2026-05-27

Plan your TOEIC score goal

Estimate the score gap and weekly study intensity. This is planning guidance, not a score promise.

TOEIC score gap

100 points

You have a 100-point gap before Aug 4, 2026. A steady plan around 7.61 hours per week is a reasonable planning target.

Weeks remaining
9.9
Suggested study
7.61 hrs/week
Available study
8.00 hrs/week
Intensity level
steady

TOEIC improvement is not guaranteed. Actual results depend on your starting level, practice quality, test familiarity, consistency, sleep, and test-day conditions.

TOEIC goal planning formula

Score gap = target TOEIC score - current TOEIC score. Weeks remaining = days until test / 7.

The suggested study hours are a planning estimate based on the score gap and time left. Actual results depend on practice quality, level, test familiarity, and consistency.

When to use this tool

TOEIC preparation is easier to plan when you know the size of the score gap. This tool gives a rough study target, but it does not promise a score increase.

Realistic examples

Use these examples to check whether your own inputs are in the right format before relying on the result.

Example 1: steady improvement plan

  • Current score: 650
  • Target score: 750
  • Test in 10 weeks
  • Available study time: 8 hours per week

Score gap: 100. Suggested intensity: steady.

The weekly time is close to a reasonable study target if the student practices both listening and reading.

Example 2: large gap with little time

  • Current score: 500
  • Target score: 800
  • Test in 6 weeks
  • Available study time: 5 hours per week

Score gap: 300. Suggested intensity: very intense.

This goal may be too aggressive. The student should consider more preparation time or a staged target.

How to set a TOEIC score goal

Start with a recent practice test or official score if you have one. A goal based on old results can make the plan too easy or too hard.

Set one target for the next test and one longer-term target. A 50 to 100 point jump is easier to plan than trying to fix everything at once.

Listening vs reading preparation

TOEIC listening often improves with regular exposure, dictation, and timed practice. Reading usually needs vocabulary, grammar patterns, and speed under pressure.

If one section is much weaker, split your study time unevenly for a few weeks, then return to balanced practice before the test.

Important score disclaimer

No calculator can guarantee a TOEIC score increase. Practice quality, starting level, test familiarity, health, sleep, and consistency all affect the final score.

Use this calculator as a planning guide, then adjust after practice tests show how you are actually improving.