Cambridge English (KET / PET / FCE / CAE / CPE) Practice & Vocabulary
Cambridge English (KET / PET / FCE / CAE / CPE) — free practice with graded vocabulary, dictation, intensive listening, cloze and SRS spaced repetition. Lifetime certificate covering A2 (KET) to C2 (CPE), widely accepted across Europe and Latin America. One investment, no expiry.
Three difficulty levels (L1 Foundation A1-A2, L2 Intermediate B1-B2, L3 Advanced C1-C2) across six practice modes: vocabulary, dictation, intensive listening, cloze, pronunciation and writing.
Lifetime certificate covering A2 (KET) to C2 (CPE), widely accepted across Europe and Latin America. One investment, no expiry.
Cambridge English: lifetime certificates with European weight
Cambridge English Qualifications (KET / A2 Key, PET / B1 Preliminary, FCE / B2 First, CAE / C1 Advanced, CPE / C2 Proficiency) issue **certificates that never expire** — a unique feature in the major English-test landscape. Score validity is for life. That makes Cambridge particularly popular in European secondary education, Latin American teacher certification, and any context where the candidate wants a credential they will not need to re-take in five years.
The Cambridge tests are also the most pedagogically structured: each level has well-defined criteria for grammar, vocabulary, discourse and pragmatic competence, and the speaking section uses a two-candidate format where you interact with another examinee for part of the test. That interaction format produces speaking scores that correlate more strongly with real-world conversational ability than the monologue-heavy formats used by IELTS Part 2 or TOEFL.
For PrepLearnio users, the most useful framing is that **the Cambridge B2 First is the cleanest mirror of CEFR B2 among all major tests** — its scoring criteria align almost one-to-one with the CEFR descriptors, and our vocabulary and grammar tools at level 2 are graded to match. Candidates who score Cambridge First Pass with Merit are demonstrably B2 in all four skills; the same cannot be said with the same precision of an IELTS 6.0 candidate, whose skill profile may be uneven across the four bands.
Two practical considerations. First, Cambridge is **paper-based by default** at most centres, with a computer-based option growing slowly. If you prefer typing, check centre availability — the format can affect your timing strategy substantially. Second, the writing section uses two pieces: a compulsory essay and a choice of formats (article, email, report, review, story). The choice format rewards register-control — picking the right tone for the audience earns more marks than packing in advanced vocabulary. Practise switching registers, not memorising 'C1 phrases'.
Frequently asked questions
Are Cambridge English certificates accepted in the UK?
Yes — by most UK universities for academic admission. For UKVI student or work visas, only specific Cambridge variants (e.g. B1 Business Preliminary) appear on the SELT list. For mainstream university admission Cambridge First and Advanced are accepted; for visa purposes use IELTS UKVI or LanguageCert IESOL.
Is Cambridge First (FCE) harder than IELTS 6.0?
They map to the same CEFR B2 band but test it differently. Cambridge is structured for clearer pass/fail clarity at the B2 boundary; IELTS gives a graded band that conflates partial B2 with B1+. For demonstrating definitive B2 competence, Cambridge First is the cleaner signal.
Can I prepare for Cambridge tests without enrolling in a course?
Yes — Cambridge English publishes free practice tests on their official site, and the vocabulary lists per level are publicly documented. Self-study works particularly well at A2–B2 because the level descriptors are concrete. C1 and C2 self-study is harder because the gap between input understanding and output production widens.