Average rate: ~$280 / month
Based on $30–$50 per lesson × 8 lessons
Hit your IELTS or Goethe target faster: real exam flow, AI feedback on every attempt, and a personal plan, without a tutor or hidden fees.
Available exams
Cost comparison
Six months of prep at a fraction of the cost of a personal tutor — with the full trainer in one subscription.
You save about
≈ $1,320
over 6 months of exam prep on Pro
Average rate: ~$280 / month
Based on $30–$50 per lesson × 8 lessons
$60 / mo
Flat fee: simulations, modules, AI review, and analytics — no per-lesson charges
Why Exalify
A single workspace that turns scattered prep into a clear path to your target score.
Modules and an interface that mirror the actual exam day.
Instant scoring, error breakdown and hints aligned with grader criteria.
Topics and priorities updated from your latest score and exam date.
One subscription covers every module, simulation and AI tool.
Attempts, weak topics and predicted band score in a single view.
Open the workspace from any device, no schedule to keep up with.
Time limits and section order match exam day — no surprises at the desk.
Save words from texts and feedback, review with flashcards and quizzes.
Dialogues and oral practice with pronunciation and fluency feedback.
Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking — a dedicated scenario for each module.
Pick the exam type and module: listening, reading, writing, or speaking. Each block has its own scenario close to the official format so you don’t overfit to “comfortable” conditions.
Progress and attempts stay in your profile: see where you lose points and which task types feel easier. You can revisit weak sections without restarting the whole test.
Materials and hints stay tied to the task context, not abstract advice, but work with the text or audio you just completed.
Modules stitched into one session with a shared time limit, like test day.
When a full scheme is configured, modules merge into one session with a shared time limit, like exam day. You train not only language but rhythm: when to speed up, where to save a minute, how not to burn out before speaking.
After a simulation you get a breakdown: where time went, which answers the system flags as weak, what to repeat before the next run. That lowers anxiety before the real exam, you’ve already seen a similar flow of screens and instructions.
Useful for first-timers and retakes: compare multiple full runs and track progress by score and time.
Answer review, task hints, strategy, and chat in the context of your screen.
AI helps step by step: written answer checks with error explanations, task-specific hints, speech synthesis and recognition for speaking. PRO adds deeper modes, answer strategy and chat in the context of the screen you’re on.
Unlike generic chatbots, hints follow the exam format: word limits, essay type, scoring criteria. Saves time, no need to explain from scratch what Task 2 is or how Speaking Part 2 works.
AI doesn’t replace live clubs, but fills gaps between sessions: review an essay draft or run a speaking answer in the evening when a teacher isn’t available.
Folders and cards: vocabulary from tasks and your own lists for review.
Collect vocabulary from lessons and exams into folders, review with cards, and mark words you actually confuse in tests, not abstract textbook lists.
PRO unlocks the full dictionary: several thematic sets (academic words, connectors, writing phrases) and sync with modules where you miss most.
Review is built into the workflow: no exporting words to other apps, a card next to the task lowers friction between “learned” and “retained”.
Checks on your folders and lists: recall meaning, collocations, spelling, in a short session.
Don’t “eyeball” vocabulary: run a session on a chosen folder or exam word set, comprehension, spelling, and collocations with feedback on mistakes.
The mode links to the dictionary: the same cards and lists from tasks become a timed series of attempts, you see which words drop most often.
Selection translation and exam modules stay nearby, no need to move words to other apps just to drill before the test.
Clubs and pair sessions so speaking doesn’t lag behind writing.
Clubs and pair practice move speaking out of “I understand but don’t speak”. Scheduling and booking live inside the workspace, no messenger threads or random Zoom links.
Topics follow exam context: charts, opinions, experience, what you see in Parts 2-3. Moderators and formats keep pace closer to the exam than a “kitchen chat”.
Some flows can add AI topic work between live sessions: practice connectors, polish an opening, or review pronunciation pitfalls.
Select text in a task and translate without leaving the exam flow.
Highlight a phrase in the task, get a translation without leaving the exam screen. Especially useful for long instructions, prompts, and academic texts where one unknown term can break pace.
Together with AI hints you grasp meaning faster but stay inside the training UI, no ten tabs and lost focus before the timer.
Built for prep, not cheating: translation helps unpack lexicon and structure so you read more confidently next time without the crutch.
Summaries of attempts, weak task types, and weekly trends.
PRO summaries across attempts: where time goes, which task types lag, and how average scores move week to week.
The activity calendar shows study regularity, handy to catch slumps before the exam and adjust the plan without manual spreadsheets.
Slices can be compared with simulations and live clubs: see whether “paper” score growth matches real speaking practice.
Weekly plan and section priorities from your stats and exam deadline.
AI builds a picture from your attempts and exam deadline: suggests where to shift focus this week, what to repeat in short sessions, and what to defer.
Different from one-off hints in a task, here it’s a “prep route” plan, not a single-answer nudge.
Rebuild the strategy after each simulation: the system factors new weak spots and remaining time to the test.
Answers about exam format, criteria, and your attempts in the workspace.
Ask about IELTS and other exam formats, scoring criteria, time limits, and typical mistakes, answers lean on official test logic, not generic internet tips.
Consultation can use workspace context, e.g., how to read a Reading score drop over the last three attempts.
Not a replacement for billing/access support, but removes some pre-exam “consultation” load when you need a quick rule or section structure reminder.
Next step
The same rhythm of parts and time limits as on test day, plus a clear picture of weak spots from your attempts.