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Study this ielts table sample answer with a practice task, data description, Band 7 sample answer, Band 9 improved answer, overview analysis, key features, useful vocabulary, and common mistakes.
This is an IELTS-style practice task, not an official IELTS exam question.
The table shows the average monthly spending of students in three cities on rent, food, transport, and entertainment.
The table compares average monthly student spending in three cities. Overall, rent was the biggest cost in all cities, and City A was the most expensive. Students in City A spent $600 on rent, compared with $450 in City B and $350 in City C. Food costs were closer, at $250, $220, and $200 respectively. City B had the highest transport and entertainment spending, at $100 and $150. City C was the cheapest city overall, with the lowest figures for rent, food, transport, and entertainment except that transport was lower than City A only slightly.
The table compares how much students spent each month on four categories in three cities. Overall, rent was by far the largest expense everywhere, and City A had the highest total spending, while City C was generally the least expensive. Rent in City A stood at $600, considerably above City B's $450 and City C's $350. Food spending showed less variation, ranging from $200 in City C to $250 in City A. By contrast, City B recorded the highest figures for transport and entertainment, at $100 and $150 respectively. City C had the lowest or joint-lowest spending in most categories, especially rent and entertainment.
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Rent was the largest expense in all three cities, with City A being the most expensive overall. City C had the lowest spending in most categories.
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Use our Academic IELTS Task 1 Checker to identify missing key features, data comparison gaps, and grammar bottlenecks.
Identify the highest and lowest figures, group similar data, and compare categories clearly.
Look for extremes, clear patterns, and differences between rows or columns.
No. Include numbers that support the main comparisons.
Use whereas, compared with, respectively, and by contrast.
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