The 4-step bar chart method
Step 1 — Paraphrase the chart, naming the metric, the categories, and the time period. Example: 'The bar chart shows the average household income across five European countries in 2010 and 2020.'
Step 2 — Give the overall pattern in 1–2 sentences. Identify the highest, the lowest, and the most striking contrast. Avoid specific numbers in the overview.
Step 3 — Group bars by similarity. 'Countries with high income', 'countries with moderate income', 'countries with low income'. Reference specific bars only for the extreme values inside each group.
Step 4 — Close with a comparison or a notable change. 'Country A's income rose by 35 percent, more than any other country in the chart.'
The 4 most common bar chart mistakes
Band 8 model answer (bar chart)
The bar charts compare the average daily calorie consumption per person and the share of household spending on food in five countries in 2000 and 2020. Overall, wealthier countries consumed more calories and spent a smaller share of household income on food, while the opposite was true in lower-income countries. The gap between the richest and poorest countries narrowed over the period for calorie intake but widened for food spending share. In 2000, the United States had the highest daily calorie consumption at roughly 3,800 kcal, while India had the lowest at about 2,200 kcal. By 2020, the United States figure had fallen slightly to around 3,600 kcal, whereas India's had risen to approximately 2,700 kcal, narrowing the gap between the two. The United Kingdom, Japan, and Brazil all sat in the middle of the range in both years, with Brazil showing the largest absolute increase. The pattern for food spending share moved in the opposite direction. In 2000, Indian households spent 55 percent of their income on food, compared with 14 percent in the United States. By 2020, the Indian share had fallen to 38 percent, while the US figure remained close to 13 percent, leaving Indian households still spending roughly three times more of their income on food than American ones.
High-scoring comparison vocabulary
Magnitude
- twice as much / twice as high
- three times greater than
- roughly a third of
- nearly double / almost half
- a fraction of / marginally higher
Extremes
- by far the highest / the lowest
- topped the chart at
- towered above the rest
- the clear leader / laggard
- stood head and shoulders above
Similarity
- roughly comparable to
- in a similar range / vein
- almost identical to
- clustered around the same figure
- not far behind / closely matched
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I describe a bar chart in IELTS Task 1?▾
Paraphrase the chart, give a one-sentence overview, group similar bars, and reference the highest, lowest, and most surprising values. Always use precise comparison language (more than twice as many, roughly a third of) rather than simple 'more' / 'less'.
Do I need to describe every bar?▾
No. Pick the 2–3 most striking comparisons and describe those in detail. Mentioning every bar one by one is the most common reason strong writers score below Band 7.
How do I compare two bar charts?▾
Treat them as one combined chart. Group the categories (e.g. 'countries where X rose', 'countries where X fell') and describe each group once, referencing both charts. Avoid back-and-forth comparisons that repeat category names.
What's the difference between 'vertical' and 'horizontal' bar chart vocabulary?▾
The vocabulary is the same — 'tallest', 'shortest' and 'highest', 'lowest' are both acceptable. What changes is your orientation reference: 'X is the tallest bar in the second group' is clearer than 'X has the highest value' on horizontal charts.
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