IELTS Task 2 Topic Sentence Examples (Weak vs Strong)
See how precise topic sentences create paragraph focus without memorised phrases or unnecessary background.
Quick answer
A strong IELTS Task 2 topic sentence states the paragraph's main claim in a specific way and makes its relationship to your overall position clear. It should not merely announce the topic, repeat the question, or list every supporting detail. The sentences that follow should be able to explain, qualify, or illustrate that one claim without changing direction.
A topic sentence is a promise to the reader
When you begin a paragraph with a claim, you promise that the remaining sentences will develop it. If the opening says that public parks improve health but the paragraph shifts to tourism revenue, the reader has to rebuild the logic. That weakens coherence even if both points are relevant to cities.
Write the topic sentence after choosing your best reason. Include enough detail to establish direction, but leave the explanation and evidence for later sentences. This creates a natural hierarchy: claim first, support second.
Avoid announcement and question-echo openings
Phrases such as 'This paragraph will discuss' use words without contributing meaning. Similarly, replacing a few words from the prompt does not establish your argument. Examiners need to follow the progression of ideas, not see a memorised signpost.
A useful test is to read only your thesis and the first sentence of each body paragraph. Together, they should form a compact outline of the whole essay. If one topic sentence could fit almost any question, make it more specific.
- Name the paragraph's exact subject.
- State the benefit, cause, problem, or contrast you will prove.
- Keep examples and minor details out of the opening sentence.
- Check that every later sentence supports the opening claim.
Worked examples
Before-and-after IELTS Writing fixes
Weak direction
There are many reasons why education is important.
Stronger direction
Public funding for vocational education can reduce skills shortages by preparing students for occupations that employers struggle to fill.
Weak direction
On the one hand, cities have some advantages.
Stronger direction
Large cities give young professionals access to specialised jobs that are rarely available in smaller communities.
Weak direction
Another point is that individuals should help the environment.
Stronger direction
Individual choices matter most when they create sustained demand for lower-waste products and services.
Weak direction
Social media also has disadvantages for teenagers.
Stronger direction
For teenagers, constant exposure to edited images can turn normal social comparison into persistent anxiety about appearance.
Paste one real essay to see whether Coherence & Cohesion is the score blocker you should fix first.
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Self-check before you submit
- Does the sentence make a claim rather than announce a topic?
- Is the claim specific to this exact essay question?
- Can every sentence in the paragraph support it?
- Does it connect clearly to my thesis?
- Have I avoided examples and statistics in the topic sentence itself?
Frequently asked questions
Should every IELTS Task 2 paragraph start with a topic sentence?
Body paragraphs should normally begin with a clear controlling idea. The sentence does not need a formula, but the paragraph's purpose should be visible immediately.
Can a topic sentence contain two ideas?
It can contain two tightly connected parts, such as a concession and main claim. Two unrelated benefits or problems usually make the paragraph harder to develop coherently.
Continue with a related fix
How to Develop Ideas in IELTS Task 2 (With Worked Examples)
Turn short, general claims into developed Task 2 arguments with a repeatable four-step method and worked Band 6-to-7 directions.
IELTS Body Paragraph Examples for Band 7
Build paragraph unity and depth with complete before-and-after argument examples rather than fixed sentence templates.
