How to Prepare for the DELE Exam: A Practical Guide
The DELE is the gold-standard Spanish qualification â and the exam trips up plenty of strong speakers who walk in unprepared. Here's how the exam actually works, how it's scored, and how to build a preparation plan that fits your timeline.
If you want a Spanish qualification that carries real weight â for university admission, a job application, residency or citizenship â the DELE is the one to have. Issued by the Instituto Cervantes on behalf of the Spanish government, the Diploma de Español como Lengua Extranjera is recognised internationally and, unlike many language certificates, it never expires.
It is also an exam that catches out strong speakers. Plenty of candidates with genuinely good Spanish fail the DELE â not because their language lets them down, but because they didn't understand the format, ran out of time, or lost marks on a paper they never practised. The good news: all of that is fixable, and this guide covers how.
First, choose the right level
The DELE is offered at all six CEFR levels, from A1 to C2. You don't sit a general exam and receive a grade â you register for one specific level and either pass it or you don't. That makes level choice the single most important decision you'll make.
A rough guide to the popular levels:
A2 is the level required for Spanish citizenship applications (alongside the CCSE culture test). If that's your goal, don't over-reach â register for A2, not B1.
B2 is the workhorse. It's the level most Spanish universities ask for, and the one employers generally recognise as "professionally fluent". If you're comfortable holding a conversation on unfamiliar topics and can write a structured argument, B2 is likely your target.
C1 and C2 matter for academic careers, translation, and certain regulated professions. They are genuinely demanding â the jump from B2 to C1 is bigger than most candidates expect.
If you're unsure, take a free online level test or, better, have a teacher assess you in conversation. Registering one level too high is the most common â and most expensive â DELE mistake.
Understand how it's scored (this is where people fail)
Every DELE exam tests four skills: reading comprehension, listening comprehension, written expression, and oral expression. But here's the detail that matters â the four papers are combined into two groups:
Group 1: reading + writing Group 2: listening + speaking
To pass, you need a minimum score in each group, not just a decent overall total. A brilliant reading paper cannot rescue a weak speaking exam. This is why so many self-taught learners fail: they've built strong reading and listening through apps and podcasts, but their writing and speaking â the productive skills â have never been tested under pressure.
The practical takeaway: audit yourself honestly across all four skills before you start preparing, and spend your time on the weakest one. For most independent learners, that means speaking.
Build a plan around your timeline
Three months out. Download past papers from the Instituto Cervantes website â they're free, and they are the single best preparation resource that exists. Sit one full paper under timed conditions in week one, not to pass it, but to find out exactly where you stand. Then build a weekly routine: one skill per session, with at least one speaking session a week.
One month out. Shift from learning to rehearsing. Do full timed papers weekly. Learn the task types cold â at every level, the writing and speaking papers follow predictable formats (a formal email, an opinion essay, describing a photo, sustaining a monologue). You should walk in knowing precisely what each task will ask of you and how you'll structure your answer before you've read the prompt.
The final week. No new grammar. Review your own recurring errors â the ser/estar slips, the subjunctive triggers, the prepositions that haunt you â and rehearse your speaking exam openers until they're automatic. Nerves eat working memory; automaticity gives it back.
Tips for each paper
Reading: the questions follow the order of the text. If you can't find an answer, you've gone too far â go back. Don't leave blanks; there's no penalty for wrong answers.
Listening: you hear each audio twice. Use the first listen to locate answers and the second to confirm. Read the questions before the audio starts â the exam gives you time for this, and candidates who skip it pay for it.
Writing: the examiners mark against a rubric â task completion, coherence, range, accuracy. A safe, well-structured answer that fully addresses the task beats an ambitious one that drifts. Learn the connectors (sin embargo, por lo tanto, en cuanto a) and use them deliberately.
Speaking: you get preparation time before the oral exam for the main tasks â use it to note structure, not scripts. Examiners reward interaction and repair strategies: if you can rephrase around a missing word without freezing, that's fluency, and it scores.
The fastest way to improve the productive skills
Reading and listening you can genuinely train alone. Writing and speaking you can't â not properly. You can produce endless essays and monologues, but without someone correcting them against the DELE's actual criteria, you'll rehearse your errors rather than fix them.
This is where a tutor earns their fee several times over: mock oral exams under real conditions, written work marked against the official rubric, and a clear-eyed answer to the question "am I ready for this level, or should I wait for the next sitting?" The exam runs several times a year, so a delayed attempt costs you a few months; a failed one costs the fee and the confidence.
If you're preparing for the DELE, you can find experienced Spanish tutors on Parlazo who offer exam-focused lessons â one or two sessions a week in the final months is usually enough to turn a borderline candidate into a comfortable pass. Suerte en el examen.
