Sproochentest
The Sproochentest listening comprehension requirement is set at B1 level, which is a different target from the A2 oral section. That means full exam preparation should include regular listening practice with spoken Luxembourgish, not only speaking drills. LëtzPass is strongest on speaking, so use this page for exam context and keep expectations clear.
Understand the B1 listening requirement in the Sproochentest and how it differs from the speaking preparation flow.
Exact exam context first, then preparation guidance.
Target level
B1 listening comprehension
Skill type
Understanding spoken Luxembourgish
Prep emphasis
Consistent exposure and test familiarity
Product note
Speaking prep is stronger than listening prep here
Listening practice depends more on exposure, rhythm, vocabulary recognition, and concentration than on your own sentence production. Candidates who feel strong in speaking can still underperform here if they have not trained their ear.
Treat this guide as an exam-orientation page. It tells you what the listening requirement means, but it does not overclaim that the current product solves the whole listening side of the exam.
Next step
Start with the speaking mock
Use the part of the exam preparation the product covers best today.
Official facts are separated from our preparation guidance.
INLL official Sproochentest overview
Official overview of the Sproochentest, including the exam purpose, structure, and current registration context.
https://www.inll.lu/en/sproochentest-en/
MyINL registration portal
Official portal for account creation, registration, and candidate administration.
https://myinl.inll.lu/
Council of Europe CEFR framework
Reference framework for language levels such as A2 and B1.
https://www.coe.int/en/web/common-european-framework-reference-languages
Reviewed
LëtzPass editorial team
Reviewed with input from a native Luxembourgish speaker and Sproochentest tutor.
Last reviewed: April 3, 2026
No. Speaking helps with vocabulary and confidence, but listening needs separate exposure to spoken Luxembourgish.
Yes. The oral side still matters, and speaking practice is usually the most structured part to improve quickly.