Sproochentest
A typical Sproochentest mock takes about 10 minutes: 5 minutes for a topic question and 5 minutes for a picture description. A good mock should force you to answer under light pressure, switch between topic and picture tasks, and review what actually broke down. Mock practice matters because many candidates know enough Luxembourgish but lose control when they need to respond out loud in sequence.
Use mock-test practice to turn speaking structure into exam-day control before the real Sproochentest.
Exact exam context first, then preparation guidance.
Main benefit
Reduces hesitation under pressure
Best timing
After you know the basic structures
Useful outputs
Transcript, feedback, next steps
Best product fit
Core LëtzPass strength
Mock practice is most useful when it shows you where your speaking stopped being direct, clear, or detailed enough. That feedback loop is more valuable than passive reading once the exam is approaching.
Start mock practice once you understand the task format and have basic topic and picture structures. Use it early enough that you can still fix the patterns that show up repeatedly.
Next step
Try a free speaking mock
Use the real product flow after reading the guide.
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
Yes. An early mock reveals where your real speaking gaps are, which is often more useful than guessing.
Review whether you answered directly, kept control, added enough detail, and stayed understandable.