The TCF (Test de Connaissance du Français) is an official test recognized for immigration, studies, and administrative procedures in Canada and Québec.
Before starting your preparation, it is essential to clearly understand the TCF format, the test components, and the differences between the TCF Canada and the TCF Québec.
This page provides a clear, structured, and reliable overview to help you prepare only what is relevant to your specific project.
What Is the TCF?
The TCF is a standardized test that assesses French as a second language skills according to the CEFR (A1 to C2).
There are several versions of the TCF, including:
- TCF Canada
- TCF Québec
The general format is similar, but the objectives and priorities differ.
TCF Test Components: General Structure
The TCF assesses four language skills:
✔️ Listening comprehension
- 39 questions
- Duration: approximately 25 minutes
- Short, medium, and long messages
- Levels A1 to C1
✔️ Reading comprehension
- 39 questions
- Duration: approximately 45 minutes
- Varied texts: announcements, emails, articles, and opinion pieces
✔️ Speaking skills
- 3 tasks
- Duration: approximately 12 minutes
- Interaction, guided monologue, and reasoned opinion
✔️ Written expression
- 3 tasks
- Duration: approximately 60 minutes
- Simple message, justification, and argumentative text
Each test component is assessed independently.
Which test components really matter depending on your project (Canada / Québec)?
All test components exist in both versions of the TCF, but their importance varies depending on the administrative objective.
🎯 For a Canada project (TCF Canada)
- All test components are mandatory.
- Scores are converted into CLB (NCLC) levels.
- Balance across skills is decisive.
- A weakness in one skill can impact the overall result.
🎯 For a Québec project (TCF Québec)
- Speaking is a priority.
- Written expression is highly valued.
- Listening and reading components may be secondary depending on the profile.
- The level achieved in speaking can be decisive.
Hence the importance of targeted, rather than generic, preparation.
The exact difference between the TCF Canada and TCF Québec test components
🔹Summary comparison
| Criterion | TCF Canada | TCF Québec |
|---|---|---|
| Objective | Federal immigration | Québec immigration |
| Mandatory test components | 4 skills | Speaking and writing prioritized |
| Weight of speaking | Important | Decisive |
| Weight of writing | Important | Very important |
| Comprehension | Mandatory | Depending on the application |
| Ideal strategy | Balance all skills | Focus on expression skills |
It is this difference in weighting that explains why the same preparation strategy does not work for both tests.
An effective strategy depends on the target test, not only on the level.
Total duration and organization of the test components
- The test components are independent.
- They can be taken on the same day or separately, depending on the test center.
- Results are valid for 2 years.
- The final level is reported by skill.
Why understand the format before preparing?
Preparing without understanding the TCF format can lead to:
- a waste of time,
- unnecessary preparation on secondary skills,
- a score below your true potential.
A preliminary assessment makes it possible to:
- target the right test components,
- adapt the strategy,
- choose the right preparation program.
Go further in your preparation
The TCF Strategic Guide (Silver / Gold access) allows you to:
- understand the exact expectations of the examiners,
- clearly distinguish between levels B and C,
- use ready-to-use response models,
- avoid common mistakes based on your project (Canada or Québec).
Some sections of the guide (exam formats) may be available for free, while advanced strategic content is reserved for subscribers.
Understanding the TCF format is an essential step toward success.
Whether you are preparing for the TCF Canada or the TCF Québec, priorities change, and your strategy must adapt accordingly.
Start by assessing your level, then choose a preparation path that is truly aligned with your objective.
