Most candidates preparing for IELTS spend weeks or months in front of practice software that makes the job harder than it needs to be — popups during a reading passage, ads in the answer key, body text small enough to strain a desk-lamp's patience. The test is forty minutes of sustained reading at a stretch. The tools should at least let you do that.
We started IELTSNexa because we wanted a place where the Cambridge IELTS papers — the only practice that genuinely prepares you — could be done in a calm, undecorated interface, with answer checking that actually works and AI feedback that says something useful about your writing.
Nothing here is invented. The reading passages, the listening recordings, the writing tasks — all of them come from published Cambridge IELTS volumes 4 through 20 plus the Cambridge Official Guide. We don't write our own questions; the only test that prepares you for the real exam is the real exam.
What we add is the surface around it: a typesetter's reading view, an examiner-trained marking model, a navigator that doesn't get in the way, and a payment system that you can cancel without finding three hidden settings pages.