CEFR level test

What's your Russian level?

Find your level on the CEFR scale, from A1 (beginner) to C2 (proficient). Answer 30 Russian questions that get harder as you go. We score grammar and vocabulary, pinpoint where your Russian starts to thin out, and show the fastest way to climb: reading real books.

Quick answer

The CEFR rates Russian ability on six levels, from A1 (beginner) through B1 and B2 (independent user) up to C2 (mastery). This free test estimates your Russian level from 30 grammar and vocabulary questions in about five minutes, then recommends what to read next.

1. Это ___ книга.
2. Я хорошо ___ по-русски.
3. Каждый вечер Маша читает эту интересную ___ .
4. Меня ___ Анна, я из Москвы.
5. Я хочу ___ . Дай мне, пожалуйста, воды.
6. Вчера Иван ___ интересный фильм по телевизору.
7. У меня нет старшей ___ .
8. Каждое утро я ___ зубы и принимаю душ.
9. Чтобы поехать в Москву, мне нужно ___ билет на поезд.
10. После целого дня работы он очень ___ и хотел спать.
11. Мой старший брат работает ___ в большой компании.
12. Обычно я ___ домой около шести и сразу готовлю ужин.
13. Каждый день он ___ на работу на автобусе.
14. Я взял с собой зонт, ___ на улице шёл сильный дождь.
15. Прежде чем действовать, нам нужно ___ важное решение.
16. Машина медленно ___ к дому и остановилась у ворот.
17. Если бы я знал об этом заранее, я обязательно ___ тебе.
18. Молодые учёные ___ важное научное открытие.
19. Родители должны ___ больше внимания воспитанию своих детей.
20. Его доводы звучали логично, но меня они совсем не ___ .
21. ___ домой после работы, он вдруг вспомнил о важной встрече.
22. Молодой учёный подвергся ___ со стороны коллег.
23. Опытный водитель никогда не станет пренебрегать ___ дорожного движения.
24. Его блестящая речь произвела на слушателей сильное ___ .
25. После операции больной медленно, но верно пошёл на ___ .
26. Это было не что ___, как обыкновенное недоразумение.
27. За свой подвиг он удостоился самой высокой ___ .
28. Он относится к своим обязанностям спустя ___ , и начальник им недоволен.
29. Этот экзамен дался ему с большим ___ : он готовился несколько месяцев.
30. Журналист задал политику весьма ___ вопрос, на который было трудно ответить.
30 questions · about 5 minutes · free, no sign-up

The fastest way up the CEFR scale in Russian is reading

Whatever your level, you climb quicker by meeting Russian in real sentences, again and again. Lingo7 lets you read real books in Russian at your level, with tap-to-translate and native-narrated audio. Free to start.

How this test estimates your level

The 30 questions are split evenly across the six CEFR levels (five at each of A1, A2, B1, B2, C1 and C2) and ordered from easiest to hardest. Roughly half check grammar (verb forms, agreement, structure) and half check vocabulary (the right word in context), so the result reflects both.

Your level is the highest band where you stay above 60% correct. We climb from A1 upward and stop at the first level you can no longer hold. That ceiling is your estimate, because it reflects what you can do reliably, not a single lucky answer. The breakdown then shows your score at every level and your grammar-versus-vocabulary balance.

It's an estimate, not a certificate. What it's genuinely good at is showing where your Russian thins out, and that the surest way to push that ceiling higher is to keep reading at, and just above, your level.

About learning Russian

Russian provides access to one of the world's great literary traditions from Tolstoy to Dostoevsky, is a key language in space science and diplomacy, and is widely understood across former Soviet states.

A1-C2CEFR levels this test covers
255Mspeakers worldwide
Indo-Europeanlanguage family

Frequently asked questions

What is my Russian level?

This free test estimates it on the CEFR scale (A1 to C2) in about five minutes. You answer 30 Russian questions that get harder as you go, covering grammar and vocabulary. Your level is the highest band where you keep answering correctly, so it reflects what you can reliably do, not your single best guess.

What do the CEFR levels A1-C2 mean?

CEFR is the standard European scale. A1 and A2 are beginner and elementary: simple phrases and everyday basics. B1 and B2 are intermediate and upper-intermediate: holding conversations, then working and reading novels in the language. C1 and C2 are advanced and proficient: near-native command with full nuance. Most learners aiming to "use" a language are heading for B2.

How accurate is this Russian level test?

It is a quick placement estimate, not an exam. Because it samples a handful of items per level it can land a half-step off, especially if your skills are uneven. Read it as a level and a profile: the grammar and vocabulary subscores and the per-level breakdown show exactly where your Russian starts to thin out, which is more useful than a single number.

Is this an official Russian certificate?

No. Official CEFR certification comes from accredited exams such as the TORFL / ТРКИ, which test all four skills under controlled conditions. This tool is a free self-assessment to point you at the right level and the fastest way to climb it.

How do I improve my Russian level fastest?

Meet the language in real context, again and again. Once you are past the basics, extensive reading is one of the most efficient ways to climb, because it grows vocabulary and grammatical intuition at the same time. Lingo7 lets you read real books in Russian at your level with tap-to-translate and native-narrated audio.