IELTS Test Centers in El Salvador

IELTS Testing Centres in El Salvador

In total, there is one test location in El Salvador that offer IELTS exams. You can select the one which is closer to you.

There are two types of test format available for IELTS exams: paper-based or computer-delivered. For both formats, the Speaking Section is done with a real IELTS examiner on a face-to-face basis.

San Salvador, El Salvador

British Council – The British Institute of International Languages

Street Address: San Salvador, El Salvador

Contact Email: contacto@britishcouncil.org.mx

Website URL: https://www.britishcouncil.org.mx/examen/ielts

IELTS Test Dates Testing Locations Types of Exam Registration Fee (MXN)
2020/09/26 IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training 7000
2020/12/5 IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training 7000

IELTS Exam Fee in El Salvador

According to the test maker – British Council, the current cost to take IELTS test in El Salvador is 7000 MXN.

List of cities in El Salvador where you can take the IELTS tests

  • San Salvador

More about El Salvador

Population

With its welcoming and fertile volcanic highlands El Salvador always exercised a notable attraction on the Spaniards. They could easily settle in the country where there was a lack of indie political organizations capable of opposing their penetration; the pipil, the most evolved people of Aztec origin settled in the highlands, docilely accepted the newcomers. As a consequence of this there was a rapid assimilation of the Indian element which today, foreign to any tribal organization, represents about 9.1%. of the entire population. Mestizos or ladinos are largely predominant, equal to 88.3% of the total and, as in all of Centramerica, difficult to classify from the point of view of somatic characters. The whites, or Creoles, are 1.6% and live mostly in urban centers and especially in San Salvador which, founded by the conquistadors, has been the main center of the country ever since. The Salvadoran population was initially very small in number; it began to increase rapidly in the late nineteenth century and especially in the twentieth century. In 1821 El Salvador was home to 400,000 residents, which rose to 800,000 in 1894 and to 1.4 million at the 1930 census. Even more rapid increases occurred later: in 1949 the census registered 1.8 million residents. have become, according to the most recent estimates (2017 estimate), almost 7 million. The rate of increase in recent decades has been impressive, with an index that can be considered among the highest in the world. This is due to the high birth rate, given that it becomes alarming also considering the limited size of the territory. The country’s poverty and excessive demographic growth also contributed to the increase in migratory phenomena that affected the country throughout the twentieth century. Initially, emigration was directed to neighboring Honduras, but the political crisis and civil war in the last decades of the twentieth century brought over 1 million Salvadorans out of the borders, many of whom reached Belize, Canada, Mexico and the United States. United. Requests for asylum and refugee status have decreased since the mid-1990s: according to UNHCR data from around 20,000 in 1996, they would have shrunk to 4000 ten years later. More generally, however, the relevant population of the country (whose average density, of approx. 312.81 residents / km², is the highest in Isthmian Central America) is in relation to the fertility of the soil in the volcanic belt, in in fact the strongest densities are recorded, with maximum values ​​in the central section, which hosts San Salvador; the density is lowered in the coastal plain, where the vast haciendas predominate, and in the innermost areas. The population lives for approx. 40.2% in villages and small properties, the fincas, or in the agglomerations annexed to large companies but the demographic increase has pushed towards urbanization. The cities are not numerous: the largest, by far, is the capital San Salvador, in a favorable position at the foot of the volcano of the same name and relatively close to the coast, to which it is now well connected by a highway, and where it has its outlet. in the port of La Libertad. The city has suffered frequent earthquakes and has been rebuilt several times; the main economic, commercial and cultural activities of the state take place there. The urban agglomeration, which has expanded in parallel with the reconstruction activities of the city, now has over 2 million residents and includes in a single large conurbation Villa Delgado, Nueva San Salvador (fourth largest city in the country), Soyapango and Mejicanos. Another important center of the country is Santa Ana, joined to the capital by the railway and the Pan-American Carretera. To these same lines of communication are other populous centers of the other lands, including Sonsonate and San Miguel (second city of the country), which have their outlets on the Gulf of Fonseca.