IELTS Testing Centres in Romania
In total, there are 5 test locations in Romania 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.
Cluj-Napoca, Romania
British Council test location – Cluj-Napoca
Street Address: 14 Calea Dorobantilor
Telephone Number: +40 (0)21 3079600
Contact Email: contact@britishcouncil.ro
Website URL: https://www.britishcouncil.ro/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (RON) |
2020/07/25 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 965 |
Bucharest, Romania
British Council Bucharest
Street Address: Calea Dorobanți 14, București 010572, Romania
Telephone Number: +40 (0)21 3079600
Contact Email: contact@britishcouncil.ro
Website URL: https://www.britishcouncil.ro/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (RON) |
2020/09/12 | IELTS General Training | 965 |
Brașov, Romania
British Council test location – Brasov
Street Address: Registration address 14 Calea Dorobantilor
Telephone Number: +40 (0)21 3079600
Contact Email: contact@britishcouncil.ro
Website URL: https://www.britishcouncil.ro/en/exam/ielts
Timișoara, Romania
British Council test location – Timisoara
Street Address: 14 Calea Dorobantilor
Telephone Number: +40 (0)21 3079600
Contact Email: contact@britishcouncil.ro
Website URL: https://www.britishcouncil.ro/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (RON) |
2020/09/26 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 965 |
Iași, Romania
British Council test location – Iasi
Street Address: 14 Calea Dorobantilor
Telephone Number: +40 (0)21 3079600
Contact Email: contact@britishcouncil.ro
Website URL: https://www.britishcouncil.ro/en/exam/ielts
IELTS Test Dates | Testing Locations | Types of Exam | Registration Fee (RON) |
2020/09/26 | IELTS Academic and IELTS General Training | 965 |
IELTS Exam Fee in Romania
According to the test maker – British Council, the current cost to take IELTS test in Romania is 965 RON.
List of cities in Romania where you can take the IELTS tests
- Brasov
- Bucharest
- Cluj-Napoca
- Iasi
- Timisoara
More about Romania
Population
89% of the population are Romanians. The minorities include Magyars (6.5%; mainly in Transylvania; Szekler; Romania-Hungary), Roma (3.3%; according to other sources around 13%), Germans (Romanian- Germans), Ukrainians, Serbs, Croats, Russians, Bulgarians, Turks and others A total of 18 ethnic groups are officially recognized as national minorities; the right to use their mother tongue is guaranteed in the constitution. The share of foreign nationals in the total population was only 0.58% in 2017.
The average population density (2017) is 85 residents / km 2. The hill country of the Subcarpathian Mountains, the Danube lowlands, especially the region around Bucharest, and the basin landscapes of Transylvania are more densely populated, parts of the Western and Southern Carpathians and the Danube Delta have the lowest densities. Around 55% of the population live in cities. It is estimated that around 3.5 million Romanians live abroad.
The biggest cities in Romania
Biggest Cities (Residents 2011) | |
Bucharest | 1,883,400 |
Cluj-Napoca (Klausenburg) | 324 600 |
Timișoara (Temesvár) | 319 300 |
Iasi | 290 400 |
Constanța | 283 900 |
Religion
The constitution (Article 29) guarantees freedom of religion and follows the principle of the separation of state and religion. The basis of the state’s religious policy is the Kultusgesetz, passed in 2006. With regard to religious communities, it differentiates between “churches and cults”, “religious associations” and “religious associations”. The first two have the legal status of state-recognized corporations with certain legal claims against the state. The law of worship only mentions the Romanian Orthodox Church by name, however, this expressly equates “the other churches recognized by the state”. The State Secretariat for Religious Affairs is responsible for relations between the state and religious communities. The religious communities are subject to state registration. The exercise of the rights guaranteed to them by the constitution and the Kultusgesetz (institutional and military pastoral care, religious instruction, maintenance of schools, state financial allocations) requires their state recognition (2007: 18 religious communities).
According to the 2011 census, over 81% of the population are Orthodox Christians. The Old Believers form an Orthodox minority church (0.16% of the population; Popowzy). About 5.1% of the population belong to the Catholic Church (especially Romanian-Hungarians and Romanian Germans in Transylvania and in the Banat, who follow the Latin rite); This includes the more than 150,000 believers (0.75% of the population) who profess to the Greek Catholic Church, which was rebuilt in 1990. Approximately 6% of the country’s residents belong to Protestant denominations (Reformed, Pentecostal, Baptist, Adventist, etc.). The largest Protestant church is the “Reformed Church in Romania”, which is rooted in the Hungarian population group (around 3% of the population).
Another religious community with references to the Bible are the Jehovah’s Witnesses (about 0.25% of the population).
The Muslims (0.32% of the population), Jews and Baha’i represent numerically small non-Christian religious minorities. The Muslims (Turks and Tatars) are Sunnis from the Hanefi school of law and predominantly from Dobruja. The historical roots of the Jewish community in what is now Romania go back to the beginning of the 2nd century AD. Of the approximately 3,500 Jews who are still around today (0.02% of the population; 1924: around 796,000, 1947: around 428,000), the majority live in Bucharest.