The Ultimate Guide to Reading Numbers in PTE: How to Nail DI Charts, Years, and Decimals without Losing Fluency

by Rico
The Ultimate Guide to Reading Numbers in PTE: How to Nail DI Charts, Years, and Decimals without Losing Fluency

If you have been practicing PTE Describe Image or Retell Lecture, or any speaking task involving numbers recently, chances are you’ve encountered the following scenario:

  • You understood the chart.
  • You know how to describe the trends.
  • The moment you hit 37.5%, 4,007, or 2015-16, your speed drops immediately.

This is where many students lose the most points in PTE Speaking.

It’s not that you don’t know how to answer the question; you simply get stuck on number reading. Your content deserved points, but it was dragged down due to pauses, over-enunciation, and corrections, directly impacting your Oral Fluency and even Pronunciation.

This article clears up PTE number reading once and for all: how to read basic numbers, thousands and decimals, years, cross-year spans, and the most practical number simplification techniques for DI.

Quick Answer: How to Read Numbers in PTE Stably?

If you want to grab the core takeaway immediately, check these 5 points:

  1. Memorize 0-19 – do not hesitate.
  2. 20-99 – read as "tens + ones" (e.g., 53 = fifty-three).
  3. 100+ – prioritize chunk reading; don't randomize individual numbers.
  4. Decimals – use "point" and read digit by digit (e.g., 3.14 = three point one four).
  5. In DI – when stability is an issue, prioritize approximate values (e.g., 19,873 can be read as about twenty thousand).

To sum it up in one sentence: In PTE Speaking, the focus on numbers isn't "precision", it's "stability, flow, and lack of broken sentences".

Why Do PTE Candidates Always Lose Points on Numbers?

Many students think their DI score is low because the template isn't "advanced" enough or they missed points of content. The reality is often more direct:

  • Stopping for 1 second to think about the reading when seeing numbers.
  • Confusing teens and tens.
  • Temporarily splitting years incorrectly.
  • Trying to read decimals as integers.
  • Immediately self-correcting after misreading one number, causing fluency to plummet.

Especially in PTE Describe Image, when there are many numbers, the whole rhythm is easily broken. You may want to say: "The overall trend is upward, with the peak in 2019," but instead you say:

the highest value is in... two thousand... no, twenty... nineteen...

The machine won't sympathize with you "knowing the content." It only hears the stutters.

So for PTE, number training isn't a detail; it's the fundamental skill for speaking stability.

I. Basic Number Reading: 0-19 Must Be Memorized Before Your Brain Can Think

There are no tricks here, only fluency.

0-10

  • 0: zero
  • 1: one
  • 2: two
  • 3: three
  • 4: four
  • 5: five
  • 6: six
  • 7: seven
  • 8: eight
  • 9: nine
  • 10: ten

11-19

  • 11: eleven
  • 12: twelve
  • 13: thirteen
  • 14: fourteen
  • 15: fifteen
  • 16: sixteen
  • 17: seventeen
  • 18: eighteen
  • 19: nineteen

Why is this section particularly important?

Because all subsequent number reading rules extend from this set. If you still confuse thirteen and thirty, or fifteen and fifty, your reading of years, ratios, and chart data will inevitably be chaotic.

II. How to Read 20 to 99?

The rule is simple: Tens + Ones.

For example:

  • 22 = twenty-two
  • 35 = thirty-five
  • 48 = forty-eight
  • 53 = fifty-three
  • 67 = sixty-seven

You must memorize multiples of ten separately first:

  • 20: twenty
  • 30: thirty
  • 40: forty
  • 50: fifty
  • 60: sixty
  • 70: seventy
  • 80: eighty
  • 90: ninety

The most common mistake here isn't not knowing, but stumbling when reading fast, especially:

  • thirty vs thirteen
  • forty vs fourteen
  • fifty vs fifteen
  • eighty vs eighteen

III. How to Read 100 to 999?

The common reading style is:

Several + hundred + and + tens/ones

For example:

  • 105 = one hundred and five
  • 354 = three hundred and fifty-four
  • 598 = five hundred and ninety-eight

You can break the number into "hundreds group + last two digits" first; don't stare at the string of numbers to force it through.

For Chinese candidates, the problem here is usually not a lack of understanding of the rule, but:

  • Pausing too long after hundred
  • Adding and chaotically
  • Getting stuck again on the last two digits

The solution is direct: Practice numbers like 354 as a speech chunk, rather than constructing them every time.

IV. How to Read Numbers Above 1000?

For four-digit numbers and larger, the core strategy is also "reading in chunks."

Common Structure

Several + thousand + several + hundred + and + tens/ones

For example:

  • 4,007 = four thousand and seven
  • 7,020 = seven thousand and twenty
  • 8,356 = eight thousand three hundred and fifty-six

Useful Rules for "and"

One of the most common errors is knowing exactly where to put and.

In practice, just remember these 3 rules:

  1. Usually, add and only once in the entire number.
  2. Place and in the last three digits, connecting the hundreds and the tens/ones.
  3. If the last three digits are all 000, usually do not add and.

For example:

  • 2,300 = two thousand three hundred
  • 2,305 = two thousand three hundred and five
  • 4,007 = four thousand and seven

You don't need to study this like a grammar thesis; just ensuring you don't add it chaotically or repeatedly in the exam is enough.

V. How to Read Decimals?

Decimal reading is very frequent in PTE charts, especially for percentages, averages, and growth rates.

The rule is:

  • Read the decimal point as point
  • Read the digits after the decimal point one by one

For example:

  • 3.14 = three point one four
  • 2.05 = two point zero five
  • 7.8 = seven point eight
  • 0.6 = zero point six

Note that you should not read the digits after the decimal point according to integer logic (like "fourteen", "zero five"); you must separate them digit by digit.

If the question includes a percentage, you can say it directly:

  • 37.5% = thirty-seven point five percent
  • 12.08% = twelve point zero eight percent

VI. How to Read Years?

Years are common in DI, RL, and general speaking. Many students know the rules but get chaotic under pressure.

1. Regular Years

Usually read as two-digit pairs:

  • 1852 = eighteen fifty-two
  • 1976 = nineteen seventy-six
  • 1989 = nineteen eighty-nine

2. Century Years

If the last two digits are 00, read it as:

  • 1800 = eighteen hundred
  • 1900 = nineteen hundred
  • 2000 = two thousand

Note that 2000 is a high-frequency special case; the most stable reading is two thousand.

3. Common Readings for Years after 2000

For example:

  • 2005 = twenty oh five
  • 2008 = twenty oh eight
  • 2014 = twenty fourteen
  • 2026 = twenty twenty-six

More formally, you could say:

  • 2005 = two thousand and five

However, in PTE Speaking, if you want shorter, smoother expressions, twenty oh five is often more practical.

4. Cross-Years (Year Ranges)

When a year range appears, use to in the middle.

For example:

  • 2015-16 = twenty fifteen to sixteen
  • 1998-99 = nineteen ninety-eight to ninety-nine
  • 2001-2003 = two thousand one to two thousand three

Do not skip the beginning if it crosses a century:

  • 1999-2000 = nineteen ninety-nine to two thousand

VII. The Two Most Common Pitfalls

1. Confusing Teens and Tens

This is the most common "accident site" in PTE number reading.

For instance:

  • fifteen vs fifty
  • eighteen vs eighty

If you confuse them when nervous, this is fatal in DI. Because once a chart shows multiple consecutive numbers, your rhythm will scatter immediately.

A simple mnemonic is:

  • -teen is usually longer and more stressed
  • -ty is shorter and faster

But the truly effective method is not "understanding" but practicing your mouth until it becomes automatic.

2. Chaotic "And" Usage

Many people add and at every level, such as:

  • eight thousand and three hundred and fifty-six

While this is understandable, it easily causes your own reading to become messy. In the exam, consistency and stability are paramount, not demonstrating an exhaustive knowledge of grammatical details.

A more stable way is:

  • eight thousand three hundred and fifty-six

VIII. Should You Read All Numbers in DI?

It is not recommended.

This is the point that many candidates need to correct most.

In PTE Describe Image, the machine prioritizes whether your overall output is smooth, clear, and structurally complete, rather than whether you accurately announce every single number.

Therefore, the more practical principle is:

  • Read only 2-3 key numbers.
  • Prioritize the maximum, minimum, or obvious changes.
  • Approximate unstable numbers directly.

For example, if the chart shows 19,873, you don't need to force the exact value. You can directly say:

  • about twenty thousand
  • around twenty thousand
  • approximately twenty thousand

If there is 49.86%, it is entirely acceptable to simplify it to:

  • about fifty percent

This is not laziness; it is a test strategy.

Because in PTE, stalling on exact numbers to sacrifice fluency is a bigger loss than scoring an approximation.

IX. Practical Phrasing for Numbers in DI

Here are some of the most commonly used sentence patterns to facilitate direct migration into DI.

Describing the Maximum

  • The highest figure is about twenty thousand.
  • The peak is seen in 2019, at around thirty-seven percent.

Describing the Minimum

  • The lowest value is roughly five hundred.
  • The smallest proportion is about twelve percent.
  • The figure rises from ten to twenty-five.
  • It increases from 2005 to 2010.
  • There is a gradual decline after 2018.

Describing a Year Range

  • From twenty fifteen to sixteen, the number increased slightly.
  • Between nineteen ninety-eight and ninety-nine, the rate remained stable.

You will find that the truly high-frequency expressions aren't complex, but these short, stable, and let-you-gasps sentences.

X. 7-Day Number Special Training Plan

If you want to patch up the number section quickly, practice at this pace.

Day 1-2: Basic Number Automation

  • Focus on 0-19
  • Focus on multiples of ten 20-90
  • Specifically contrast thirteen/thirty, fifteen/fifty, eighteen/eighty

Goal: See a number and your mouth doesn't need to think in Chinese first.

Day 3-4: Three-Digit, Four-Digit Numbers, and Decimals

  • Practice 105, 354, 598
  • Practice 4,007, 7,020, 8,356
  • Practice 3.14, 12.08, 37.5%

Goal: Do not stutter when reading complex numbers.

Day 5: Years and Cross-Years

  • Practice 1900, 1998, 2005, 2014, 2026
  • Practice 2015-16, 1998-99, 2001-2003

Goal: Never split years on the spot.

Day 6: Read inside DI Templates

Stop isolating numbers. Directly plug numbers into sentence patterns, for example:

  • The highest figure is about thirty-eight percent.
  • The value increased from twenty fourteen to twenty eighteen.

Goal: Let number reading serve the answer, not停留在单词表层面.

Day 7: Timed Training

Find 10 DI charts and require yourself to:

  • Say only 2-3 numbers per question.
  • Prioritize approximation.
  • Do not self-correct.

Goal: Upgrade "knowing how to read" to "stably reading in the exam".

XI. How to Read Numbers Smoothly Faster with Youshow PTE?

If you practice numbers alone, your biggest problem is usually not "lacking materials" but not knowing exactly where you are stuck:

  • Is the pronunciation inaccurate?
  • Do you hesitate when seeing numbers?
  • Does your rhythm get messy as soon as the sentence starts?

On the Youshow PTE platform, which supports AI speech scoring, you can identify problems faster:

  • Use DI and RA to practice articulacy, turning number reading into a reflex.
  • Use AI scoring to check fluency and pronunciation, rather than relying solely on feeling.
  • Use high-frequency chart questions to repeatedly practice the "approximate numbers + fixed sentence patterns" combination.
  • Use continuous practice to observe if you slow down when encountering years or decimals.

Mastering number reading isn't the ultimate goal; the goal is to ensure you don't let numbers drag down your entire answer in the actual exam.

FAQ

Do I have to read out all numbers in PTE DI?

No. Prioritize key numbers, especially the maximum, minimum, and significant turning points. It is acceptable to approximate when you are unstable.

Can I read decimals as integers?

No. You must read the digits after the decimal point one by one (e.g., 3.14 is three point one four).

Should I read 2005 as "twenty oh five" or "two thousand and five"?

Both are used by some people, but in PTE Speaking, twenty oh five is often shorter and smoother, making it more suitable for time-limited output.

Will I get zero points in DI just because I misread one number?

Usually not. However, if you stop, restart, or repeatedly correct yourself due to a misread, you will likely lose Fluency.

Conclusion

Many students find that what drags down their PTE Speaking performance isn't a lack of content knowledge, but imprecise number reading automation.

Especially in Describe Image, a task with high information density in a short time, the more you try to read numbers "perfectly," the more likely you are to destroy the fluency of the paragraph. The truly effective strategy is:

  • Drill basic numbers until they are second nature.
  • Breakthrough years and decimals separately.
  • In DI, prioritize reading key numbers.
  • Approximate when you aren't stable.

Once you get these smoothed out, you will find that you aren't suddenly "better at English," but that you are finally no longer losing points simply because of a few numbers.

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