Grammar Essentials: Tense Consistency
Tense consistency means keeping your verb tenses aligned so time is clear and stable. This guide explains when to use past, present, and future, how to stay consistent inside sentences and paragraphs, and how to handle common IELTS tasks (Task 1 / 2, Speaking narrative, Listening notes). Includes easy rules, error patterns, before/after fixes, time-line cues, conditionals, reported speech, and short drills to build automatic control.
What “tense consistency” means
Keep your verbs in the same time frame unless there’s a real reason to change them. Shifts in tense should follow a change in time - not mood.
Core idea: Choose a time anchor → keep it → change only when the time changes.
Quick rules (use these first)
- One paragraph = one main time (past, present, or future).
- Only shift when time shifts (use a clear signal word).
- After past reporting verbs, keep the verb in the past unless the fact is still true.
- In conditionals, each type has fixed tense pairs (see below).
- In summaries, use present; in methods/history, use past.
The three anchors
- Present: facts, habits, general truths, current opinions.
- “Public transport reduces congestion.”
- Past: completed events at a known time.
- “The policy launched in 2018 and increased revenue in 2019.”
- Future: plans, predictions, schedules.
- “The city will expand the line next year.”
Tip: In academic / Task 2, use the present for general arguments. In Task 1 (graphs), match the time on the chart.
Spotting inconsistency (and fixing it)
1) Random past→present inside one event
- ❌ “I visited the museum and learn a lot.”
- ✅ “I visited the museum and learned a lot.”
2) Present facts mixed with past examples
- ❌ “Online learning is effective and improved test scores last year.”
- ✅ “Online learning is effective and has improved test scores in recent years.” (present + present perfect for recent evidence)
3) Task 1 time mismatch
- ❌ “In 2000 the population increases to 4 million.”
- ✅ “In 2000 the population increased to 4 million.”
- If the chart has no time: use present simple (“The largest segment is…”).
4) Story/narrative switch (Speaking Part 2)
- ❌ “I was walking to class and suddenly my friend calls me.”
- ✅ “I was walking to class and suddenly my friend called me.”
5) Research summaries
- Use present simple for what the study shows generally.
- ✅ “The study shows that…”
- Use past for what researchers did.
- ✅ “The researchers collected 200 samples.”
Present perfect vs past simple (most-tested pair)
- Past simple: finished time word (yesterday, in 2019, last week).
- “Sales increased in 2019.”
- Present perfect: life-time/unfinished time (since, over the last decade, recently) or result-now.
- “Sales have increased since 2019.”
Check: If you can point to a completed time, use past simple. If the period connects to now, use present perfect.
Conditionals (keep the pair together)
- Zero (facts): If + present, present.
- “If water reaches 100°C, it boils.”
- First (real future): If + present, will + base.
- “If it rains, we will cancel.”
- Second (unreal present): If + past, would + base.
- “If I had more time, I would read daily.”
- Third (unreal past): If + past perfect, would have + V3.
- “If I had revised, I would have scored higher.”
Don’t mix: “If I had more time, I will read.” → would read.
Reported speech (sequence of tenses)
When the reporting verb is past (said, told, reported), backshift if the information is time-bound:
- Direct: “I am tired.” → Reported: “He said he was tired.”
- Direct: “I will come.” → Reported: “She said she would come.”
But keep present if the fact is still true:
- “The Earth orbits the Sun.” → “He said the Earth orbits the Sun.”
IELTS Task guidance
Task 2 (essay)
- Use present simple for claims: “Governments should invest…”
- Use present perfect or past for evidence/examples:
- “Many cities have introduced bike lanes.” / “Paris launched them in 2015.”
Task 1 (Academic)
- Past data on the chart → past simple: “Unemployment fell in 2012.”
- Up to now trend → present perfect: “Rates have fallen since 2019.”
- No time axis → present simple: “The largest share is….”
Speaking
- Past stories: past (+ past continuous/past perfect if needed).
- Opinions/habits: present.
- Plans: going to/will with future time words.
Mini checklist (before you submit)
- What is my time anchor in this paragraph?
- Did I shift tense only when time changed?
- Task 1: Does my tense match the chart’s time?
- Did I keep conditional pairs and reported speech consistent?
- Any finished-time words with present perfect? Fix them.
Before/After fixes (copy style)
Task 2 example
- ❌ “Many people prefer remote work and preferred it during the pandemic.”
- ✅ “Many people prefer remote work and preferred it during the pandemic.” (general truth + past event)
Task 1 example
- ❌ “From 2010 to 2020, the rate has increased sharply.”
- ✅ “From 2010 to 2020, the rate increased sharply.” (finished period → past simple)
Speaking story
- ❌ “I arrive at the station and realized I forgot my card.”
- ✅ “I arrived at the station and realized I had forgotten my card.”
10-minute drill (build the habit)
- Underline time words in one paragraph.
- Circle verbs and check each tense against the time word.
- Fix any mismatch.
- Turn one fix into a rule (write it in your notebook).
- Do the same for a short Task 1 and a short Task 2 paragraph tomorrow.
Common time signals (use as cues)
Past: yesterday, last year, in 2018, from 2010–2015, ago, then
Present: generally, nowadays, usually, currently, at present
Present perfect: since, for, over the last X years, recently, so far
Future: tomorrow, next year, soon, by 2030, in the coming months
Self-check quiz (5 quick items)
- In 2019 the company (launch) a new app.
- Rates (fall) since 2020.
- If demand rises, prices (increase).
- She said she (come) later.
- I (walk) home when it started to rain.
Answers: 1) launched 2) have fallen 3) will increase 4) would come 5) was walking
Final tips
- Pick a tense for each paragraph before you write.
- Read your draft once only for tenses.
- Add your best 3 “golden rules” to the top of your notebook.