🧳 TOEIC Exam Day Belongings List: Facing the Test with Zero Forgotten Items
Forget test-day panic. Discover MTC's essential TOEIC exam day checklist for belongings, nutrition, and mindset. Pack smart the night before to ensure a calm morning and peak performance.
You know you should pack the night before.
But will you?
More than one test taker has woken up early on exam day, only to realise they forgot their test voucher, their ID… or even worse — their confidence.
Let’s fix that.
This isn’t just a packing list. It’s your calm-before-the-storm checklist — a small habit that makes a big difference.
✅ The Calm-Test-Day Checklist
Here’s what you actually need to bring — and why it matters:
1. Your Test Voucher (受験票)
No voucher = no entry. It happens more often than you think. Put it in a clear file and pack it first.
2. Valid Photo ID
The name must match your TOEIC registration exactly. Double-check expiration dates too.
Accepted: Driver’s license, passport, or My Number card — but always check official guidelines in advance.
3. Pencils (x2) and Eraser
Standard #2 or HB pencils (not mechanical).
Bring at least two — both sharpened — and a reliable eraser that won’t smudge or tear the paper.
4. Analog Wristwatch (Not a Smartwatch)
Phones and digital timers are off-limits. A simple analog watch is your best pacing tool — especially in Part 7.
Set quiet mental checkpoints (e.g. “Part 5 done by 10:10”) and check in as you go.
5. Nutrition for Mental Focus
We recommend a banana and a small bottle of electrolyte drink (like Pocari Sweat or Aquarius).
The goal: steady blood sugar and hydration.
Think: calm, stable, marathon energy — not a sugar spike followed by a crash.
6. Light Jacket or Cardigan
Test centres can be chilly — especially in summer when the air conditioning is strong.
Bring a layer, even if it’s warm outside. You don’t want to shiver through Part 7.
7. Eye Drops or Tissues
Dry eyes from AC? Runny nose from nerves or allergies? It happens.
You won’t be allowed to leave often, so bring a small pack of tissues and eye drops just in case.
8. Quiet Good Luck Charm (if that’s your thing)
A small item — a charm from a shrine, a pebble in your pocket, a note from someone who believes in you.
Sometimes it’s not superstition — it’s stability. And it reminds you: you’re not alone.
🌅 Pack the Night Before = Calm the Morning Of
One of the simplest ways to reduce test anxiety?
Pack everything the night before.
Lay it all out on your desk or dining table.
🎒 Clear file
✏️ Pencils and eraser
🪪 ID
⏰ Watch
🥤 Drink + snack
🧥 Jacket
🍀 (Optional) Lucky charm
When your bag is ready, your brain rests better.
You’ll sleep deeper, wake up calmer, and walk into the test without that frantic “Did I forget something?” panic that drains mental energy.
🧠 Bonus Tip: Prepare Your Brain Too
The TOEIC exam doesn’t start when they say, “Begin.”
It starts the moment you wake up — how you eat, how you move, how you breathe.
So:
Eat breakfast.
Walk slowly.
Check your belongings one last time.
And take one deep, steadying breath before you enter.
You’ve got this.
And now… you’re packed for it too.
TOEIC Nerves? Here’s How to Stay Calm and Perform at Your Best
You know the answers, but freeze on TOEIC test day. Discover why nervousness makes you blank, and learn MTC's strategies to prepare your mind, stay calm, and perform at your best.
You know the feeling.
You’ve studied. You’ve practiced. You know the material.
But the morning of the TOEIC test arrives… and suddenly, your heart won’t stop pounding.
You forget everything. You panic. And you walk out thinking,
“I knew that answer… why couldn’t I say it?”
Nervousness doesn’t mean you’re unprepared.
It just means you’ve never been taught how to prepare your mind — not just your memory.
Let’s change that.
🚨 Why You Freeze — Even When You Know the Answer
Your brain is designed for survival.
In a calm state, you can remember what you studied, think clearly, and make decisions.
But under stress? Your brain switches into “fight, flight, or freeze.”
And that’s exactly what happens on test day.
For many learners, the TOEIC test environment feels threatening — not because of the test itself, but because of everything riding on the score:
A job interview
A promotion
A chance to study abroad
The end of a long study journey
So when you sit down to take the test, your brain is flooded with adrenaline and stress.
And what do we know about adrenaline?
It shuts down the prefrontal cortex — the part of your brain responsible for calm thinking and memory retrieval.
Translation?
You blank. You guess. You panic. And worst of all… you blame yourself.
🛠️ How to Stay Calm and Take Back Control
Let’s get practical.
Here are four techniques that My TOEIC Coach uses to help students stay grounded and perform at their best:
1. Rehearse the Day Before
One major source of stress is uncertainty. So remove it.
Pack everything the night before
Set out your clothes, test voucher, ID, and stationery
Set two alarms
Decide what time you’ll leave
Visualise yourself arriving, checking in, and sitting down
If your brain knows the path, it doesn’t panic.
2. Treat It Like a Marathon
Would you run a marathon on an empty stomach?
Before the test, fuel your brain like an athlete:
A banana and a small electrolyte drink give you potassium and stable energy
Avoid sugar crashes or skipping breakfast
Don’t over-caffeinate — you want energy, not jitters
3. Anchor Yourself Physically
When you feel panic rise, use your body to reset your brain:
Place both feet flat on the floor
Sit upright, hands resting on your thighs
Inhale for 4 seconds, hold for 4, exhale for 6
Repeat 3 times
This shifts your nervous system from “fight or flight” to “rest and focus.”
4. Use a Grounding Phrase
Just before the test begins, whisper to yourself:
“I’ve done what I can. I’m ready to show it.”
This isn't positive thinking. It's alignment.
You’re reminding your brain that this is your moment — and that you’re allowed to succeed.
🔁 Bonus: Practice Under Test Conditions
The more your practice feels like the real thing, the calmer you’ll be.
That’s why at My TOEIC Coach, we simulate real test environments in coaching:
Timed sections
Background noise
“One shot” answering rules
So when the real day comes, your body says, “I know this.”
And confidence takes over.
🌱 Final Thought
Being nervous doesn’t mean you’re weak. It means you care.
But caring without a strategy leads to panic.
With the right tools — and a coach who understands — your nerves can become focus, and your preparation can finally turn into progress.
You don’t need to fight the fear.
You just need to train your brain to breathe through it.