But once the exam is over and the results arrive on a scale of 0 to 100, one burning question haunts candidates:

The most important number is not the average, but your own progress. Use these statistics to set realistic goals, target your weak points, and remember: the DELF B2 is a pass/fail exam first. Everything above 50 is a victory. The 68 is simply the flavor of the majority. Have you taken the DELF B2? Share your score and section breakdown in the comments—help us update the unofficial global average!

| Score Range | Grade | Frequency | Interpretation | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | 0-49 | Fail | ~15-20% | Insufficient; cannot function independently. | | 50-59 | Passable (low pass) | ~30% | Barely autonomous; many "scrape by." | | | Assez bien | ~35% | THE AVERAGE ZONE – Solid B2. | | 70-79 | Bien | ~12% | Strong B2; ready for B2+ or C1 prep. | | 80-89 | Très bien | ~5% | Exceptional; likely ready for C1. | | 90-100 | Rare | <1% | Near-native; often native speakers or advanced teachers. |

"A score of 50 is the same as a 68." False. A 50/100 often means one section (usually oral production) was nearly failing (e.g., 6/25). A 68/100 indicates balanced competence across all skills. For university admissions, a 68 is viewed with confidence; a 50 invites scrutiny.

If you scored around 68, you are in the heart of the bell curve: you are exactly what a B2 French speaker looks like. If you scored lower, target the speaking and listening sections. If you scored higher, congratulations—the C1 level is waiting.