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Grammar Exercise – Will or Going to
Do the exercise below on Will or Going To and click the button to check your answers.
(Before doing the exercises, you may want to read the lessons on the future simple and future plan )
If you need a quick review of the difference between will and going to, jump to the review section at the end of this post!
Will or Going to exercise with Answers

Exercise Instructions
In this exercise, select the correct option (will or going to) from the drop-down menu to complete each sentence appropriately. Focus on whether the sentence expresses a spontaneous decision, prediction, or planned action.
Will or Going to Quiz
Grammar Summary: Will vs Going to
Will
- Used for spontaneous decisions, promises, or predictions based on opinion. It is also used in first conditional sentences
Example: I’ll help you with that.
Going to
- Used for planned actions or predictions based on evidence.
Example: It’s going to rain; look at those clouds.
(Tip: If it’s decided now, use will. If it’s already planned or evident, use going to.)


