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IB History — Complete Exam Guide (SL & HL)

IB History is one of the most popular Group 3 subjects, offering students the chance to study significant historical events, movements, and leaders from the 20th century and beyond. The course develops critical thinking, source evaluation, and essay-writing skills.

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BACC Education Team

IB Diploma Exam Specialists

Last updated: April 2026IB HistoryIB History examIB History SL

69/100

Difficulty

15+

Study Articles

6

FAQs Answered

SL & HL

Levels

What is IB History?

IB History is a Group 3 (Individuals & Societies) subject available at both Standard Level (SL) and Higher Level (HL). It develops critical thinking, research skills, and the ability to evaluate evidence and arguments.

The course is structured around key concepts and encourages students to examine history through multiple perspectives and lenses.

Exam Structure

Paper 1: Source-Based (1h, 25%)

  • Prescribed subject — analyze a set of primary and secondary sources
  • 4 structured questions testing comprehension, analysis, comparison, and evaluation

Paper 2: Essay (1h30min, 45%)

  • Choose 2 essays from a choice of world history topics
  • Topics include Authoritarian States, Conflicts, and Movements

Paper 3 (HL only): Essay (2h30min, 35%)

  • 3 essays on regional history option (e.g., History of Europe, Americas, Asia)

Internal Assessment: Historical Investigation (2,200 words, SL: 25%, HL: 20%)

  • Independent research investigation on a historical question

Assessment Weight Distribution

SL vs HL Comparison

The key differences between SL and HL are the number of papers, depth of content, and teaching hours (150 for SL, 240 for HL). HL requires additional analytical depth and often covers more content areas.

Difficulty Analysis

IB History is rated at approximately 72/100 difficulty. It is among the more challenging Group 3 subjects.

Key challenges include essay-writing under timed conditions, managing large volumes of content, and developing strong analytical arguments.

69/100

Overall Difficulty

Component Difficulty

Global Grade Distribution (Approximate %)

How to Prepare for IB History

1. Master the Content

Create comprehensive notes organized by topic. Use mind maps and summaries for revision.

2. Practice Essay Writing

Write timed essays weekly. Focus on structure, evidence, and evaluation.

3. Learn Source Analysis

For Paper 1 (where applicable), practice OPVL analysis and source comparison.

4. Use Past Papers

Work through past papers under timed conditions. Study mark schemes to understand examiner expectations.

5. Use BACC Education

Our practice questions cover every topic with detailed explanations and model approaches.

Recommended Study Time Allocation

Study Timeline

12 months before

Complete class notes, begin topic summaries

9 months

Weekly essay practice, past papers

6 months

Complete IA, intensive revision

3 months

Full timed papers weekly

1 month

Focus on weak topics

1 week

Review key terms and arguments

Scoring & Grades

IB History grades follow the 1–7 scale. Global averages are typically around 4.5–5.2. Grade boundaries vary by exam session and paper difficulty.

How examiners distinguish strong answers

For Individuals and Societies subjects, examiners separate mid-band and high-band answers through argument quality. Strong work does more than define concepts or describe events. It selects evidence, organizes judgment clearly, and evaluates significance, causation, perspectives, or policy implications in a way that directly answers the command term.

One practical implication is that revision has to be evidence-based. Do not judge your preparation only by how familiar the material feels when you read notes. Judge it by the quality of the work you can produce without support. If you cannot yet generate a clear answer, explanation, argument, or reflection under realistic conditions, then the topic is not secure no matter how recognizable it seems. That mindset is important because many IB students confuse recognition with readiness and discover the gap too late. Because History is available at both SL and HL, students should also review the level comparison carefully and make sure their revision intensity matches the depth required by their chosen path.

A weekly study system that actually works

The most reliable routine is a three-part cycle: build concise knowledge notes, convert them into issue-based plans or case-study banks, and then apply them in timed essays or data questions. That system keeps content, examples, and structure linked together so revision transfers effectively into marks.

An effective week usually includes four elements. First, one session for consolidation: review notes, definitions, examples, or models and make sure the fundamentals are clear. Second, one session for application: answer questions, plan essays, annotate texts, solve problems, or refine coursework depending on the subject. Third, one session for feedback: compare your performance with criteria, model answers, or markschemes and identify exactly where marks are being lost. Fourth, one short session for retrieval: return to the same material a few days later and prove that the improvement stuck. This cycle is simple, but it scales well across the full school year and gives you a better chance of peaking at the right time.

How to use these guides strategically

Use the main guide when you need the full syllabus picture and the mini articles when a single weakness is dragging scores down. If timed essays are weak, choose essay-structure resources. If evidence is weak, choose case-study or concept guides. Precision beats generic hard work.

The most effective students do not read every resource at the same depth. They diagnose what they need, choose the right level of detail, and then turn reading into action quickly. For example, if you are unclear on the full course structure, the anchor guide should come first. If you already understand the course but keep missing marks on one recurring weakness, a mini article is the better tool. That distinction matters because efficient revision is not about doing more. It is about choosing the smallest next action that improves performance. When used well, the anchor article gives you the big-picture map, while the mini guides help you close specific skill gaps one by one.

Career Paths with IB History

  • History
  • Law
  • Journalism
  • International Relations
  • Diplomacy
  • Civil Service
  • Museum/Heritage work
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Research

Career Pathways

History

Law

Journalism

International Relations

Diplomacy

Civil Service

Museum/Heritage work

Politics

Education

Research

Tips from Top Scorers

  • "Start your IA early." — The IA is a significant portion of your grade.
  • "Structure every essay." — Introduction, body paragraphs with PEEL, conclusion.
  • "Use specific examples." — Vague references won't score well.
  • "Evaluate, don't just describe." — Higher-order thinking gets higher marks.

Ready to Practice IB History?

Try our practice questions with detailed explanations. 30 free questions — no sign-up required.

Start Practising Free

Frequently Asked Questions about IB History

Is IB History hard?

IB History requires strong essay-writing skills and the ability to analyze evidence critically. With consistent practice, most students achieve good grades.

What's the difference between History SL and HL?

HL covers more content, includes additional papers, and requires greater analytical depth. HL has 240 teaching hours vs 150 for SL.

How is the IA structured in IB History?

The IA is an independent research project (typically 1,500–2,200 words) where you investigate a specific question using primary and/or secondary sources.

What careers can IB History lead to?

History, Law, Journalism, International Relations, Diplomacy, Civil Service, Museum/Heritage work, Politics, Education, Research

How should I prepare for the essays?

Practice writing timed essays weekly, use past paper questions, study mark schemes, and develop a structured approach (introduction, analysis paragraphs, evaluation, conclusion).

How many hours should I study per week?

For SL, aim for 3-4 hours. For HL, 5-6 hours including essay practice, content review, and past papers.