Free Typing Speed Test

Measure your WPM, accuracy, and consistency — no login required

Mode
Difficulty
Duration
Sounds
Off
Backspace
On
Keyboard
60s
WPM
Accuracy

How to Improve Your Typing Speed

Typing speed improves fastest with targeted daily practice, not just volume. Follow these steps:

  1. Run a baseline 60-second test — know your starting WPM before you try to improve it
  2. Check the key error heatmap — most typists have 2–3 problem keys causing the majority of errors
  3. Drill those specific keys — targeted repetition builds muscle memory faster than general practice
  4. Prioritise accuracy first — slow down until you consistently hit 95%+ accuracy, then increase speed
  5. Track your consistency score — steady 45 WPM beats a 60 WPM that drops to 30 halfway through
  6. Practice 20–30 minutes daily — short daily sessions outperform long irregular ones every time

What is a Good Typing Speed?

Average typing speed is around 40 WPM for casual typists. Professional typists typically range from 65–75 WPM. For government exams like SSC CGL and SSC CHSL, the minimum required speed is 35 WPM. A speed of 50+ WPM with above 95% accuracy is considered proficient for most office and data entry work. Advanced typists exceed 80 WPM. If you are preparing for a government exam, aim to consistently score 42–45 WPM in practice — exam nerves cause a slight drop, so a buffer is important.

Understanding Your Results

  • Net WPM — correctly typed words per minute. Your real score — the one that matters.
  • Gross WPM — total words typed per minute, ignoring errors. Shows your raw speed ceiling.
  • Accuracy — percentage of words typed without any mistake. A word is wrong if even one character is off.
  • Consistency — how steady your speed was across every 10-second interval. Higher is better.
  • Mistyped Keys — the characters you got wrong most often. Focus your practice here for the fastest gains.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good typing speed in WPM?

The average typing speed is around 40 WPM for casual typists. Professional typists typically type between 65–75 WPM. Speeds above 80 WPM are considered advanced. For government exams like SSC CGL and SSC CHSL, the minimum required speed is 35 WPM. A consistent 50+ WPM with above 95% accuracy is considered proficient for most office and data entry work.

What is the difference between gross WPM and net WPM?

Gross WPM is your raw typing speed — the total number of words typed per minute regardless of errors. Net WPM deducts mistakes and reflects only the correctly typed words per minute. Net WPM is always the score that matters in typing tests and government exams. For example, if you type 55 gross WPM but make errors on 5 words, your net WPM is 50.

How is typing accuracy calculated?

Accuracy is the percentage of words you typed correctly out of total words attempted. A word is counted as correct only when every character matches exactly. For example, if you typed 90 words and 85 were correct, your accuracy is 94.4%. High accuracy matters more than raw speed because errors cost you net WPM and in exam conditions cannot be corrected.

What does the consistency score mean?

Consistency measures how steady your typing speed was across the entire test, calculated from your WPM in each 10-second interval. A higher consistency percentage means your speed was stable throughout — no big spikes or drops. Consistent speed is more valuable than a high peak that quickly falls. Aim for above 80% consistency for reliable performance.

How can I improve my typing speed quickly?

The fastest way to improve is focused daily practice of 20–30 minutes. Use the heatmap after each test to identify your most mistyped keys and drill those specifically. Prioritise accuracy over speed — slow down until you stop making mistakes, then gradually increase speed. Practice touch typing with home-row finger positioning and resist looking at the keyboard. Most people see measurable improvement within 2–3 weeks of consistent practice.

Which test duration should I use for practice?

Use 15 or 30 seconds to warm up and identify problem keys quickly. The 60-second test is the best all-round benchmark — long enough to be meaningful, short enough to repeat often. Use the 120-second test to build stamina and simulate longer exam conditions like SSC CGL (10 minutes) or SSC CHSL (15 minutes).