Get Free Quote

⌨️ Typing Speed Test β€” Check Your WPM and Accuracy

Type the sentence below as fast and accurately as you can. The timer starts on your first keystroke.

0
WPM
100%
Accuracy
0s
Time

This free typing speed test measures your words per minute (WPM) and accuracy live, the instant your first keystroke starts the clock. Type the sample sentence, watch your speed climb in real time, hit New Sentence for a fresh passage, and repeat to track your improvement. Whether you are benchmarking for a job application, prepping for a data-entry assessment, or just trying to beat your personal best, this online typing test gives you an honest number every attempt β€” no sign-up, no ads between you and the keyboard, nothing stored.

Typing speed is one of those quiet skills that compounds across everything you do at a computer. A few extra words per minute means faster emails, faster reports, and less friction between the thought in your head and the words on the screen. This test is where that improvement starts β€” and it takes under a minute per run.

What a Typing Speed Test Measures and How WPM Works

A typing speed test is a timed assessment of how quickly and accurately you can reproduce a given passage. WPM stands for words per minute, and there is a subtlety most people miss: a "word" is not an actual word. For measurement purposes, one word is standardised as five characters including spaces, regardless of how long the real words are. As the words-per-minute standard explains, this five-character definition keeps scores comparable no matter which sentence you type.

The formula this tool uses is: (correct characters Γ· 5) Γ· minutes elapsed = WPM. Crucially, only correctly typed characters count toward your score. Mistakes drag your effective WPM down, which is exactly why speed and accuracy are tracked side by side β€” a blazing raw speed riddled with errors is slower, in practice, than a steady clean one.

How to Take the Test

  1. Read the sample sentence above the text box and scan it before you begin.
  2. Click inside the box and start typing it exactly as shown.
  3. The timer starts automatically on your first keystroke β€” there is no manual start.
  4. Type to the end. Correct characters turn green; errors show in red as you go.
  5. Watch your WPM, accuracy, and time update live in the metrics below the box.
  6. Click New Sentence to reset and try again with a different passage.

Every metric updates on each keystroke, so you can see your current pace at any moment without waiting for the run to finish.

What Is a Good Typing Speed? WPM Benchmarks

A raw WPM number means little without context, so here is where scores actually sit. The widely cited global average is around 40 WPM, and 45–60 WPM is generally considered good:

  • Under 30 WPM β€” beginner, usually hunt-and-peck or two-finger typing.
  • 30–40 WPM β€” below average; fine for casual use, slow for professional work.
  • 40–50 WPM β€” the average range for most adults.
  • 50–60 WPM β€” above average, comfortable for most office roles.
  • 60–80 WPM β€” professional level, expected of skilled typists and writers.
  • 80–100+ WPM β€” expert territory: competitive typists, programmers, and highly practised touch typists.

Accuracy sits alongside speed in every serious benchmark. Professional standards typically demand 95–98% accuracy, not just raw pace β€” a 70 WPM score at 90% accuracy is often rated below a 60 WPM score at 99%. Chase clean typing first and speed tends to follow.

Typing Speed by Profession

Many jobs carry an unspoken β€” or explicitly tested β€” typing requirement. Rough expectations by role:

  • Data entry β€” commonly 60–80 WPM with 98%+ accuracy, since throughput is the whole job.
  • Administrative and clerical β€” government exams often set 40–50 WPM; private-sector roles frequently expect 55–65 WPM.
  • Transcription β€” 70–90 WPM for keyboard transcriptionists; court reporters work far faster on specialised stenograph machines.
  • Writing and journalism β€” often 60–90 WPM, simply from hours at the keyboard.
  • Software development β€” around 55–70 WPM; coding involves plenty of thinking between keystrokes, so raw speed matters less.

If your score falls short of a role you are targeting, focused daily practice can usually close a 10–15 WPM gap within a few weeks.

Touch Typing β€” The Skill Behind Fast Typing

The biggest single improvement most typists can make is learning to touch type β€” typing without looking at the keyboard. Touch typing is built on home-row muscle memory: the left hand rests on A-S-D-F, the right on J-K-L-semicolon, and fingers reach out to nearby keys while the eyes stay on the screen. A test like this quickly reveals whether you are truly typing from memory or still glancing down to confirm each key.

The speed gap is dramatic. Hunt-and-peck typists usually plateau around 30–40 WPM, while consistent touch typists routinely reach 60–80 WPM. When you first switch over, your speed drops β€” that is normal and temporary. Resist the urge to look down, trust your fingers, and accept early mistakes as part of the process. Speed follows accuracy, never the reverse.

How to Improve Your Typing Speed

  • Short daily sessions beat occasional long ones. Ten focused minutes a day builds speed faster than an hour once a week.
  • Prioritise accuracy over raw speed. Racing through errors trains bad habits; slow down until you type cleanly, then let pace build naturally.
  • Target your weak keys. Notice which letters and combinations slow you down and drill those deliberately.
  • Track your progress. Take this test regularly and note your WPM and accuracy β€” visible improvement is one of the strongest motivators to keep going.
  • Fix your posture. Per OSHA's computer-workstation ergonomics guidance, a supported back, neutral wrists, and a screen at eye level reduce fatigue and let you type longer without strain.

Using This Test to Prepare for an Employer Assessment

Plenty of employers run a typing assessment during hiring, especially for administrative, data-entry, legal, medical-transcription, and customer-service roles. This free test is an ideal practice ground: the sentence-based format mirrors what most formal assessments use, so you can rehearse under similar conditions, measure your improvement in the weeks before an application, and walk into the real thing with the number already in hand. Run it a few times a day, watch your average climb, and build the muscle memory that carries over to the assessment.

Want to sharpen your wider writing workflow while you are here? Pair this with our word counter for hitting length targets, and browse the full free tools hub for more practical, no-sign-up utilities.

Come back tomorrow and beat today's score. This is one of many free tools we build and keep free at Arb Digital. Explore the full free tools collection, or see what our team does with web design and content marketing when the project is bigger than a keyboard.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good typing speed in WPM?

For general use, 40–55 WPM is average and 55–70 WPM is comfortably professional. Data-entry and administrative roles typically expect 50–70 WPM with 95%+ accuracy. Anything above 80 WPM places you in the top tier of general typists.

How is WPM calculated in this typing test?

WPM equals (correct characters Γ· 5) Γ· elapsed minutes. One standard "word" is five characters including spaces, which keeps scores comparable across different sentences. Only correctly typed characters count toward your result.

What is the average typing speed?

The global average is roughly 40 WPM with moderate accuracy. Regular computer users and office workers typically reach 50–60 WPM, while writers, programmers, and trained typists often hit 70–90 WPM through consistent practice and touch typing.

How can I check my typing speed regularly?

Take this test daily β€” each run takes under a minute and tracks WPM and accuracy live. Note your score after each session and aim to add 2–3 WPM per week through short, focused practice. Small daily gains compound quickly.

Does this typing test work on mobile?

Yes, it runs in mobile browsers with touch keyboards. However, scores on a touchscreen are usually lower than on a physical keyboard, since touch typing relies on tactile keys and muscle memory built on hardware. For accurate benchmarking, use a physical keyboard.

How does accuracy affect my WPM score?

Directly. Only correct characters count toward WPM, so errors lower your effective speed even if your fingers are moving fast. That is why the test shows accuracy alongside speed β€” clean typing at a steady pace usually beats fast typing full of mistakes.

Is this typing speed test free and unlimited?

Yes β€” completely free, with no sign-up, no account, and no limits. Click New Sentence as often as you like. All results are shown in your browser and nothing is stored or transmitted anywhere.