Typing Speed Test

Cleaner controls, bigger vocabulary variety, long-practice options, and a more polished typing space built for focused, repeatable improvement.

Training Rules

Numbers & SymbolsMix punctuation and digits.
Focus ModeReduce distractions.

Custom Practice Text

Paste your own article, coding prompt, or exam paragraph and practice against exactly that content.

Time
30
Raw
0
Net
0
Accuracy
100%
Streak
0
Errors
0
Click here or start typing...
Tab restart test
Esc
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6
F7
F8
F9
F10
F11
F12
~`
!1
@2
#3
$4
%5
^6
&7
*8
(9
)0
_-
+=
Backspace
Tab
Q
W
E
R
T
Y
U
I
O
P
{[
}]
|\
Caps
A
S
D
F
G
H
J
K
L
:;
"'
Enter
Shift
Z
X
C
V
B
N
M
<,
>.
?/
Shift
Ctrl
Win
Alt
Alt
Win
Menu
Ctrl
PrtSc
ScrLk
Pause
Ins
Home
PgUp
Del
End
PgDn
Up
Left
Down
Right
Num
/
*
-
7
8
9
+
4
5
6
1
2
3
Enter
0
.

Live Coaching

Build a smooth run first. Clean, even typing will improve real-world speed faster than frantic bursts.

Ghost Target

No ghost loaded yet. Your personal best will become the pace target after your first saved run.

Pace Status

Start typing to see how stable your speed is from moment to moment.

Error Focus

This panel will explain whether mistakes or rhythm are hurting your net score most.

Session Analytics

Personal Best
0 WPM

No personal best saved yet.

Session Average
0 WPM

Your saved attempts will shape this.

Consistency
0%

Higher means your pace stays steadier.

Current Focus
Accuracy

We will recommend the next improvement focus here.

Why This Version Feels Better

Cleaner Controls

Dropdowns keep the screen uncluttered while still giving access to long sessions and specialized practice.

Deeper Content

Large word banks and paragraph pools reduce repetition so practice feels fresh across many sessions.

Better Feedback

Raw and net WPM, consistency, streaks, and a saved best target turn the page into a training tool instead of just a timer.

Recent Attempts

Finish a few runs to build your local training history.

About This Typing Speed Test

This typing speed test is designed for people who want more than a simple timer and a final score. It gives you a clean place to practice typing, track your pace, and understand whether mistakes, rhythm, or endurance are affecting your performance. Instead of feeling like a bare-bones counter, it works more like a practical training tool you can return to regularly.

The page measures both raw speed and net speed, shows live accuracy, keeps track of streaks, and saves recent attempts locally in your browser. That makes it useful for students, office workers, writers, coders, and anyone trying to build faster and more reliable keyboard habits.

Features That Make the Tool Useful

The typing test includes several practice options so the experience does not become repetitive after only a few runs. You can switch between words, quotes, paragraphs, and custom text depending on the kind of typing you want to improve. Short sessions are useful for speed bursts, while longer word-count modes are better for stamina and concentration.

  • Flexible practice modes: Choose from common word drills, longer paragraph practice, quote-based runs, or your own pasted text.
  • Long practice support: Use extended word counts like 500, 700, or 1000 words for endurance training.
  • Live performance feedback: Watch raw WPM, net WPM, accuracy, streak, and errors update as you type.
  • Helpful analytics: Review consistency, saved attempts, and your personal best to see patterns over time.
  • Visual keyboard support: The full keyboard display can help newer typists stay oriented while practicing.

How to Use the Typing Test

Getting started is simple. First choose the test mode that matches your goal. If you want a straightforward speed run, words mode is a good place to begin. If you want more realistic reading flow, use paragraph mode. Quotes can help with punctuation and rhythm, while custom mode is useful when you want to practice with your own article, assignment, or coding snippet.

  1. Select your setup: Pick a mode, duration, word count, vocabulary type, and optional preset from the dropdown controls.
  2. Enable rules if needed: Turn on numbers and symbols for more variety, or use focus mode to keep the interface calmer.
  3. Start typing: Click into the typing area or simply begin typing to start the timer.
  4. Watch the live stats: Use the score cards to understand not only how fast you are, but also how accurate and steady your pace is.
  5. Review the result: When the test ends, check your final score, consistency, errors, and recent history to see where to improve next.

Who This Tool Is For

This typing test works well for a wide range of users. Students can use it to improve speed before exams or assignments. Professionals can use it to become more efficient with daily writing tasks. Developers can choose coding-related vocabulary to make practice feel more relevant. Even casual users can benefit from learning to type with fewer pauses and fewer corrections.

Because the tool supports both shorter sessions and longer practice formats, it can be used for quick warmups or more serious improvement routines. That balance makes it suitable for both beginners and experienced typists.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between raw WPM and net WPM?

Raw WPM reflects how quickly your fingers are moving overall, while net WPM gives a more realistic picture by factoring in correct typing. If you type very fast but make frequent mistakes, your raw score may stay high while your net score drops.

Can I practice with my own text?

Yes. Switch to custom text mode and paste your own content into the text box. This is useful for practicing essays, emails, study material, or code snippets that match the kind of typing you do in real life.

Is this typing test suitable for long practice sessions?

Yes. In addition to shorter word-count options, the tool also supports longer practice settings such as 500, 700, and 1000 words. These are helpful when you want to work on consistency and endurance rather than only short bursts of speed.

Does the tool save my results?

Your recent attempts and personal best are stored locally in your browser. That means you can track progress over time on the same device without needing to create an account.

What is a good typing speed?

A comfortable typing speed depends on the context, but many people consider around 40 WPM average for general use. Scores above that can feel efficient for everyday work, while higher speeds become more useful when accuracy and consistency stay strong as well.

Why should I use different modes like words, paragraphs, and quotes?

Each mode trains a slightly different skill. Word drills are good for speed, paragraphs feel closer to natural writing, quotes often improve punctuation control, and custom text helps you practice with material that is personally relevant.