TYPING TEST
1-minute typing test — free, instant WPM check
A 1-minute typing test is the fastest honest way to measure your typing speed. In 60 seconds you'll see your words per minute, characters per minute, accuracy, and the specific keys that cost you the most. Free, no signup, no ads on the test page itself — start typing whenever you're ready.
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Why a 1-minute typing test is the right baseline
One minute is the most common duration for typing speed measurement worldwide, and for good reason. It's long enough to average out a bad opening sentence and short enough that exam-style fatigue doesn't kick in. Most online typing test rankings, leaderboards, and casual benchmarks use 1-minute as the standard. If you tell a friend 'I type at 65 WPM', that number is almost certainly from a 1-minute test. Shorter tests (30 seconds) tend to inflate WPM because typists can sprint without sustaining; longer tests (5 or 10 minutes) tend to deflate WPM as fatigue accumulates. The 1-minute window strikes the cleanest balance and is the score you'd put on a resume or share competitively.
What your 1-minute typing test tells you
After 60 seconds, Typetera shows you four numbers and one breakdown. WPM (words per minute, net) is the headline — every five typed characters count as one word, errors subtracted. CPM (characters per minute) is the same data without the divide-by-five normalization — more useful for non-Latin scripts. Accuracy is the percentage of correct characters out of all you typed. Mistakes is the raw count of wrong keystrokes. Below those, a per-key breakdown shows which keys slowed you down most often — usually a handful of bigrams or letter combinations that account for most of your errors. Practice targets become obvious from this breakdown.
How to do well on a 1-minute test
Read the first sentence before typing it. Look at the screen, not the keyboard. Keep your fingers on the home row (ASDF / JKL semicolon for QWERTY). Type at the pace you're confident, not the pace you wish you could hold — most typists lose to over-extension in the last 15 seconds. Don't aggressively backspace single typos; the time cost of correcting often exceeds the WPM impact of leaving one wrong letter. If accuracy is below 95%, slow down for the next attempt and let your speed climb naturally as your fingers gain confidence. Most users who run two or three 1-minute tests in a row see their WPM steady within 5-10% — that's your honest baseline.
Average 1-minute WPM scores
Across millions of online typing tests, the typical 1-minute distribution looks like this: bottom 10% types under 25 WPM, average adult is around 40 WPM, top quartile crosses 60 WPM, top 5% sustains 80+ WPM, and elite competitive typists hit 100-150 WPM. Your number will vary by language (most people are 10-20% slower in their second language), by script (Devanagari, Tamil, and Telugu speeds are typically lower because multiple keystrokes produce single visible characters), and by passage difficulty (random words score higher than real sentences for the same finger speed). Use your first 1-minute result as a baseline, not a verdict.
Beyond the 1-minute test
Once you know your baseline, the next step depends on what you're prepping for. Government typing exams (SSC CHSL, RRB NTPC, CPCT) all use 10-minute tests with stricter accuracy expectations — practice with our 10-minute typing test for those. Competitive typists who want to push WPM upward should add daily 2-minute and 5-minute tests to build endurance. For casual self-improvement, a daily 1-minute test combined with focused practice on your weakest keys (per the breakdown) compounds reliably — most people gain 15-20 WPM in their first three months of regular practice.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Is a 1-minute typing test accurate?
+Yes, for typical use. 60 seconds is long enough to average out a bad start and short enough that fatigue doesn't distort results. For exam-style benchmarks, use a 10-minute test instead.
What's the average WPM in a 1-minute test?
+About 40 WPM for adults. Office workers in typing-heavy roles average 50-65 WPM. Top 5% sustains 80+ WPM.
Is Typetera's 1-minute test free?
+Yes. Free, no signup, no ads on the test page. Ads only appear on supporting pages like Results, FAQ, and Tips.
Can I do the 1-minute test in Hindi or Tamil?
+Yes. Typetera supports 1-minute typing tests in 7 languages with native scripts: English, Hindi (Devanagari), Tamil, Telugu, Spanish, French, and Portuguese.
Does the 1-minute test have punctuation and numbers?
+By default, yes. You can toggle punctuation, numbers, and capitals on/off in the Options bar above the test for cleaner finger-speed measurement.
How can I improve my 1-minute typing score?
+Daily 5-10 minute practice, focus on accuracy first (95%+), look at the screen not the keyboard, and target your weakest keys from the per-key breakdown after each test.
MORE TYPING TESTS
Try a different duration
30-second typing test — quick WPM check
Take a free 30-second typing test online. Instant WPM and accuracy in half a minute. Quickest typing speed check, no signup, available in 7 languages.
Open →2-minute typing test — sustained WPM check
Take a free 2-minute typing test online. Measures sustained typing speed with WPM, CPM, and accuracy. No signup, 7 languages with native script support.
Open →5-minute typing test — endurance speed check
Free 5-minute typing test online. Tests sustained typing speed and accuracy over a longer window. WPM, CPM, accuracy, per-key breakdown. 7 languages with native script.
Open →10-minute typing test — exam-style endurance
Free 10-minute typing test online. Matches the SSC CHSL, RRB NTPC, and CPCT exam format. Sustained WPM, accuracy, and per-key breakdown. English + Hindi.
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