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TYPING TEST

30-second typing test — quick WPM check

A 30-second typing test is the fastest way to get a rough sense of your typing speed. It's not exam-style — it's a quick snapshot. Most people use the 30-second format when they want a number before a longer practice session or just out of curiosity. Start typing whenever you're ready.

30 seconds

DURATION

7

LANGUAGES

None

LOGIN

Free

COST

When the 30-second test makes sense

The 30-second typing test is a sprint, not a marathon. It rewards quick reflexes and instant rhythm — the typists who score highest are usually those who get into flow fast. Use a 30-second test as a warmup before a longer session, as a quick check after a focused practice block, or when you want to see if you're improving day-over-day without committing to a longer run. It's also the friendliest format for first-timers because the short duration removes the pressure of sustaining focus. For honest baseline measurement, however, a 1-minute test is more reliable, and for exam-style scoring a 10-minute test is closer to the real conditions.

Why 30-second WPM is usually higher

The same typist will typically score 10-20% higher on a 30-second test than on a 5-minute test, even at the same effective finger speed. The reason is fatigue and consistency. In 30 seconds you can sustain your top-end pace without slowing; in 5 minutes you naturally taper as concentration breaks. This is why competitive typing leaderboards usually report a single short-burst best, while professional and exam contexts require sustained performance. Don't be fooled by your 30-second number into thinking you can hold that speed for a 10-minute exam — most candidates lose 15-20% on the longer durations. Use a 5-minute or 10-minute test for exam-style benchmarking.

How to do well on a 30-second test

Read the first line before you type. Hit a steady rhythm in the first 5 seconds — speed picks up naturally once your fingers find their pattern. Don't aggressively correct typos in a 30-second window; the time cost is too high relative to the WPM impact. Keep your eyes on the screen, not the keyboard. If you blow it on a stretch of unfamiliar bigrams (like 'tr' or 'qu'), just keep moving. The 30-second format favors flow over precision. After the test, look at the per-key breakdown — it's still useful even on a short run, because typos in a short window often surface the most consistent weaknesses.

What 30-second WPM scores look like

A 30-second sprint typically produces these distributions: 25-35 WPM for beginners, 40-55 WPM for the average adult, 60-75 WPM for above-average typists, 85+ WPM for competitive typists, 110+ WPM for elite. The world record for a 30-second test (depending on platform) sits around 200 WPM. Your number will be 10-20% higher than your sustained 5-minute pace. If you're seeing 60 WPM in a 30-second test, your sustained working speed is probably around 50 WPM — useful to know when comparing to exam thresholds or professional benchmarks.

30-second tests in non-English languages

30-second tests work in all 7 Typetera languages — English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Spanish, French, and Portuguese. The format is the same, but the corpus and script change. For Hindi, Tamil, and Telugu, expect lower WPM numbers than English even with equivalent finger speed, because multiple keystrokes produce single visible characters in those scripts. Use CPM (characters per minute) instead of WPM when comparing non-Latin scripts — it's the more honest unit. A typist scoring 25 WPM in Hindi might be at 125 CPM, which corresponds to roughly 35 WPM in English-equivalent effort.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

  • Is 30 seconds enough to measure typing speed?

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    It gives a quick snapshot, but the result will be 10-20% higher than your sustained speed over 5 or 10 minutes. Use it as a warmup or quick check, not as a definitive measurement.

  • What's a good 30-second WPM score?

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    55+ WPM puts you above average for adults. 75+ WPM is fast. 100+ WPM is competitive. Top scores cross 200 WPM.

  • Does Typetera offer 30-second tests in Hindi or Tamil?

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    Yes. All 7 supported languages (English, Hindi, Tamil, Telugu, Spanish, French, Portuguese) have 30-second test options in their native scripts.

  • Why is 30-second WPM higher than 5-minute WPM?

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    Sustained typing accumulates fatigue and concentration breaks. Short bursts let you stay at peak pace; longer durations naturally taper.

  • Is the 30-second test free?

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    Yes. Free, no signup, no ads on the test page itself.

  • How often should I run a 30-second test?

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    Once or twice a day at most. More than that and you're testing fatigue, not skill. Run a focused 5-10 minute practice block between tests.