How to Learn Fast Typing — A Complete Beginner-to-Advanced Roadmap
A proven plan to go from 25 WPM to 60 WPM in 30 days: finger placement, accuracy drills, speed-building routines, and the mistakes that kill progress.
What Is WPM and How to Measure Typing Speed — A Complete Guide
What WPM means, how it's calculated, what counts as a good number, and 5 practical ways to raise it — a pillar guide with examples and benchmarks.
Keyboard Typing Drills — Free and Effective Practice Routines
A complete set of targeted drills to grow your WPM — from home row to speed bursts, plus a 30-day schedule and free places to practice.
Average Typing Speed — Benchmarks by Age, Profession, and Country
Global average sits around 45-50 WPM, but the real number depends on age, profession, and language. Concrete tables and a guide to placing yourself in context.
What Is Touch Typing — The Skill of Typing Without Looking
Touch typing is the skill of typing without looking at the keyboard — finger placement, learning stages, common mistakes, and a 6-8 week plan to master it.
Best Typing Test Websites — 2026 Ranking
A complete comparison of the 10 best typing test websites — UzbekType, Monkeytype, Keybr, and more — with the right user profile for each.
Keyboard Practice for Kids — Age-by-Age Plan
Right keyboard practice from age 6: age-by-age WPM benchmarks, best free sites, and 5 practical tips for parents.
Fast Typing on a Computer — 7 Practical Tips
7 practical tips you can apply today — touch typing, keyboard shortcuts, burst typing, ergonomics, and the 15-minutes-a-day rule.
CPM vs WPM — Which One Should You Use
WPM × 5 = CPM. But the formula has nuances: Net vs Gross, language differences, which sites use which, and which metric your job needs.
Online Typing Test — How to Take One and Read the Result
Take a free test in 30 seconds: which duration and difficulty fit you, how to read the 4-number result, and how to track growth over time.
QWERTY vs Dvorak vs Colemak — Does Keyboard Layout Actually Make You Type Faster?
Dvorak and Colemak reduce finger travel on paper, but real research tells a different story — especially outside English. What actually raises your speed while staying on QWERTY.