Dotyping is a free online typing test to measure your typing speed in WPM (words per minute) and accuracy. Choose a timed typing test or a word-based typing test, then press Start to begin.
Whether you’re preparing for a job assessment, improving everyday productivity, or just challenging yourself, a typing test helps you track progress over time. Use the same test length regularly to compare results, or switch difficulties to build accuracy and confidence on longer passages.
Tip: If your accuracy drops below 95%, slow down slightly and focus on clean keystrokes. Speed increases naturally once your fingers build reliable muscle memory. Practice in short sessions (5–10 minutes) and take breaks to avoid fatigue.
These common questions explain how typing scores work and how you can improve quickly without developing bad habits.
Many people type around 40 WPM. If you’re above 60 WPM with good accuracy, you’re generally considered fast. Accuracy matters most for real-world typing. If you’re taking a typing test for work, aim for consistency—stable scores are usually better than occasional peaks.
WPM is calculated from typed characters converted into “words” (often using 5 characters as one word) divided by time. Net WPM reduces the score for mistakes. This is why improving accuracy can increase Net WPM even if your raw speed stays the same.
Practice regularly, focus on accuracy first, and increase test length over time. Use consistent finger placement and avoid looking at the keyboard. Start with simple text, then gradually move to punctuation and numbers once you’re stable. Tracking your weak keys and practicing them intentionally is one of the fastest ways to improve.
In real work (emails, coding, documents), mistakes cost time because you must correct them. Higher accuracy usually leads to better Net WPM and a smoother typing rhythm. Think “clean and steady” first—speed follows.
Daily short sessions are more effective than long sessions once a week. Try 5–10 minutes per day, then add one longer session on weekends if you want faster progress. Consistency is what builds muscle memory.