40 - 80 WPM
Comfortable everyday pace
Good enough for normal chat, note taking, and office work. Many casual users spend most of their time in this range.
Type a fixed paragraph inside a chosen time window and review net speed, raw speed, accuracy, and mistake locations.
Speed
0
Accuracy
100%
Time Left
1:00
Current Article
Source · 客制化词组 · 216 chars
Click the text area below to start typing
This list surfaces the earliest visible mismatches for quick review.
The curve records net speed over time so rhythm changes are easier to spot.
A single peak score is fun, but the more useful signal is whether you can keep speed and accuracy together for a full run.
40 - 80 WPM
Good enough for normal chat, note taking, and office work. Many casual users spend most of their time in this range.
80 - 150 WPM
This is already a strong range for coding, writing, editing, and long-form desk work. It usually feels fast without feeling reckless.
200+ WPM
Usually the product of serious practice, very efficient habits, and excellent consistency. At this point speed is no longer the only impressive part.
Most real improvement comes from cleaning up movement, reducing mistakes, and building a repeatable rhythm instead of forcing raw speed all at once.
If your eyes still keep returning to the keyboard, speed growth usually stalls early. Reliable finger memory changes the ceiling.
Frequent backspacing quietly destroys flow. Slowing down just enough to type cleaner often produces a faster score very quickly.
Layout, language, and input method all shape rhythm. If progress stalls, changing the workflow can help more than brute repetition.
Typing tends to improve when the pace is smooth instead of spiky. A steadier trend line often matters more than one dramatic burst.
Different languages and tools describe speed differently, so the useful metric depends on what you are actually typing.
Words Per Minute. Typing tools often normalize one word to five characters so different English passages stay easier to compare.
Characters Per Minute. This is often more natural for languages where character output is easier to reason about than word boundaries.
Keystrokes Per Minute. Some tools use this to focus on raw input actions rather than only final displayed output.
These answers focus on practical improvement, keyboard feel, and what the numbers actually mean in daily use.
Sometimes, but usually by feel rather than magic. Better feedback, clearer actuation, and a more comfortable rhythm can help, but typing habits still matter more than the switch alone.
Because early gains often come from familiarity, while later gains depend on technique. When progress stalls, look at finger usage, eyes-on-keyboard habits, and how often mistakes force corrections.
Yes if you want structured growth. This page is great for fast browser-side checks, while dedicated typing trainers, race sites, and letter-combination drills are better for long-term repetition.
Raw speed uses all typed characters, while net speed only counts correct output, so net speed is closer to usable typing performance.
Because finishing the prompt is treated as a valid end state. That makes short passages easier to compare and keeps sprint-style practice from dragging on artificially.