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Mobile Typing Test

How fast can you type on your phone? Measure your thumb typing WPM.

WORDS 0 WPM 30s

> Start typing to begin...

For fair results, disable autocorrect in your keyboard settings. Use tap typing, not swipe.

Your rank
WPM
Accuracy
30s
Duration

What is a mobile typing speed test?

A mobile typing speed test measures how quickly you can type on your phone using your thumbs. Unlike desktop typing tests that measure full-keyboard speed, this test is designed specifically for touchscreen input. You type displayed text using your phone's native keyboard, and the tool calculates your words per minute (WPM) based on correctly typed characters.

The key difference from desktop tests is the input method. On a phone, you're typically using two thumbs on a much smaller keyboard. There's no home row, no tactile feedback from physical keys, and your fingers have to travel shorter but less precise distances. This fundamentally changes what a "good" typing speed looks like.

Why is mobile WPM lower than desktop WPM?

Most people type significantly slower on a phone than on a full keyboard. The average desktop typist hits about 40 WPM, while the average mobile typist without autocorrect manages about 25-30 WPM. Several factors explain the gap:

Smaller keys. Phone keyboards pack the entire alphabet into a space smaller than your palm. Hit zones are tiny, and mistaps are frequent. On a physical keyboard, each key has a distinct position your fingers learn through muscle memory.

No home row. Touch typing on a physical keyboard relies on eight fingers resting on known positions. On a phone, your thumbs hover above a flat glass surface with no physical reference points.

Two thumbs vs ten fingers. Even the fastest thumb typists are limited by the mechanics of alternating two digits instead of distributing work across ten.

Average mobile typing speed benchmarks

LevelWPM RangeWhat it means
Beginner0-15Hunt-and-peck with one thumb. Still finding the keys.
Below Average15-25Functional but slow. You get texts sent, eventually.
Average25-35Normal two-thumb typing without autocorrect.
Fast35-50Noticeably quick. Your friends are waiting for you to stop typing.
Elite50+Exceptional. Your thumbs have their own training regimen.

These benchmarks are for raw typing without autocorrect or swipe input. With autocorrect enabled, most people score 10-15 WPM higher — but that's the software typing, not you.

Why is autocorrect disabled?

This test disables autocorrect, autocomplete, and spell-check to measure your actual typing ability. Autocorrect artificially inflates your speed by silently fixing errors you'd otherwise need to backspace and correct. For a fair measurement of thumb typing skill, it needs to be off. If your keyboard still corrects words, go into your phone's keyboard settings and disable autocorrect manually.

Tips for faster mobile typing

Use both thumbs. Alternating thumbs is the single biggest speed improvement. Each thumb handles its side of the keyboard while the other moves into position.

Hold your phone steady. A stable grip reduces mistaps. Rest your phone on a surface or hold it with both hands in landscape orientation.

Practise without autocorrect. Training without the safety net builds genuine muscle memory. Your accuracy and speed will improve faster.

Learn key positions. Just like touch typing on a keyboard, knowing where letters are without looking is the foundation of speed.

On a keyboard? Try our desktop typing speed test for full keyboard WPM measurement.

FAQ

What is a good mobile typing speed?

The average mobile typing speed without autocorrect is about 25-30 WPM. Above 40 WPM is fast for thumb typing, and above 50 WPM is elite territory. Most people type significantly slower on a phone than on a full keyboard.

Why is autocorrect disabled?

Autocorrect inflates scores by fixing your mistakes automatically. Disabling it ensures the test measures your actual thumb typing speed and accuracy.

How is mobile WPM calculated?

The same way as desktop: correctly typed characters divided by 5 (standard word length), divided by elapsed minutes. The formula is identical — only the input method differs.