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30-second Typing Test

By TypeLab Editorial Team

Take a 30-second typing test to measure WPM and accuracy, then repeat it to compare results. Use this 30-second typing test to measure WPM and accuracy with

This timer works well for quick warm-ups and short baseline checks.

Use TypeLab to move from first-key confidence to daily touch-typing flow with structured lessons, repeatable tests, and game-based practice that fits school, homework, and office routines.

A 30-second test is best for warm-ups and quick accuracy checks. Repeat it a few times to find your stable baseline before you switch to longer timers.

Take a typing speed test, follow free lessons, and practice daily to improve WPM and accuracy.

  • Measure speed and accuracy with the same 30-second timer each time.
  • Compare repeated runs instead of relying on one isolated result.
  • Use lesson practice to fix weak keys before the next attempt.

The 30-second timer is a good way to keep comparisons fair. Use the same device and layout when you test.

Shorter tests are useful for quick checks, while longer tests show how focus holds up over time.

What a 30-second typing test is best for

Thirty seconds is a warm-up timer. It highlights accuracy and finger control before fatigue changes your rhythm.

  • Warm up: run 2–3 short attempts to loosen up your hands.
  • Accuracy check: keep errors low and aim for a smooth, relaxed pace.
  • Quick baseline: compare runs only when the timer and layout stay the same.

Editorial trust

This page is maintained by TypeLab Editorial Team, the team responsible for TypeLab's touch-typing lessons, benchmark explainers, and school rollout content.

See the About TypeLab page for company details and the Authors page for editorial ownership, review standards, and expertise signals.

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Frequently asked questions

What is covered on 30-second Typing Test?

Use this 30-second typing test to measure WPM and accuracy with a timer that is easy to repeat.

How should you use this page?

This timer works well for quick warm-ups and short baseline checks.

What should you open next?

Continue with Lessons, Test Yourself, Privacy Policy to move from reading into guided practice, testing, or related resources.

References