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Typing for Dyslexia

By TypeLab Editorial Team

Learn how TypeLab can support lower-friction typing practice for learners with dyslexia using careful pacing, readable settings, and verified product features

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.

Pick one clear goal for today, go slowly enough to stay accurate, and re-check under the same settings.

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

  • Training
  • Test Yourself
  • Pricing

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.

Published . Updated .

Frequently asked questions

What is covered on Typing for Dyslexia?

Typing practice may be helpful for some learners with dyslexia because it can reduce the writing burden of handwriting or slow key search, create a more repeatable keyboard routine, and support confidence through short structured sessions. That does not mean typing practice diagnoses, treats, or fixes dyslexia. It means that when the setup is readable and low-pressure, keyboard skill can become more manageable.

How should you use this page?

Pair this page with the course, focused drills, and timed checks so the information turns into measurable progress.

What should you open next?

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