All Typing Tests & Tools

Every free typing test and tool on CGLTyping, in one place — government exam mocks, English and Hindi practice, and calculators.

There are 29 tests and tools here, and they aren't interchangeable — a government exam mock scores you the way that exam actually grades, while a plain speed test just measures raw WPM. Picking the wrong one is the most common way people practise hard and still get surprised on exam day.

If you know your exam, start with its dedicated mock — it applies the right duration, speed unit and error limit without you configuring anything. If you're building general speed, use a timed English test. If you just need a number converted, the calculators do that in a few seconds.

Government Exam Tests

7 Tests

Each exam grades typing differently — these are set up to match, not a one-size-fits-all test.

English & Duration Tests

7 Tests

Ungraded practice at any length — pick a duration and go.

Hindi Typing Tests

3 Tests

Whichever layout your exam actually uses — Mangal, Kruti Dev, or general Hindi Unicode.

Regional Language Tests

4 Tests

Unicode practice for state-level exams, using self-hosted fonts for each script.

Choosing

Which Test Should You Take?

The honest answer is "the one that matches how you'll actually be graded". Here's the shortest route from your situation to the right page:

If you're…Take thisWhy
Preparing for a specific examSSC CGL, CHSL, CPCT or NTPCCorrect duration, speed unit and error limit, applied for you
Building raw speed5-minute or 10-minute testLong enough to expose stamina problems, no pass/fail pressure
Short on time today1-minute testEnough for a daily streak; too short to judge real speed
Typing in HindiMangal or Kruti DevThe keymaps differ — muscle memory doesn't transfer between them
Just converting a numberWPM or accuracy calculatorNo test needed — enter the figures and read the result
Not sure you're even eligibleEligibility CheckerCheck before you spend weeks practising for the wrong post

What Every Test Here Has in Common

Whichever one you open, the rules are the same, because they're the rules the real exam software uses:

  • Copy-paste is disabled inside the typing box, exactly like the exam centre.
  • Backspace is on by default and can be switched off for stricter accuracy drills.
  • The timer starts on your first keystroke, not when the page loads.
  • Nothing is uploaded. Your attempts live in your own browser's local storage — this is a static site with no account and no server to send them to.
  • No ads on the test screen, ever.

The exam-specific mocks add one thing on top: a verdict. Instead of a bare WPM, they check your speed and your weighted error rate against your category's limit, and tell you whether that attempt would actually have passed. That's the difference between practising and rehearsing.

What Isn't Here, and Why

Two honest gaps worth knowing about. Kruti Dev is a guide rather than a live test, because Kruti Dev is a legacy non-Unicode font and we haven't been able to confirm a copy we're licensed to redistribute — the engine is ready, the font isn't. And the Kruti Dev ⇄ Unicode converters explain the conversion rather than perform it, for the same reason. Where a tool can't do the job properly yet, the page says so instead of pretending.