How to Get an Official Accredited Typing Test Certificate
- Certificates from recognized organizations are accepted for employment; unproctored browser certificates are not
- Most certification tests run 5 minutes with 95% accuracy minimum
- IAAP, civil service boards, and vocational schools issue the most widely accepted credentials
- Your target WPM level should match the jobs you are applying for
- Preparation takes 2 to 6 weeks depending on your current baseline
What Makes a Certificate Official
The word "official" in the context of typing certificates comes down to four things: who issued it, how the test was administered, what it measured, and whether anyone can verify it. A PDF generated by a free browser-based typing test is not a credential employers recognize. A certificate from an accredited professional organization, issued after a proctored assessment, is.
The key signals employers look for: the issuing organization's name is recognizable in the industry, the test was proctored (monitored to prevent cheating), the score is reported as net WPM with accuracy, and the certificate can be verified through the issuing organization. See WPM requirements by profession to understand which certificate levels are relevant for your target role.
The Main Certification Bodies
| Organization | Certificate type | Test format | Who it's for |
|---|---|---|---|
| IAAP (International Association of Administrative Professionals) | CAP credential includes typing component | Proctored, 5 minutes | Administrative professionals |
| National civil service / government HR bodies | Civil service typing certificate | Proctored, 3 to 5 minutes | Government job applicants |
| State vocational / community colleges | Office skills certificate | Proctored, typically 5 minutes | Entry-level office / admin |
| eSkill, Criteria Corp, Kenexa | Employer-administered skills tests | Proctored, 3 to 5 minutes | Specific employer assessments |
What the Certification Test Looks Like
Most official typing certification tests follow a consistent format: 5 minutes of continuous typing from a passage displayed on screen, with net WPM scoring and an accuracy threshold. The passage is usually a business letter or general prose — not difficult vocabulary, but sustained and unfamiliar. Proctoring may be in-person at a testing center or via webcam and screen recording for remote sessions.
The score you receive reflects your performance for the full 5 minutes, not your peak 30-second burst. This is exactly why the 5-minute test on TypingTest.now is the most relevant practice format — it replicates the duration and sustained attention the real test requires.
How to Prepare
Building Speed
If your current speed is below your target certificate level, give yourself at least 3 to 4 weeks of daily practice. Use the 1-minute test for daily progress tracking and the 5-minute test for weekly simulation runs. A gap of 10 WPM typically closes in 2 to 3 weeks of consistent daily practice. See how to improve typing speed for the full plan.
Building Accuracy
Most certification tests require 95 percent accuracy minimum before your WPM score counts. If your current accuracy is below 96 percent, start with the accuracy test before focusing on speed. Bringing accuracy from 90 to 96 percent typically takes 1 to 2 weeks of focused drills and gives a bigger net WPM improvement than adding 5 raw WPM.
Is a Certificate Worth It?
For roles where typing is explicitly tested in the hiring process — administrative, legal, medical, government — a formal certificate adds credibility to your application. It provides a verifiable, third-party confirmed score that a self-reported WPM cannot. For roles where typing is incidental rather than core, it adds less value. Prioritize it if the job posting explicitly mentions a typing requirement or certificate, or if you are applying to government roles where credentials carry formal weight.
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