What is a good typing speed by age?
Children average 10–25 WPM; teens reach 35–45 WPM; adults average 38–45 WPM. These are baselines, not targets.
Typing speed varies widely by age because it tracks keyboard exposure time. These figures are practical benchmarks, not pass/fail cutoffs:
| Age range | Typical WPM | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 8–10 years | 10–20 WPM | Just learning keyboard layout |
| 11–13 years | 20–35 WPM | Increasing with school use |
| 14–16 years | 35–45 WPM | Approaching adult baseline |
| 17–25 years | 40–55 WPM | Digital natives with high exposure |
| 26–45 years | 38–50 WPM | Average adult; varies by job type |
| 46+ years | 30–45 WPM | Slightly lower average, highly variable |
A note on Gen Z typists
Younger users who grew up with touchscreens sometimes start slower on physical keyboards than older millennial cohorts did at the same age. The gap narrows quickly with regular keyboard use.
Students specifically
For school and university work, 40 WPM is a functional baseline. At that speed you can keep up with lecture note-taking and complete assignments without typing being a bottleneck. 60+ WPM is comfortable for heavy writing workloads.
Speed matters less than consistency. A 13-year-old typing 25 WPM with 97% accuracy is better positioned than one typing 45 WPM with 80% accuracy. Practise accuracy first — speed follows.
Related tests: 1-Minute Test, 3-Minute Test