Indonesian Typing Test — Free Online WPM Test

Bahasa Indonesia is one of the most typing-friendly major world languages: it uses the standard Latin alphabet, has no special characters or diacritics, and spells words almost exactly as they sound. That said, reaching high WPM in Indonesian requires adapting to its characteristic vocabulary — longer words due to affixation and unique digraphs like ng and ny. This guide covers everything you need to know to measure and improve your Indonesian typing speed with FastTypings.

FreeNo loginSupports Indonesian (/id)Standard QWERTY — no setup needed

Why Indonesian Is Great for Typing Practice

Among the world's major languages, Indonesian stands out as exceptionally keyboard-friendly. It uses only the 26 letters of the basic Latin alphabet with no modifications. There are no accented characters like French é or German ü, no special scripts, and no input method editors. You pick up your keyboard and start typing.

This accessibility has made Indonesian one of the fastest-growing languages on the internet. Indonesia has the world's fourth largest population and an extraordinarily high smartphone and internet penetration rate, making typing speed genuinely important for a huge number of people professionally and personally.

Key Features of Indonesian Typing

No special characters or diacritics
Standard Bahasa Indonesia uses only the 26 letters of the basic Latin alphabet. There are no accents, cedillas, or special characters in everyday formal writing. This means any QWERTY keyboard works perfectly for Indonesian — no layout changes, no dead keys, no input method switching.
Rich affixation creates long words
Indonesian is highly agglutinative. A single root can generate many derived forms through prefixes and suffixes: makan (eat) → makanan (food) → memakan (to eat, formal) → dimakan (to be eaten) → pemakan (eater). Long derived words are common in formal and written Indonesian, which means average word length is higher than in English.
Consistent spelling-to-pronunciation
Indonesian spelling is almost perfectly phonemic — each letter corresponds to one sound. Unlike English, where the same spelling can produce wildly different sounds, Indonesian words are typed exactly as they are pronounced. This consistency makes it easier to type unfamiliar words correctly and helps build speed faster.
Digraphs: ng, ny, sy, kh
Four common letter combinations function as single phonemes in Indonesian: ng (like in 'sing'), ny (like Spanish ñ), sy (like 'sh'), and kh (like German ch). These appear frequently and require smooth two-key transitions. Drilling words like dengan, nyata, syarat, and akhir builds fluency with these pairs.

Indonesian Typing Speed Benchmarks

LevelSpeed (WPM)Notes
Beginner15–30 WPMBuilding speed on Indonesian vocabulary
Intermediate30–50 WPMComfortable with common words and affixes
Office standard50–70 WPMMeets Indonesian administrative typing expectations
Proficient70–90 WPMSmooth with long affixed words (ber-, me-, ke-/-an)
Expert90–120+ WPMFull touch typing with high accuracy

Because Indonesian words average longer than English words, a 60 WPM Indonesian score represents more total keystrokes than a 60 WPM English score. If you are used to English typing benchmarks, do not be discouraged if your Indonesian WPM appears lower at first — your actual typing throughput may be equivalent or greater.

Tips for Improving Indonesian Typing Speed

Indonesian in the Global Typing Context

Most global typing speed tests and competitions are conducted in English. Indonesian speakers who want to benchmark themselves professionally benefit from a dedicated Indonesian typing test that reflects the actual vocabulary and letter frequency distribution of Bahasa Indonesia — not English text translated into Indonesian.

The letter frequency profile of Indonesian differs significantly from English. The letters A, N, I, E, and K are among the most common in Indonesian, while Q, X, and Z are rare. Practising with Indonesian text ensures your speed measurement reflects your real-world typing capability in the language you actually use.

FastTypings Indonesian Support

FastTypings has a dedicated Indonesian language mode at fasttypings.com/id. The test presents authentic Bahasa Indonesia text and measures your WPM and accuracy in real time. No input method setup is required — your standard QWERTY keyboard works immediately. The test is free and requires no account.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Does Indonesian use a standard QWERTY keyboard?
Yes. Indonesian (Bahasa Indonesia) is written using the standard Latin alphabet with no diacritics or special characters in everyday usage. A standard QWERTY keyboard works perfectly for Indonesian typing — no special input method, layout remapping, or IME is required. This makes Indonesian one of the most accessible languages for keyboard typing tests.
What is a good Indonesian typing speed for office work?
For Indonesian office work, 40–60 WPM with 95%+ accuracy is a solid benchmark. Government and administrative roles in Indonesia typically expect 50–70 WPM for document work. Indonesian words tend to be longer than English words on average (mean ~6 characters), so WPM scores directly reflect a large keystroke throughput.
Is Indonesian typing similar to English typing?
Yes, structurally. Both use the standard Latin alphabet on a QWERTY keyboard without special input methods. The main difference is vocabulary and phoneme frequency — common Indonesian letter combinations (ng, ny, sy, kh) differ from English digraphs, so your finger transitions will feel different even at the same WPM. Practising Indonesian-specific text rather than English text gives more accurate results.
Why does Indonesian typing practice matter?
Indonesian is the fourth most spoken language by number of speakers globally, with over 270 million users. It is the official language of Indonesia, the world's fourth most populous country. For professionals working in Indonesian business, government, or media environments, fast and accurate typing in Bahasa Indonesia is an essential workplace skill with direct productivity impact.
Can FastTypings test Indonesian typing speed?
Yes. FastTypings has a dedicated Indonesian language mode at fasttypings.com/id. The test uses Bahasa Indonesia text passages and measures your WPM and accuracy in real time. No special input setup is required — just start typing on your standard QWERTY keyboard. The test is free and requires no account.