High Court Typing Test — Hindi & English
High Court typing test — speed targets and accuracy
Most High Courts in India conduct typing tests for posts such as Stenographer, Assistant, Clerk and Court Reader. Typical speed requirements range from 25 to 40 WPM in English and 25 to 30 WPM in Hindi, depending on the court and the post. The exact figures vary — Allahabad, Delhi, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Punjab & Haryana High Courts each publish their own criteria — so always check the official notification.
What sets High Court typing apart is the emphasis on accuracy and clean legal-style text. Passages often resemble real court language, and a strict error limit (commonly around 5% of the typed matter) can disqualify an otherwise fast candidate. For Hindi posts, the test may use Krutidev/Remington or Mangal/Inscript.
Start High Court PracticeHow High Court typing differs from SSC
- Backspace is often allowed (unlike strict SSC/CPCT modes) — but within a tight error tolerance.
- Legal vocabulary appears frequently, so practise with formal, sentence-heavy passages.
- Hindi layout matters — confirm whether your court uses Krutidev or Mangal before you train.
- Accuracy threshold is usually decisive, not raw speed.
Practise here in both Hindi and English with formal passages and a live accuracy meter, so you can keep your error rate under the High Court limit while maintaining the required speed.
FAQ
Is the high court typing test free?
Yes. It is completely free, requires no signup, and runs entirely in your browser.
Does it support Hindi and English?
Yes. You can practise in both English and Hindi (Mangal / Krutidev layouts).
Is my data private?
Yes. Everything runs locally in your browser. Your data is never uploaded to a server.