Type Faster: A 2-Week Touch-Typing Plan
Reclaim hours every week. A realistic, no-gimmick plan to hit 80+ WPM with proper technique.
You don't need talent to type fast — you need correct finger placement and about fifteen focused minutes a day for two weeks. Speed is just a side effect of accuracy done consistently.
Days 1–3: home row only
Rest your fingers on A S D F (left hand) and J K L ; (right hand) — most keyboards have small raised bumps on F and J so you can find this position without looking. For the first three days, practice exercises using only these eight keys plus the space bar. Resist the urge to look down; typing blind is the entire point of the exercise.
Days 4–7: expand one row at a time
Add the top row, then the bottom row, always returning your fingers to the home row between reaches. Each finger owns a specific column of keys — for example, your left index finger reaches for both R and F and V. Learning these fixed assignments is what makes touch typing fast: your fingers stop "searching" and start moving on muscle memory.
Accuracy first, speed later
In week one, your words-per-minute number doesn't matter at all — accuracy does. Typing slowly but correctly builds the right muscle memory; typing fast with constant mistakes just trains bad habits faster. Speed climbs on its own once the correct motion is automatic.
Days 8–14: real text, daily reps
Switch from isolated key drills to typing real sentences and paragraphs — free typing-practice sites work well for this. Fifteen minutes a day, every day, will outperform one long weekend session, because the skill is built through repetition frequency, not total hours.
Common habits worth breaking
- Looking at the keyboard — cover it with a cloth for a few sessions if you have to.
- Using the wrong finger for a key because it's "close enough" — it will cap your ceiling later.
- Typing in short bursts and stopping when it feels hard — that's exactly the point where the skill is forming.
What to expect by day 14
Most people who follow this plan consistently land somewhere between 40–60 words per minute with solid accuracy, up from a hunt-and-peck baseline often under 25. That's not "fast" by touch-typing veteran standards, but it's a real, permanent gear change — and speed keeps climbing naturally for months afterward with normal daily use.
The takeaway
Two weeks, home row first, accuracy before speed, and daily short sessions instead of occasional long ones. It's a small, boring routine — and it works.
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