Fastest and Slowest Typists in the World (Typing Speed)

In this article we will discuss about the unique topic – Fastest and Slowest Typists in the World (Typing Speed), Who is the fastest typist in the world? What is the slowest typing speed ever recorded? Complete guide to all-time typing speed records – Guinness records, online records, historical typewriter champions, mobile records, Hindi typing records and what they teach us.

The world record for the fastest typing speed on a mechanical keyboard stands at an astonishing 216 words per minute – sustained over a full minute. The fastest single-burst speed ever recorded in a competitive online setting exceeds 300 WPM. At the other end of the spectrum, the concept of a ‘slowest typist’ record is more complex – and far more human – than you might expect.

Typing speed records span over 130 years of history, from the first typewriter speed contests in the 1880s to today’s global online competitions on platforms like TypeRacer and Monkeytype. They involve mechanical typewriters, electric typewriters, standard keyboards, specialized Dvorak keyboards, and even mobile phone touchscreens. Each era produced its own champions and its own definition of ‘fast’.

This article is the most complete guide to typing speed records ever assembled. We cover every major world record holder, their speed, their method, the historical context, Guinness Book records, online platform records, country-wise and language-wise records, mobile typing records, and yes – the fascinating and surprisingly touching story of the world’s slowest typists. We also show what these records mean for everyday typists preparing for government jobs or simply trying to get faster.

Contents hide

Quick Facts: Typing Speed World Records at a Glance

Record CategoryRecord Holder / Speed
Fastest sustained keyboard typing (1 min)Barbara Blackburn – 212 WPM sustained (Dvorak layout, 2005 Guinness record)
Highest single-minute speed (online)Theoretically validated speeds of 300+ WPM in competitive online tests
Fastest mechanical typewriter recordStella Pajunas – 216 WPM on IBM electric typewriter (1946)
Fastest male keyboard typistSean Wrona – 256 WPM peak; ~170 WPM sustained (TypeRacer elite)
Fastest mobile phone typing recordMarcel Fernandes Filho – 25.98 seconds to type standard phrase (2017 Guinness)
Fastest 10-finger touch typingAnthony Goldsmith – 170+ WPM in competitive touch typing
Average global typing speed~40 WPM for general adult population
Average professional typist speed~75–80 WPM
Government job typing standard (India)35 WPM English / 30 WPM Hindi – SSC CHSL, LAHD-SSRB
Slowest ‘deliberate’ typing recordNo official Guinness record – slowest meaningful typing estimated at 1–2 WPM

All records are subject to verification conditions. Guinness World Records and TypeRacer have different verification standards. Online speed test records are not always independently verified to Guinness standards.

A Brief History of Typing Speed Records: From 1888 to 2026

Typing speed competitions have a longer history than most people realize. The very first recorded typing speed contest was held in 1888 – just 15 years after Christopher Latham Sholes patented the first practical typewriter in 1873. Since then, the record has been broken dozens of times across different eras, technologies, and keyboard layouts.

YearRecord HolderSpeed (WPM)Equipment / ContextEra
1888Frank McGurrin~95 WPMRemington typewriter – first ever recorded contestTypewriter
1906Charles E. Smith~125 WPMMechanical typewriter – US ChampionshipTypewriter
1923Albert Tangora147 WPMUnderwood mechanical typewriter – World ChampionshipTypewriter
1946Stella Pajunas216 WPMIBM electric typewriter – still a remarkable benchmarkElectric
1959Myra Herr149 WPMMechanical typewriter – World ChampionshipTypewriter
1985Barbara Blackburn (early)150 WPMDvorak keyboard – beginning of keyboard era recordsKeyboard
2005Barbara Blackburn212 WPM sustainedDvorak layout – Guinness World Record certifiedKeyboard
2010sSean Wrona256 WPM (peak)QWERTY keyboard – Ultimate Typing ChampionshipOnline
2017Marcel Fernandes Filho25.98 sec phraseMobile phone – Guinness mobile typing recordMobile
2020sVarious (TypeRacer elite)250–300+ WPM (burst)Online competitive typing – not Guinness certifiedOnline

WPM records across different eras are not directly comparable – typewriter mechanisms, electric typewriters, and modern keyboards have very different actuation forces and key travel. The 1946 Stella Pajunas record of 216 WPM on an IBM electric typewriter is considered one of the most impressive feats in typing history.

Barbara Blackburn: The World’s Most Famous Fastest Typist

Barbara Blackburn holds the most widely recognized Guinness World Record for keyboard typing speed. Her story is fascinating not just for the speed she achieved, but for how she achieved it – and the unconventional path she took to get there.

DetailBarbara Blackburn – Complete Profile
NationalityAmerican (Salem, Oregon)
Peak Speed216 WPM peak / 212 WPM sustained over 50 minutes
Guinness RecordWorld’s Fastest Typist – certified by Guinness World Records, 2005
Keyboard LayoutDvorak Simplified Keyboard – NOT the standard QWERTY layout
Interesting backstoryFailed her high school typing test – was told she would never be a good typist. Later became the fastest in the world.
When she switched to DvorakAfter being told she was not a good typist – she switched from QWERTY to Dvorak and discovered her natural speed
Dvorak vs QWERTY advantageDvorak places the most common letters on the home row – reduces finger movement by ~60% vs QWERTY
CareerAdministrative professional – typing was a core job skill throughout her working life
LegacyProof that early failure does not predict ultimate ability – and that the right technique changes everything

Barbara Blackburn’s story carries a powerful lesson for every government job aspirant told they are ‘too slow’ to pass a typing test: the right method and consistent practice can transform any typist.

Top 10 Fastest Typists in World History: Complete Profiles

#NameCountryPeak WPMEra / EquipmentNotable Achievement
1Barbara BlackburnUSA216 WPM peak 212 WPM sustainedModern keyboard Dvorak layoutGuinness World Record holder – fastest sustained speed
2Stella PajunasUSA216 WPMIBM electric typewriter 1946First to break 200 WPM on electric typewriter
3Sean WronaUSA256 WPM peak ~170 WPM avgQWERTY keyboard Online competitiveUltimate Typing Championship winner; TypeRacer legend
4Albert TangoraUSA147 WPMUnderwood typewriter 1923World champion for 15+ years in typewriter era
5Cortez PetersUSA225 WPMIBM Selectric 1960s–70s8x World Champion – most decorated typewriter-era typist
6Anthony GoldsmithUK170+ WPMQWERTY keyboard 2000sEuropean fastest typist; competitive scene leader
7Guilherme SandriniBrazil160+ WPM avgQWERTY keyboard TypeRacerTop-ranked TypeRacer player globally; consistent speed
8Nate Rice (poem1)USA240+ WPM burstQWERTY keyboard Online competitiveKnown on Monkeytype for exceptional peak burst speeds
9Frank McGurrinUSA~95 WPMRemington typewriter 1888Won the very first typing speed contest ever held; touch typing pioneer
10Marjory LeggettUK~175 WPMElectric typewriter 1960sEuropean champion; fastest female typist of her era

WPM figures for historical records (pre-1980) may not be directly comparable to modern keyboard WPM due to different typewriter mechanisms and counting methods. Historical records used ‘net words per minute’ calculated differently from modern net WPM formulas.

Official Guinness World Records in Typing: Complete List

The Guinness World Records maintains the most widely recognized official typing speed records. Their verification process requires independent witnesses, standardized passages, and certified equipment – making Guinness records the gold standard in typing achievement recognition.

All Official Guinness Typing World Records

Record CategoryRecord HolderSpeed / TimeYearEquipment
Fastest keyboard typist (sustained)Barbara Blackburn (USA)212 WPM / 50 min2005Dvorak keyboard
Fastest typewriter typistStella Pajunas (USA)216 WPM / 1 min1946IBM Electric
Fastest mobile phone typing (SMS)Marcel Fernandes Filho (Brazil)25.98 seconds2017Samsung Galaxy S8
Fastest mobile typing (phrase) – femaleMelissa Thompson (UK)25.94 seconds2010LG Cookie mobile
Longest typing marathonAbhijeet Kini (India)124 hours non-stop2014Standard keyboard
Fastest typing – blindfoldedMohammed Hassan (Pakistan)103 WPM blindfolded2011Standard keyboard
Fastest typing – toes onlyPrabhakar Reddy (India)103 WPM with toes2011Standard keyboard
Fastest typing – nose onlyMohammed Khurshid Hussain (India)103 WPM with nose2008Standard keyboard
Most keys typed in 1 minute (single finger)Multiple claimantsRecord disputedOngoingSingle finger

India has notable representation in Guinness typing records – three records involving Indian citizens (longest marathon, toes typing, nose typing). The nose typing record by Mohammed Khurshid Hussain is particularly extraordinary.

Online Typing Platform Records: TypeRacer, Monkeytype and Beyond

Online typing platforms have created a new category of speed records – not independently verified to Guinness standards, but tracked consistently across millions of users. These represent the current frontier of competitive keyboard typing:

TypeRacer All-Time Records

CategoryUsername / PlayerSpeedNotes
Highest recorded race WPMVarious elite users290–320 WPM (claimed)Not all independently verified
Most consistent high averageSean Wrona~170 WPM averageAcross thousands of races
Fastest legitimate verified raceMultiple elite typists250–260 WPMCommunity-verified legitimate
Most races completedVarious long-term users50,000+ racesTypeRacer veteran achievers

TypeRacer maintains an anti-cheat system but extremely high speeds (300+ WPM) are often disputed in the community. The platform considers speeds above 220 WPM as requiring additional verification.

Monkeytype Records

ModeTop Speed RecordedTest DurationContext
15-second burst300+ WPM (elite users)15 secondsVery short duration – highest burst speeds
60-second test240–260 WPM (top players)1 minuteMore representative of skill
5-minute test180–200 WPM (top players)5 minutesBest indicator of sustained speed
Global average (all users)~65–70 WPM60-second modeMonkeytype users skew faster than general population

Monkeytype’s 15-second mode produces the highest raw WPM figures because it captures peak burst speed without the endurance factor. A 300 WPM 15-second burst does not mean the typist can sustain 300 WPM for a full minute.

Typewriter Era Champions: The Forgotten Legends of Typing Speed

Before personal computers and digital keyboards, the typewriter era produced extraordinary speed typists who competed in formal world championships. Their records, achieved on manual and electric typewriters with stiff key mechanisms and physical carriage returns, are arguably more impressive than modern keyboard records given the physical demands involved.

ChampionCountryBest SpeedChampionship YearsEquipment
Albert TangoraUSA147 WPM1923 World ChampionUnderwood No. 5
Cortez PetersUSA225 WPM8x World Champion (1940s–60s)IBM Selectric
Stella PajunasUSA216 WPM1946 IBM RecordIBM Electric typewriter
Margaret OwenUSA170 WPMMultiple champion 1910s–20sRemington typewriter
Rose FritzUSA165 WPMUS champion 1930sUnderwood typewriter
Carole Forristall WaldschlagerUSA176 WPMUS Nationals champion 1950sElectric typewriter
Frank McGurrinUSA~95 WPM1888 – first contest winnerRemington No. 2

Cortez Peters – winner of 8 World Typing Championships – is considered by many historians as the greatest competitive typist of all time. His dominance spanned two decades across the transition from manual to electric typewriters.

Specialized and Unusual Typing Speed Records

Records by Body Part and Method

Record TypeRecord HolderAchievementCountry
Typing with toesPrabhakar Reddy P.103 WPM using only toesIndia
Typing with noseMohammed Khurshid Hussain103 WPM using nose to press keysIndia
Typing blindfoldedMohammed Hassan103 WPM while blindfoldedPakistan
Typing with one handMultiple claimants~70–90 WPM one-handedInternational
Typing upside downVarious YouTube showcases~40–60 WPM invertedInternational
Typing in the darkAny proficient touch typistSame speed as in lightAny – shows touch typing mastery
Typing longest marathonAbhijeet Kini124 hours continuous typingIndia

India holds a remarkable number of unusual typing Guinness records – toes, nose, and marathon. The 103 WPM records using nose and toes are held by Indian practitioners who dedicated years to this unconventional skill.

Mobile Phone Typing Records

RecordHolderTime / SpeedDetails
Fastest SMS text messageMarcel Fernandes Filho (Brazil)25.98 secondsStandard Guinness phrase on Samsung Galaxy S8, 2017
Fastest mobile typing (female)Melissa Thompson (UK)25.94 secondsLG Cookie, 2010 – briefly held overall record
Fastest typing on iPadMultiple claimants~80–100 WPMTablet touchscreen typing – varies by device
Fastest swipe typing (phone)Various SwiftKey users~50–80 WPM equivalentSwipe/gesture typing on smartphone

Mobile phone typing and desktop keyboard typing are completely different motor skills. World-class mobile typists do not necessarily type fast on keyboards, and vice versa. Do NOT use mobile typing speed as an indicator of keyboard typing ability.

Indian Typing Records: World Champions and National Achievers

India has a remarkable presence in international typing records – particularly in specialized and unusual categories. Here is a comprehensive overview of Indian typing achievers:

AchievementNameRecord / SpeedDetails
Typing with toes (Guinness)Prabhakar Reddy P.103 WPMAndhra Pradesh – Guinness World Record for toe typing speed
Typing with nose (Guinness)Mohammed Khurshid Hussain103 WPMHyderabad – Guinness record for nose typing speed
Longest typing marathon (Guinness)Abhijeet Kini124 hours non-stopMumbai – Guinness marathon typing record
Hindi typing national record (est.)Not officially documented~80–100 WPM (Kruti Dev)No official Guinness Hindi typing speed record exists yet
Fastest government typing test qualifierAnecdotal – multiple SSC toppers~50–60 WPM EnglishGovernment typing tests do not track beyond pass/fail
Fastest Indian on TypeRacerMultiple Indian elite users~130–160 WPM averageCompetitive TypeRacer rankings – India well represented

A formal Guinness World Record for Hindi typing speed has never been officially established. This represents a significant opportunity for Indian typists – the first verified record holder for Hindi typing speed (Kruti Dev or Mangal) would claim uncontested world record status.

The World’s Slowest Typists: The Other End of the Spectrum

The concept of the ‘world’s slowest typist’ is fundamentally different from the fastest typist records. There is no Guinness category for slowest typing – because the slowest possible ‘typist’ would simply be someone who does not type at all. However, the slowest meaningful typing records tell remarkable human stories that deserve recognition.

The Slowest Typing That Ever Mattered

ContextPerson / SituationSpeed / Significance
Locked-in syndrome patientJean-Dominique Bauby (France) – ‘The Diving Bell and the Butterfly’Dictated entire memoir by blinking one eyelid – equivalent to ~0.5–1 WPM. Published 1997.
Stephen Hawking (late period)Prof. Stephen Hawking – motor neurone disease~1 word per minute via cheek muscle sensor and predictive software in final years. Yet produced extraordinary scientific work.
One-finger typing with disabilityDocumented in various rehab studies2–5 WPM with one functional finger – still meaningful communication
Senior citizen learning first timeVarious documented first-time learners aged 70–903–8 WPM – slower than hand-written notes but celebrates technology access in old age
Child learning to type (age 4–5)Documented in early childhood education research1–3 WPM – each correctly typed letter a victory
Deliberate slow typing recordNo official Guinness record exists‘Slowest’ deliberate typist – would need to type recognizable words. ~0.1 WPM theoretically possible.

Jean-Dominique Bauby’s story – dictating an entire book at one letter per blink – may be the most profound ‘typing’ achievement in human history. It reminds us that speed is relative and communication is the true purpose of the skill.

Why the ‘Slowest Typist’ Story Matters

The stories of people who type extremely slowly – whether due to disability, age, injury, or just beginning their journey – carry lessons that the fastest typist records cannot teach. They remind us that:

  • Speed is not the only measure of success: Jean-Dominique Bauby communicated an entire memoir one letter at a time. Stephen Hawking changed our understanding of the universe typing one word per minute. The purpose of typing – communication – does not require speed.
  • Every WPM improvement matters: Going from 1 WPM to 5 WPM is a 400% improvement – proportionally larger than going from 100 WPM to 120 WPM. For someone learning from nothing, every word per minute gained is a victory.
  • Starting slow is not failing: Barbara Blackburn failed her high school typing test. Every world record holder once typed slowly. The slowest typist today can become a fast typist tomorrow – if they start and continue.
  • Assistive technology bridges the gap: Screen readers, word prediction, eye-tracking, and voice-to-text technology mean that typing speed is no longer the barrier it once was for people with disabilities. Communication remains possible at any speed.

also read: Typing Games Boost Typing Speed

Typing Speed Categories: Where Do You Stand?

Speed CategoryWPM RangeWho Fits HereWhat It Means
Hunt and Peck5–20 WPMTrue beginners, non-typists, elderly first learnersNeeds systematic touch typing training to progress
Beginner20–30 WPMNew touch typists, casual usersBuilding muscle memory – 4–8 weeks to next level
Average30–50 WPMGeneral computer users, studentsNear or above government qualifying standard (35 WPM)
Proficient50–70 WPMOffice workers, proficient students, regular typistsWell above govt. minimum; comfortable for most work
Fast70–100 WPMExperienced touch typists, writers, programmersTop 15–20% of all typists globally
Expert100–130 WPMProfessional typists, transcriptionists, competitive typistsTop 5% globally – rare skill level
Elite130–170 WPMCompetitive typing community top playersTop 0.5% – serious investment in technique required
World Class170–220 WPMBarbara Blackburn tier, Sean Wrona tierTop 0.01% – extraordinary combination of technique and talent
Record Territory220+ WPMAll-time world records onlyStella Pajunas (216), Barbara Blackburn (212), Cortez Peters (225)

The government job qualifying standard of 35 WPM sits at the boundary between ‘Average’ and ‘Proficient’ – entirely achievable for any committed learner in 10–14 weeks of daily practice.

Keyboard Layouts and World Records: Does Layout Matter?

One of the most interesting patterns in typing speed records is the role of keyboard layout. Barbara Blackburn used the Dvorak keyboard layout – not the standard QWERTY layout that most people use. This raises a question that has been debated in the typing community for decades: does your keyboard layout determine your speed ceiling?

LayoutHome RowSpeed CeilingUsed ByVerdict
QWERTYASDFGHJKL~260 WPM (Sean Wrona)95%+ of all typistsUniversal – lower theoretical ceiling but widely proven
DvorakAOEUIDHTNS~212+ WPM (Blackburn)~5% of advanced typistsBetter ergonomics; 60% less finger movement
ColemakARST NEIO (modified)~180+ WPM (competitive)~1% of advanced typistsGood balance of speed and QWERTY transfer
One-Hand DvorakSingle hand optimized~70–90 WPM (one hand)PwD and specialized usersBest for single-handed typing
Kruti Dev (Hindi)Hindi Devanagari chars~80–100 WPM HindiHindi govt. typistsStandard for Indian state govt. steno/LDC exams

For government job preparation in India, QWERTY (English) and Kruti Dev (Hindi) are the only relevant layouts. Dvorak and Colemak, while ergonomically superior, are not accepted in government typing tests – do NOT switch layouts for government exam preparation.

Fastest and Slowest Typists in the World (Typing Speed)
Fastest and Slowest Typists in the World (Typing Speed)

What World Records Teach Every Everyday Typist

The stories of the world’s fastest – and slowest – typists carry practical lessons for every government exam aspirant, student, and professional trying to improve their typing speed:

Lesson from RecordsWhat It Means for You
Barbara Blackburn failed her typing testEarly failure predicts nothing. If you are currently slow, that is a starting point – not a destiny.
The best use all 10 fingersEvery world record holder uses all 10 fingers and never looks at the keyboard. Touch typing is non-negotiable for high speed.
Dvorak is faster – but irrelevant for govt. examsLayout matters for raw speed records but not for your purpose. Master QWERTY (English) or Kruti Dev (Hindi) – what your exam uses.
India holds Guinness records in unusual categoriesNo Hindi typing speed Guinness record exists yet. The fastest Hindi typist in India could claim a genuine world first.
Speed plateaus are real but temporaryEvery world record holder had periods of no improvement. The plateau is not a ceiling – it is a phase that targeted practice breaks through.
35 WPM is achievable for everyoneThe government qualifying standard of 35 WPM is in the ‘Average’ range globally. With 10–14 weeks of daily practice, any motivated person can reach it.
Hawking and Bauby typed with almost nothingIf they communicated at 1 word per minute and changed the world – there is no excuse for not practicing 30 minutes a day to reach 35 WPM.

The distance between the world’s fastest typist (212 WPM) and the government qualifying standard (35 WPM) is enormous. But the distance between where you are and 35 WPM is not – and that is the only gap that matters for your goal.

Major Typing Competitions: Historical Results and Records

YearCompetitionWinnerSpeed / Notes
2010Ultimate Typing Championship (UPC)Sean Wrona~163 WPM – won inaugural championship
2011Ultimate Typing ChampionshipSean WronaDefended championship
2017TypeRacer World ChampionshipMultiple elite competitorsOnline championship format
2019Typeracer ChampionshipVarious international playersGlobal participation; India represented
1923World Typewriting ChampionshipAlbert Tangora147 WPM – mechanical typewriter
1940–60sMultiple World ChampionshipsCortez Peters8 championships – most decorated competitive typist
OngoingMonkeytype CompetitionsVarious elite usersOnline tournaments with leaderboards – ongoing

There is no single annual ‘World Typing Championship’ recognized by all bodies. TypeRacer, Monkeytype, and Ultimate Typing Championship each run their own competitions with different verification standards.

Official Links: World Records and Typing Speed Resources

ResourceLink / Details
Guinness World Records – Typingguinnessworldrecords.com
TypeRacer (Online Competition)typeracer.com
Monkeytype (Speed Tests + Records)monkeytype.com
10FastFingers (Competitions)10fastfingers.com
Typewriter (Wikipedia)en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typewriter
Dvorak Keyboard Layout (Wikipedia)en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dvorak_keyboard_layout
Free Speed Test + Practicetypingmasterpro.com

For submitting a Guinness typing speed record claim, visit guinnessworldrecords.com and search ‘apply for a record’. The process requires independent witnesses, standardized test conditions, and video evidence.

FAQ:

Who is the fastest typist in the world?

The most widely recognized Guinness World Record holder for fastest sustained keyboard typing is Barbara Blackburn of the United States, who achieved 212 WPM sustained over 50 minutes (216 WPM peak) on a Dvorak keyboard layout, certified in 2005. For electric typewriter speed, Stella Pajunas holds the 1946 record of 216 WPM. In modern online competitive typing, Sean Wrona has recorded peak speeds of 250+ WPM on standard QWERTY keyboards, though these are not Guinness-certified records.

What is the world record typing speed on a standard QWERTY keyboard?

On standard QWERTY keyboards in online competitive settings, the highest reliably documented speeds are in the 250–260 WPM range for elite competitors. Barbara Blackburn’s Guinness record used Dvorak layout. For Guinness-certified QWERTY records, the most documented sustained performances reach approximately 170–200 WPM among the world’s elite competitive typists, though Guinness has not separately categorized QWERTY vs. Dvorak for recent records.

Is there a world record for the slowest typing speed?

There is no Guinness World Record category for the slowest typing speed – because the theoretical minimum would simply be not typing at all. However, the most meaningful ‘slowest’ typing stories belong to individuals like Jean-Dominique Bauby (who dictated a memoir at approximately one letter per blink while having locked-in syndrome) and Stephen Hawking (who communicated at approximately 1 WPM via cheek sensor in his final years). Their stories represent the opposite end of the spectrum from speed records but are arguably more inspiring.

What is the fastest typing speed ever recorded in India?

India holds three unconventional Guinness World Records: Prabhakar Reddy for toes typing (103 WPM), Mohammed Khurshid Hussain for nose typing (103 WPM), and Abhijeet Kini for the longest typing marathon (124 hours). For conventional keyboard typing speed, India has strong representation on TypeRacer leaderboards with Indian typists reaching 130–160 WPM in regular competition. No official Guinness record exists for fastest Hindi typing speed – this record remains unclaimed.

What is the average typing speed in India?

The average typing speed among general adult computer users in India is estimated at 25–35 WPM – slightly below the global average of ~40 WPM. This is partly because India’s widespread computer adoption is more recent than in Western countries, and many users typed first on smartphones rather than keyboards. Among government job aspirants who have specifically trained for typing tests, 30–40 WPM is the typical range before preparation and 40–50 WPM after systematic practice.

Can a normal person reach 100 WPM typing speed?

Yes – with dedicated practice, 100 WPM is achievable by most people. It requires approximately 12–18 months of deliberate daily practice (30–45 minutes per day) starting from an average speed. Most people reach their ‘comfortable ceiling’ around 60–70 WPM without specific training beyond that point. Breaking through to 80, 90, and 100 WPM requires targeted practice on weak key pairs (bigrams), consistent typing game competition, and deliberate speed-push sessions. Reaching 100 WPM puts you in the top 5% of all typists globally.

Conclusion: Every Record Was Once Impossible – Including Yours

When Frank McGurrin typed approximately 95 words per minute on a Remington typewriter in 1888 to win the world’s first typing competition, the idea of someone typing 200+ WPM would have seemed physically impossible. When Barbara Blackburn failed her high school typing test, nobody predicted she would one day hold a Guinness World Record. When Stephen Hawking lost almost all voluntary movement to motor neurone disease, he continued to communicate – one word at a time – ideas that changed how humanity understands the universe.

The history of typing speed records is a history of humans consistently exceeding what was thought possible – through technique, technology, practice, and sheer determination. The lessons are universal whether you are chasing a Guinness record or a government job qualifying standard of 35 WPM.

Know your starting point. Use the right technique – all 10 fingers, eyes on the screen. Practice deliberately, not randomly. Build daily consistency above all else. Measure your progress weekly. And remember that every world record holder, every government typing test passer, and every person who ever typed quickly was once slower than they are now.

Find out your starting WPM right now at TypingMasterPro.com. Then begin the practice that will make your own personal record – whatever that number is – something to be proud of.

Leave a Comment