SSC Typing Test: Rules, Speed & Free Practice

Complete SSC typing test (DEST) guide: CHSL pattern, qualifying speed (35 WPM English / 30 WPM Hindi), error rules, Mangal vs Kruti Dev, and free SSC-style practice.

MMohammad IsmailJune 27, 20264 min read
SSC Typing Test: Rules, Speed & Free Practice

SSC Typing Test Guide: Rules, Speed & Free Practice

The SSC typing test (officially the DEST — Data Entry Speed Test) is the skill test that decides whether you qualify for clerical posts in the Staff Selection Commission (SSC) CHSL recruitment — posts such as LDC, JSA, PA, SA, and DEO. This guide covers the test pattern, qualifying speeds, the error rules that decide your net score, and how to practise for free.

SSC CHSL typing test pattern

After you clear the written tiers, qualifying candidates appear for the DEST:

  • Medium: English or Hindi (you choose at the time of the exam; the choice usually can't be changed later).
  • Task: you're given a printed passage and must type it into the exam software.
  • Duration: typically 10 minutes (15 minutes for some DEO posts — confirm in your notification).
  • Software behaviour: the exam software disables or penalises backspace and auto-correct, so you must type accurately the first time.
  • Font/layout: modern SSC cycles use the Mangal (Unicode) font with the Inscript/Remington layout for Hindi; English is standard QWERTY. Always confirm the exact font in your notification.

Qualifying speed (WPM)

SSC states qualifying speeds in KDPH (key depressions per hour). The commonly cited qualifying benchmarks for the LDC/JSA typing test are:

MediumQualifying speedIn WPM (approx.)
English10,500 KDPH35 WPM
Hindi9,000 KDPH30 WPM

For DEO posts, the requirement can be higher (often cited as 8,000 and 15,000 KDPH depending on the specific DEO post). These figures are indicative — the exact qualifying speed, time, and post-specific requirement are set in each cycle's official notification, so verify against yours before you practise.

Accuracy and error rules

Your net score — not gross — is what qualifies you. The standard scoring approach:

  • Gross speed = all key depressions ÷ time.
  • Errors (wrong character, omitted character, extra character, or a full-word mistake) each carry a penalty.
  • Net speed = gross − (errors × penalty).

Because each error removes several keystrokes from your net count, a careful 33 WPM can out-qualify a careless 37 WPM. Accuracy is decisive. Some candidates are disqualified not for being slow but for accumulating too many errors on the most common words — so drill high-frequency vocabulary.

English vs Hindi test

The two mediums demand different practice:

  • English test: standard QWERTY; faster to learn; focus on rhythm and avoiding transposition errors.
  • Hindi test: Devanagari on the Inscript/Remington layout; conjuncts (क्ष, त्र, ज्ञ, श्र) are the main speed-killers. Practise on the exact font your notification specifies (Mangal vs Kruti Dev).

Choose the medium in which you can sustain the higher net speed — not the one you're fastest at gross, because the Hindi error penalty often narrows the gap.

Free SSC typing practice

  1. Practise on exam software, not a chat keyboard — disable backspace, use the exact font and timer.
  2. 10-minute timed tests daily — match the real duration.
  3. Track net WPM and accuracy every session; aim for 97%+ accuracy before pushing speed.
  4. Drill the conjuncts if taking the Hindi test.
  5. Use learntype.app's free SSC-style typing passages, with engines for both Inscript and Remington layouts.

Frequently asked questions

What is the qualifying speed for SSC CHSL typing? Indicatively 35 WPM (English) / 30 WPM (Hindi), i.e. ~10,500 / 9,000 KDPH. Verify the exact figure and duration in your cycle's notification.

Is backspace allowed in the SSC typing test? The exam software typically disables or penalises backspace, so practise typing correctly the first time.

Mangal or Kruti Dev for SSC Hindi? Modern SSC cycles generally use Mangal (Unicode) with Inscript/Remington; older references mention Kruti Dev. Confirm the font in your notification before practising.

Is the typing test qualifying or merit-ranking? For most CHSL clerical posts it is qualifying (pass/fail) at the prescribed speed, though policies can vary by post and cycle — check your notification.

Related guides

Speeds, durations, and qualifying benchmarks above are indicative, based on commonly cited SSC CHSL standards. The exact rules for your exam are in the official SSC notification for your recruitment cycle — always verify before practising.

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Written by

Mohammad Ismail