Is Backspace Allowed in Indian Government Typing Tests? (2026)
Short answer: in nearly every major Indian government-exam typing test, backspace is disabled on the exam-centre computer. Here's the full exam-by-exam breakdown and why it matters for your preparation.
The exam-by-exam backspace table
| Exam | Post | Backspace | Arrow keys | Home/End |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SSC CHSL | LDC/JSA/PA/SA | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| SSC CGL Tier-III | DEST | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| CPCT | All | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| UPSSSC | JA/LDC/CO | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| UPPRPB | Computer Operator | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| UPPRPB | SI/ASI Clerk | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| RRB NTPC Stage III | Clerk cum Typist | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| Informatics Assistant | Suchna Sahayak | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| Gramin Dak Sevak | Skill Test | Disabled | Disabled | Disabled |
| Court Clerk (state) | Junior Assistant | Usually Disabled | Varies | Varies |
Why do exam centres disable backspace?
Three linked reasons:
- It measures real-world clerical speed. In government offices, clerks type physical carbon-copy documents, court depositions, or revenue records where corrections require reprinting and re-submission. Keyboard-level corrections are effectively banned on paper forms, so the exam mirrors that.
- It prevents speed gaming. If backspace is allowed, candidates type wildly then stop to correct — "catch-up typing". This allows gaming the clock and prevents fair comparison.
- It filters for attention, not just motor speed. A candidate who can sustain 30 WPM with 3% errors on the first keystroke each time is more valuable than one who types 45 WPM with a backspace frenzy that nets 25 WPM.
What exactly is disabled? (The full list of blocked keys)
Backspace— the obvious one.Delete— forward delete is also disabled on most exam terminals.Arrow keys— Left/Right/Up/Down; you cannot navigate within typed text.Home / End— cannot jump to start / end of line.Page Up / Page Down— disabled.Ctrl + anything— Ctrl-A, Ctrl-Z, Ctrl-X, Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V all disabled.Mouse clicks— click-to-position cursor is disabled. Your cursor is always at the trailing end of what you've typed.
Three implications for your preparation
1. Practice with backspace disabled from day one
If your practice tool allows backspace (most free tools do), you're building a habit that will fail you on exam day. Our Kruti Dev typing test disables backspace by default — the mode is called "SSC-strict". Use it.
2. Train your eyes forward, not backward
When you make a mistake, your natural reflex is to look back at the typo. On a backspace-disabled exam that reflex is useless and burns 1–2 seconds per error. Train to look forward — the next word, the next line — regardless of what just happened. This is the single biggest mental shift for beginners.
3. Do a "reset drill" weekly
Once a week, practise typing a passage with your dominant hand's little finger taped to the Backspace key — i.e., pressing Backspace has no effect because the key itself doesn't register. This re-trains the reflex. In a week or two you'll stop trying to backspace altogether.
When IS backspace allowed?
- Private typing tools: 10FastFingers, TypingClub, Keybr, Typing.com — all allow backspace by default.
- Practice mode of government tools: Some state commissions provide a "practice mode" on their portal where backspace works but the timed test does not.
- State court-clerk tests (varies): A small number of state high courts allow time-penalised backspace — each backspace deducts 0.5s from your total time. Read your specific notification.
- Data Entry Operator tests (CGL DEST): DEST specifically measures raw keystrokes — you cannot correct errors but "erroneous entries" are counted; the mechanism effectively penalises backspace use.
The "half-mistake" trap most candidates miss
With backspace disabled, a wrong character becomes a full mistake. But a missed character (skipped letter, missing space, missed matra) is a half-mistake (0.5). The math is brutal: 10 full mistakes + 20 half-mistakes = 20 combined marks. In a 1,800-character Hindi passage, that's already 1.1% — and most candidates don't even notice half-mistakes while typing.
Try backspace-disabled practice → English practice (strict mode)
Frequently asked questions
Is backspace allowed in SSC CHSL typing test?
No. Backspace is disabled on the exam-centre computer for all CHSL posts requiring typing (LDC, JSA, PA, SA, Court Clerk).
Is backspace allowed in CPCT typing test?
No. CPCT disables backspace, arrow keys, Delete, Home, End and all Ctrl-based shortcuts. Once a character is typed, it stays.
Is backspace allowed in RRB NTPC Stage III typing test?
No. RRB disables backspace for Stage III typing skill test across all clerk-cum-typist posts.
Why is backspace disabled in typing exams?
To measure real clerical accuracy (paper-office work cannot be corrected without re-typing), prevent speed gaming through catch-up typing, and reward sustained attention over motor-speed alone.
Are mouse and arrow keys allowed to move cursor?
No. On every major Indian government typing exam the cursor can only advance with keystrokes — mouse clicks, arrow keys, Home and End are all disabled.
What counts as a half mistake?
Extra space, missing space, missing matra/vowel sign, wrong punctuation, wrong case. Each scores 0.5. Full mistakes (wrong character, omission, substitution) score 1.
Is backspace allowed in court clerk typing exams?
Usually disabled, but a handful of state high courts (e.g., some Maharashtra and Delhi sub-courts) use time-penalised backspace — each backspace deducts 0.5 seconds. Check your specific notification.