SSC CHSL 2026 Typing Test — The Complete Rulebook
Everything the 2026 SSC CHSL notification actually mandates about the typing skill test — speed, error cap, duration, backspace policy, bilingual option, the 35/30 WPM formula, and what changed from 2024–25 cycles.
Who this rulebook applies to
Everyone who clears the SSC CHSL Tier-II exam and is shortlisted for a post in LDC / JSA (Lower Division Clerk / Junior Secretariat Assistant), PA/SA (Postal / Sorting Assistant), or DEO (Data Entry Operator) is called for a typing skill test. The typing test has existed in CHSL since 2011 but has seen small changes in almost every year's notification — this article locks in the 2026 version.
The six parameters you must memorise
- Language: Choose English OR Hindi at the time of application, not at the test. You cannot switch on exam day.
- Speed: 35 WPM English = 10,500 key depressions per hour; 30 WPM Hindi = 9,000 KDPH. Passages are 2,000–2,400 characters for English, ~1,800 for Hindi.
- Duration: 10 minutes exactly. A 2-minute pre-test demo window is allowed for mock-typing only.
- Backspace: Disabled. Arrow keys / Home / End / delete also disabled — once a character is entered it stays.
- Error tolerance: Up to 7% combined (full + half) on total characters typed. Cross 7% and you fail regardless of speed.
- Merit weightage: None. Typing is purely qualifying in CHSL — passing adds you to the post eligible list, nothing more.
What "7% error cap" actually means — worked example
Say you type 1,890 characters in 10 minutes (~ 30 WPM Hindi). The system splits mistakes into full (1 mark) and half (0.5 mark). Half-mistakes include: extra space, missing space, wrong punctuation, wrong matra/vowel sign, wrong case. Full mistakes are wrong characters or omissions.
7% of 1,890 = 132.3 combined mistakes. If you have 120 full mistakes you're already close — 25 half-mistakes on top push you to 132.5 and you fail. In practice, sub-4% is the safe zone, 5% is the danger zone, and above 6% you are gambling on exam-day luck.
Speed formulae — SSC uses Net WPM, not Gross
| Metric | Formula | What SSC uses |
|---|---|---|
| Gross WPM | (total characters / 5) ÷ (time in min) | No |
| Net WPM | ((total characters − errors) / 5) ÷ (time in min) | Yes — for qualify cutoff |
| KDPH | Total key depressions × (60 / minutes) | Converted from Net WPM for notifications |
Because Net WPM is what decides pass/fail, error reduction gives you speed credit too. Every 10-mistake reduction in a 10-minute session effectively adds 2 Net WPM.
What changed in 2026 vs 2024–25
- Font flexibility: Hindi typing now accepts Kruti Dev 010 (Remington Gail) AND Mangal (Inscript) at the same test centre. Earlier cycles forced candidate-level font choice at application; 2026 allows on-the-day selection during the 2-minute demo window.
- Stricter invigilation: Camera-based proctoring with eye-tracking was trial-run in late 2025 and is notified for 2026. Looking off-screen for more than 4 seconds continuously can trigger a warning.
- Keyboard standardisation: SSC centres are now mandated to use USB-A full-size keyboards with standard key-travel (1.5–2 mm). Older centres had mixed chiclet-style keyboards; this is fixed.
- No bilingual attempt: 2026 notification explicitly ended the rarely-used "both language" option. You get one language, one attempt.
Eligibility by post — who needs which speed
| Post | Typing needed | Target speed | Weightage |
|---|---|---|---|
| LDC / JSA | Yes | 35 WPM Eng / 30 WPM Hin | Qualifying |
| PA / SA | Yes | 35 WPM Eng / 30 WPM Hin | Qualifying |
| DEO (non-C&AG) | Speed Test | 8,000 KDPH English | Merit-contributing |
| DEO (C&AG) | Speed Test | 15,000 KDPH English | Merit-contributing |
| Court Clerk | Yes | 35 WPM Eng / 30 WPM Hin | Qualifying |
Four-week preparation plan
Week 1 — Foundation
Find your baseline. Do 3 × 3-minute timed tests with backspace disabled. Note your Gross WPM, Net WPM, and error %. No targets yet; you're just establishing a starting point. 45 minutes per day, 5 days.
Week 2 — Accuracy first
Aim for 0% errors on 3-minute passages, even if your speed drops 30%. Reflex for correctness must be built before speed; speed without accuracy is useless on a backspace-disabled exam. 60 min/day, 6 days.
Week 3 — Full simulations
Move to 10-minute full simulations, twice a day. Target Net 32 WPM (English) / 28 WPM (Hindi) — 3 WPM below the bar but with <3% errors. Use the Kruti Dev typing test for Hindi practice.
Week 4 — Exam-day prep
Push to Net 37 WPM English / 32 WPM Hindi in practice so exam-day nerves still leave you above 35/30. Do your 10-minute sim at 10 AM daily to match the typical SSC centre slot. Do not practice the day before the exam — rest the fingers.
Where candidates actually fail
- They practised with backspace enabled. Result: at the first typo their whole rhythm collapses.
- They practised on laptop chiclet keyboards only. Exam centre full-size keyboards feel heavier — fingertip pressure needs re-calibration.
- They chased speed past 40 WPM while errors climbed to 5–6%. Net WPM then falls below 35 and they fail.
- They ignored Hindi-specific half-mistakes (matra, chandrabindu) that English-trained typists don't instinctively see.
- They skipped the 2-minute demo window on exam day, losing their chance to confirm the font/layout is what they practised on.
Should you choose English or Hindi?
Default to the language you type faster in during a 10-minute uninterrupted session with backspace disabled. For most Hindi-medium aspirants from North India that's Hindi at 28–30 WPM vs English at 22–25 WPM — Hindi wins. For Bengali/Tamil/Malayalam-medium candidates who learned English typing in school, English is usually the faster choice.
Three tie-breakers if you're close in both languages: (a) pick English if you plan to work in non-Hindi states; (b) pick Hindi if your target post is North-India specific (UP/MP/Rajasthan); (c) pick whichever has fewer half-mistakes — matra half-mistakes compound faster than English punctuation errors.
Practice SSC CHSL Hindi Typing Test → Practice English Typing
Frequently asked questions
What is the typing speed required for SSC CHSL 2026?
35 WPM in English or 30 WPM in Hindi (Kruti Dev 010 or Mangal Inscript). The speed is measured as Net WPM — that is, gross words typed minus errors, divided by time.
Is backspace allowed in SSC CHSL typing test?
No. Backspace, arrow keys, delete, Home and End are all disabled on the exam-centre machine. Any typo remains in the final text.
How many errors are allowed in CHSL typing test?
Up to 7% combined errors on the total characters typed. Full mistakes count as 1, half mistakes (extra space, wrong matra, wrong punctuation) count as 0.5.
Is Kruti Dev allowed in SSC CHSL 2026?
Yes. For the Hindi paper you can type in Kruti Dev 010 (Remington Gail layout) or Mangal (Inscript). You can also choose the layout during the pre-test demo window.
Does SSC CHSL typing score count in final merit?
No — CHSL typing is qualifying only. Passing puts you on the post-eligible list but typing speed above the 35/30 cutoff does not add to your rank. DEO Speed Test is the exception (merit-contributing).
How long is the SSC CHSL typing test?
10 minutes. A 2-minute demo window is allowed before the timed portion to familiarise you with the layout.
Can I attempt the typing test in both languages?
No. The 2026 notification explicitly removed the bilingual attempt option. You choose one language at application time.
What happens if I fail the CHSL typing test?
You are removed from consideration for LDC/JSA/PA/SA and Court Clerk posts in that cycle, but remain eligible for non-typing posts in the same recruitment if your Tier-II score permits.