- 1 Formal touch-typing is best started at age 6–7, once fine motor skills are ready.
- 2 Pre-keyboarding activities (letter finding, sound play) are appropriate from age 3.
- 3 Free keyboard exploration builds real skills from as early as age 2.
- 4 Starting formal typing too early can create bad habits and keyboard aversion.
The short answer
Formal typing starts at age 6 or 7
This is the consensus of occupational therapists and early childhood educators, aligned with typical elementary school curricula.
Formal touch-typing — home-row position, all-finger technique, speed targets — is best introduced at age 6 or 7, once fine motor skills and reading ability are sufficiently developed.
But "starting typing" and "being ready for formal typing instruction" are different things. Pre-keyboarding activities — exploring letters on a keyboard, finding keys by name, connecting letter sounds to key presses — are developmentally appropriate from around age 3, and free keyboard exploration from age 2.
What the research says
AAP on interactive screen time
Interactive activities like keyboard play carry meaningfully different developmental value than passive video watching.
NAEYC on letter-name knowledge
Children who can recognise and name most letters before kindergarten learn to read significantly faster. A keyboard is a uniquely tactile environment for that practice.
OT research on fine motor
The pincer grip and precise finger isolation needed for touch-typing typically matures between ages 5 and 7. Pushing before this causes frustration.
Age-by-age guidance
Free exploration
Press keys, see letters, hear letter names. No instruction needed — the exploration itself is the learning. Builds keyboard familiarity and cause-and-effect understanding.
Letter finding
Can begin to find named letters on the keyboard. Works best when the child already knows some letter names. A letter-finding game format (like Find the Letter mode) makes this engaging without pressure.
Letter-sound work
Connecting pictures to letters to key presses. Phonemic awareness is developing rapidly. This is the ideal window for Type the Letter activities. Not yet formal typing — no hand position instruction.
First word typing
Typing short, phonetically regular words reinforces decoding skills. Still exploration-led rather than technique-led. A natural bridge to formal typing instruction in early elementary school.
Formal typing instruction
Home row position, finger assignment, speed building. Fine motor skills and reading ability are now sufficiently developed. Tools like Typing.com, TypingClub, and Dance Mat Typing are designed for this stage.
The risk of starting formal typing too early
A child who loves pressing keys at age 4 is far better prepared for formal typing at age 7 than a child drilled on hand position at age 5 who found it stressful.
Parents who introduce structured typing practice — correct finger positions, home-row rules, speed goals — before age 6 or 7 sometimes find that their children develop strong single-finger habits that are hard to break later. More significantly, the frustration of attempting a physically demanding task before the fine motor system is ready can make children averse to keyboard practice altogether.
The goal of pre-keyboarding activities is to build positive associations with the keyboard, not technique.
Where ToddlerKeys fits in
ToddlerKeys is designed for the pre-typing window: ages 2–6. It is not a typing tutor — there is no instruction on finger positioning, no speed measurements, and no home-row rules. Instead, it focuses on the skills that research shows matter most before formal typing begins: letter names, letter sounds, keyboard familiarity, and positive associations with keyboard use.
Read more about the full keyboard readiness progression or explore the 5 specific pre-keyboarding skills your child needs before formal typing begins.
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ToddlerKeys meets children where they are — from free exploration at age 2 to first words at age 6. No login, no ads, completely free.
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