Practice Sets

Typing sets for SSC CGL practice

Choose from 350 local practice and mock sets without digging through clutter. The 15 minute mock runs are tuned closer to the official SSC CGL DEST pattern, so this page helps you train for the real typing window instead of only collecting random reps.

Quick Answer

Which set should you open first?

If you are starting cold, open an easy 5-minute practice set. If you already have rhythm today, choose a medium 10-minute practice set. If you want the closest rehearsal for the real SSC CGL DEST, open a 15-minute mock test with the stricter exam-style layout.

Official SSC notices describe the DEST as a 15-minute qualifying test for about 2000 key depressions, with additional time only for eligible PwBD candidates using a scribe or compensatory time.

Best for weekdays

Easy or medium practice sets usually give the best balance between useful reps and not frying your patience.

Best for exam feel

Use the 15 minute mock when you want the closest feel to the official SSC DEST window of about 2000 key depressions and less help on screen.

Best for stamina

Move to 15 or 30 minutes only after shorter runs stop feeling chaotic. For real exam rehearsal, the 15 minute mock is the one that matters first.

How To Use This Page

Choose the next set in under a minute

Start with the amount of time you can finish cleanly, then use mode and difficulty to decide how much pressure you want today. If your last session was chaos, that is not a sign to click the hardest box again.

Use The Filters Like A Human

Pick the run you can finish cleanly today

Practice mode is the safer daily default when the goal is steady improvement. Mock mode makes more sense when you already know the weak point and want the screen to stop helping. The better choice is usually the one you can finish without the session turning into a small personal feud.

Shorter runs are useful when you want to reset rhythm, spacing, and posture. Longer runs are useful when you want to see whether that control still survives after the first easy lines are gone. In other words, use duration to test stamina, not ego.

Practice For Daily Reps

Choose Practice when you want visible feedback and a cleaner training loop. It is the better default for most weekdays.

Mock For A Quiet Check

Choose Mock when you already know what to work on and want a calmer screen with less help while you type.

Reset Days

Three and five minute sets are enough to fix rhythm, spacing, and posture without turning a tired evening into a punishment session.

Stamina

Fifteen and thirty minute sets are where you find out whether your focus still holds once the first comfortable paragraph disappears.

Need More Context

Read the guide that matches the problem

If you are unsure about speed targets, paragraph training, or longer runs, start with the guide that answers that exact question instead of collecting random advice from six tabs and one confused YouTube comment section.

Speed Target Guide

Useful when you are trying to understand what kind of pace is practical and how to train toward it.

Paragraph Practice Guide

Useful when you want to move from short drills into paragraph work that feels more like real preparation.

15 Minute Guide

Useful when you want a serious session length but you are not sure how to pace it properly from the first paragraph.

Rules And Pattern Guide

Useful when you want a clearer line between practice advice on this site and the latest official notice details.