A fair fight: free, beloved software vs. a paid newcomer
Let's be upfront about something. TIPP10 is free, open source, and one of the most respected typing tutors in the German-speaking world. It has been downloaded millions of times, it's used in schools and universities across Germany, and it's been recognised by Stiftung Warentest. That's not marketing fluff — it's a genuinely good piece of software with a long, well-earned reputation.
Typiq, by contrast, is a paid app. €18.99, once. So this comparison starts from an honest position: a paid product has to earn the gap over free, proven software, and TIPP10 sets a high bar. We're not going to pretend otherwise.
This article is written by the team behind Typiq, so treat the perspective accordingly. We've kept the facts about TIPP10 accurate and fair, and we'll point out plainly where TIPP10 is the better choice. If you read to the end and conclude TIPP10 is right for you, that's a perfectly good outcome — and we'd rather you make that call with accurate information than oversell you.
Pricing and model
This is the section where TIPP10 wins outright, so let's start here.
TIPP10 is free. It's open-source software (released under the GPLv2), with no subscription, no premium tier, and no paywall. You can download it, use every feature, and never pay anything. For a lot of people, that single fact ends the conversation — and fairly so.
Typiq is €18.99 as a one-time purchase for a lifetime licence. No subscription, ever. There's a free 30-minute trial with no card and no signup, so you can try the whole thing before deciding whether it's worth the price.
Being straight about it: "free vs. €18.99" is not a close call on cost. What €18.99 buys is a different kind of product — a polished, modern, native app with live per-keystroke finger guidance and a dedicated kids mode. Whether that's worth paying for depends entirely on what you need, which is what the rest of this article is about. You can see Typiq's pricing on the buy page.
Platforms and offline use
This one is closer than you might expect, and TIPP10 holds up well.
TIPP10's main product today is its browser version, which runs on any system with no install at all. There's also a desktop download for Windows, macOS, and Linux — but that desktop build is no longer maintained, and on Mac it stopped working at macOS 10.15 Catalina (so it won't run on any modern or Apple-Silicon Mac). TIPP10's own download page recommends the online version instead. The upside is real flexibility: a no-install browser option that works everywhere.
Typiq is a native app you install on Mac (Apple Silicon and Intel), Windows, Linux, and Chromebook. After installation it works fully offline — no connection needed to run a lesson. There's no browser version; Typiq is download-only by design, with the trade-off that you commit to installing it.
To be precise: TIPP10's browser version doesn't need an install at all, which is genuinely convenient and a real point in its favour. The honest difference is in delivery model and how modern the experience feels. TIPP10's online version is the actively maintained path, and its legacy desktop build is mature but dated (and Mac-incompatible on current systems); Typiq is a fresh native app that runs fully offline, with an Apple-Silicon-native Mac experience and a UI designed in 2026. If you want a current-feeling, offline-native desktop app — especially on a modern Mac — that's where Typiq pulls ahead; if you'd rather just open a browser tab and start, TIPP10's online version is the easier entry.
Learning approach: the core difference
This is the heart of the comparison.
TIPP10's signature feature is intelligent error repetition. As you practise, it tracks the keys and combinations you mistype most and drills them harder — feeding difficult characters back to you more often until they stick. It also offers a dictation mode, lets you add your own lesson texts, and provides detailed statistics. It's a smart, proven, drill-based approach to building accuracy and speed, and it's been refined over many years.
Typiq is built around real-time finger guidance. On every keystroke, it shows you which finger should hit which key, live, on a colour-coded on-screen keyboard. That's the headline difference: TIPP10 tells you what to retype when you get it wrong; Typiq shows you how to type it correctly in the moment — which finger, right now. For a true beginner who doesn't yet know the home row, that "which finger next" visual guidance is exactly the scaffolding that's hardest to get from a drill-based tool.
Neither approach is wrong — they suit different stages. TIPP10's error repetition is excellent once you broadly know finger placement and want to grind down your weak spots. Typiq's live finger guidance is aimed at the earlier moment, when you're still learning the map of the keyboard. If you're starting from zero, our guide on touch typing for beginners explains why visual finger placement matters before speed drilling does.
Layouts and multilingual support
Here TIPP10 has a genuine strength worth respecting.
TIPP10 supports multiple keyboard layouts, including QWERTZ, the German NEO layout, Dvorak, and Swiss German. For layout enthusiasts — especially anyone learning or already using NEO or Dvorak — that's a real draw, and it's not something every tutor offers.
Typiq offers 9 UI languages and 9 real keyboard layouts, including German with a proper QWERTZ layout. The app interface itself is translated, and the lessons match the physical layout in front of you. Typiq does not currently offer NEO or Dvorak layouts.
So be honest about the trade here: if you specifically want to learn NEO or Dvorak, TIPP10 is the better tool — full stop. Typiq's multilingual strength is in fully translated interfaces and standard national layouts (like real QWERTZ) for learners across nine languages, not in alternative layouts for enthusiasts. Different audiences, and TIPP10 clearly serves the alt-layout crowd better.
Data and privacy
Both tools do well here, and we won't manufacture a gap that isn't there.
TIPP10's legacy desktop version runs locally and works offline, so your practice stays on your machine, and as open-source software its behaviour is inspectable. Its actively maintained online version runs in the browser instead. Either way, TIPP10 is a free, open project rather than a data-driven business.
Typiq runs locally on your device, works fully offline, and has no ads and no tracking. The 30-minute trial needs no card and no signup. Your practice stays on your machine.
Honestly, neither tool is built to monetise your data. TIPP10's open-source transparency is a point in its favour for anyone who wants to audit the code. Typiq's edge is the explicit "no ads, no tracking, native and offline" design as a paid product with no funding model that depends on your data.
Who TIPP10 is better for
Be fair — there are strong, real reasons to choose TIPP10:
- You want it free, with no purchase decision at all.
- You value open source (GPLv2) and want software you can inspect or trust on principle.
- You want a Stiftung-Warentest-recognised, proven tool with a long track record in German schools.
- You want NEO or Dvorak layouts, which Typiq doesn't offer.
- You like the browser option as well as a desktop download.
- You prefer drill-based, intelligent error repetition and want to add your own texts and use dictation mode.
If that's you, TIPP10 is an excellent choice and you genuinely may not need to spend anything.
Who Typiq is better for
- You're learning to type from scratch and want to be shown which finger goes where on every keystroke, not just drilled on mistakes.
- You're a kid (or teaching one) — Typiq has a dedicated gamified kids mode for ages 6–14, which TIPP10 doesn't.
- You want a polished, modern, Apple-Silicon-native app rather than a mature but dated UI.
- You want guided "which finger next" learning as a true beginner.
- You're happy to pay €18.99 once for that experience, with no subscription and no ads.
If those things matter more to you than "free," that's the case for paying. If they don't, TIPP10 is the smarter spend.
Feature comparison
| Feature | TIPP10 | Typiq |
|---|---|---|
| Price | Free (open source, GPLv2) | €18.99 one-time, lifetime |
| Free entry | Fully free | 30-min trial, no card, no signup |
| Platforms | Browser (all systems) + legacy desktop (Win/Linux; Mac only up to macOS 10.14) | Native: Mac, Windows, Linux, Chromebook |
| Offline use | Legacy desktop build (Win/Linux); online version needs a browser | Yes, fully offline after install |
| Real-time finger placement | No (drill / error repetition focus) | Yes — colour-coded, every keystroke |
| Learning approach | Intelligent error repetition, dictation | Guided live finger placement |
| Dedicated kids mode (games) | No | Yes (ages 6–14) |
| Keyboard layouts | QWERTZ, NEO, Dvorak, Swiss German | 9 layouts incl. real QWERTZ (no NEO/Dvorak) |
| UI languages | German-focused (plus others) | 9 fully translated UI languages |
| Custom lesson texts | Yes | Structured lessons |
| Detailed statistics | Yes | Lesson progress focused |
| UI / experience | Mature, functional, dated | Modern, polished, native (2026) |
| Reputation | Stiftung-Warentest-recognised, millions of downloads | Newer, paid, modern alternative |
| Ads / tracking | None (open source) | None, ever |
The bottom line
TIPP10 is free, open source, Stiftung-Warentest-recognised, and runs in the browser on any system (with a legacy offline desktop build for Windows and Linux), with NEO and Dvorak layouts and a clever error-repetition engine. That is a lot of value for zero euros, and for many people — especially those who want a proven, free tool, or specifically need NEO/Dvorak — it's simply the right answer. We'll say that without hedging.
Typiq is the paid, modern alternative. It costs €18.99 once, and what you get for that is a polished, native, Apple-Silicon-ready app, real-time colour-coded finger guidance on every keystroke, and a dedicated gamified kids mode for ages 6–14 — the kind of "which finger next" scaffolding that helps true beginners and children most. Typiq has to earn that €18.99 against excellent free software, and it earns it on experience and live finger guidance, not on a longer feature list.
So: if "free and proven" wins for you, use TIPP10 with our blessing. If a modern app with live finger guidance and a real kids mode is worth €18.99 to you — especially for a beginner or a child — that's exactly what Typiq is for.
Want to decide for yourself? Try Typiq free for 30 minutes from the Typiq homepage, see the install guide, or read our roundup of the best typing software in 2026.
Frequently asked questions
Is TIPP10 free?
Yes, completely. TIPP10 is free and open source under the GPLv2 licence, with no subscription, premium tier, or paywall. You can use every feature without paying. It's also been recognised by Stiftung Warentest and downloaded millions of times, with wide use in German schools — so "free" here means free and proven. That's a genuine strength.
What is the best free alternative to TIPP10?
TIPP10 itself is already a strong free option, so the honest answer is that you may not need an alternative if free is your priority. Typiq is not a free alternative — it's a paid (€18.99 one-time), modern alternative aimed at people who want a polished native app with live finger guidance and a dedicated kids mode. There's a free 30-minute trial so you can compare it against TIPP10 yourself before paying.
How is Typiq different from TIPP10?
The core difference is the learning approach. TIPP10 uses intelligent error repetition — it drills the keys you mistype most. Typiq shows real-time, colour-coded finger placement on every keystroke, so you see which finger to use as you type. Typiq is also a modern, native app with a gamified kids mode for ages 6–14, while TIPP10 is a mature, functional tool with NEO and Dvorak layouts and a browser version. They suit different stages and audiences.
Does TIPP10 work offline and on Mac?
Partly. TIPP10's browser version runs on any system online, and its legacy desktop download works offline on Windows and Linux. On Mac, though, that desktop build stopped working at macOS 10.15 Catalina and is no longer maintained, so it won't run offline on a modern or Apple-Silicon Mac — TIPP10 recommends the online version there. Typiq, by contrast, is a native Mac app (Apple Silicon and Intel) that works fully offline after installation, alongside Windows, Linux, and Chromebook builds.
Should I pay for Typiq when TIPP10 is free?
Only if the differences matter to you. If you want free, open-source, Stiftung-Warentest-proven software, or you specifically need NEO or Dvorak layouts, TIPP10 is the better and cheaper choice — keep it. Pay for Typiq (€18.99 once) if you value a modern, native app with real-time finger guidance and a dedicated kids mode, especially for a true beginner or a child. The free trial lets you judge the gap before spending anything.
Does Typiq support NEO or Dvorak like TIPP10?
No. This is a clear point for TIPP10 — it supports QWERTZ, NEO, Dvorak, and Swiss German. Typiq offers 9 keyboard layouts including a real QWERTZ, but it does not currently include NEO or Dvorak. If you want to learn or use those layouts, TIPP10 is the right tool.
Is Typiq good for kids, like TIPP10?
Typiq has a dedicated, gamified kids mode designed for ages 6–14, with games to keep younger learners engaged, plus support for parents guiding them. TIPP10 is a capable general-purpose tutor but doesn't have a dedicated gamified children's mode. If you're teaching a young child specifically, that's one of the clearer reasons to consider Typiq over TIPP10.


