Free • No Sign-up • Browser Based

Type in অসমীয়া online,
straight from your browser.

AssameseKeyboard.com is a free toolkit for the Assamese language — a virtual InScript keyboard, English-to-Assamese typing, text utilities, grammar help, calculators and alphabet charts. Everything is Unicode, so you can copy your text into Word, WhatsApp, Facebook or any app.

No download  ·  No account  ·  Works on phone & computer
23
Free tools
0
Sign-ups
100%
Browser-based
Unicode
Compatible output
Most used tool

The Assamese Virtual Keyboard

Our main tool. An on-screen InScript keyboard so you can type Assamese on any device, even one that doesn't have the Assamese language installed. Click the keys with your mouse, tap them on your phone, or use your real keyboard with the InScript layout.

  • Standard Indian Government InScript layout
  • Outputs clean Unicode — paste anywhere
  • PDF export for your typed text
  • Optional key sounds & live character count
  • Works offline once the page is loaded
Open the Keyboard
All tools

Everything we have, organised

Twenty-three free tools across four categories — typing, text, language & learning, and calculators. Each one opens in your browser. No install, no log-in.

Advertisement — Content Middle (336×280)
Guide

How to type in Assamese online

A few simple ways to write Assamese without installing anything. Pick whichever feels easier — the output is the same standard Unicode either way.

1

Use the on-screen keyboard (no English typing needed)

Open the Assamese Virtual Keyboard and click the Assamese letters on the screen with your mouse, or tap them on your phone. Best for people who already know the Assamese alphabet but don't want to install an Assamese keyboard on their device.

2

Type in English, get Assamese (phonetic / transliteration)

Open English to Assamese Typing and type Assamese words using English spelling — for example, write axom to get অসম, or namaskar for নমস্কাৰ. Easiest option if you don't know where each Assamese letter sits on the keyboard.

3

Use your physical keyboard with the InScript layout

The virtual keyboard also accepts input from your real keyboard using the standard InScript layout. Once you learn the layout — our typing practice tool helps with that — you can type Assamese as fast as English.

4

Copy & paste anywhere

Whatever you type is plain Unicode Assamese. Select your text, copy it, and paste it into Microsoft Word, Google Docs, WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, Gmail or any other app. No special font required — modern devices already display Assamese correctly.

Who uses this

Built for everyday Assamese needs

Different people use the site for different reasons. Here are the most common ones.

🎓

Students & teachers

For school and college assignments in Assamese — essays, notes, project work, and reference charts for the alphabet, numbers and months.

🏛️

Government & office work

For typing official letters, applications and reports in Assamese on any office computer — no software install needed.

✍️

Writers & bloggers

For drafting posts, articles and social-media captions in Assamese, then cleaning and counting the text before publishing.

📱

Social & chat users

For sending Assamese messages on WhatsApp, Instagram and Facebook — including stylish nicknames and quick text tricks.

About the language

A quick note on Assamese (অসমীয়া)

A short, honest primer for anyone who's new to the language or just curious about the script behind the tools.

Assamese — known to its speakers as অসমীয়া (Oxomiya) — is the official language of the Indian state of Assam and one of the 22 scheduled languages of India. It is the easternmost Indo-Aryan language, spoken by roughly 15 million people as a first language and millions more as a second language across the Northeast.

It is written in the Assamese script, which is closely related to the Bengali script but has its own distinctive letters — most famously (ra) and (wa). The alphabet has 11 vowels and 41 consonants, plus a set of vowel signs (matras) that attach to consonants to form syllables.

On computers and phones, Assamese is stored as Unicode — the same standard used by every modern operating system, browser and app. That's why text typed here can be pasted into Word, WhatsApp, Facebook or government forms without any conversion.

If you're learning the script, the alphabet chart, number chart and months chart are good starting points.

Why this site

Small, focused, honest

We're not a giant suite. We're a few well-made tools that do one thing each, and don't ask you for anything.

🆓

Genuinely free

No sign-up, no trial, no paywall. The site is supported by lightweight ads, that's it.

🔒

Mostly private

Almost every tool runs entirely in your browser. The only exception is the grammar checker, which sends text to an AI service.

Nothing to install

Works in any modern browser, on phones and computers alike. No extensions, no apps.

🇮🇳

Built for Assamese

Made by someone who actually uses the language — not a generic multilingual tool with Assamese bolted on.

FAQ

Common questions

Quick answers to the things people most often ask. Can't find what you need? The blog goes into more detail.

How do I type in Assamese online without installing anything?
Open the Assamese Virtual Keyboard. You can click the on-screen keys with your mouse, tap them on your phone, or use your physical keyboard with the InScript layout. The typed text is in standard Unicode, so you can copy and paste it into Word, WhatsApp, Facebook, email or any other app.
What is the difference between InScript and phonetic Assamese typing?
InScript is the official Indian Government keyboard layout where each physical key maps to one Assamese letter. Phonetic typing (also called transliteration) lets you write Assamese using English spelling — for example, typing axom to get অসম. Our Virtual Keyboard uses InScript; our English-to-Assamese Typing tool uses phonetic transliteration.
Will the Assamese text I type here work in Microsoft Word, WhatsApp and Facebook?
Yes. Everything you type is plain Unicode Assamese text — the same standard used by Windows, Android, iOS and the web. Copy from the tool and paste it anywhere: Word, Excel, WhatsApp, Facebook, Instagram, Gmail or any modern app.
Do I need an Assamese font installed on my computer?
No. The site loads the Noto Sans Bengali font from Google Fonts, which covers the full Assamese script. Modern Windows, macOS, Android and iOS devices also ship with Assamese-capable fonts out of the box.
Are these Assamese tools really free?
Yes. Every tool is free with no sign-up, no download, no trial and no hidden charges. The site is supported by lightweight display ads.
Do the tools work on Android and iPhone?
Yes. The site is fully responsive and works on phones, tablets and desktops. Long-form typing is most comfortable on a desktop with a physical keyboard, but every tool is usable on mobile.
Is my text private?
Almost every tool runs entirely in your browser — your text is never sent to a server. The Assamese Grammar Checker is the only exception: it sends your text to an AI service for processing.
Can I use these tools for school, college and government work?
Yes. Students, teachers, government employees and writers in Assam regularly use tools like these for assignments, notes, official letters and reports. The output is standard Unicode Assamese accepted by Indian government systems and educational institutions.

Ready to type in অসমীয়া?

Open the keyboard and start typing — no sign-up, no install, no setup. Just click any key and your Assamese text appears.

Open the Keyboard