Typing Turkish on a PC Without Changing System Settings
Windows and macOS both support Turkish input through system language packs, but the setup process is time-consuming and changes your keyboard layout globally. For most PC users who only occasionally need to type in Turkish, the browser-based approach is far more practical.
Open kactyl.com/turkish/ in Chrome, Edge, Firefox, or any browser, and you have a fully functional Turkish keyboard without touching a single system setting.
Windows Users: No Language Pack Needed
On Windows, adding a new keyboard language requires going to Settings → Time & Language → Language → Add a language. This adds a language input indicator to your taskbar and requires pressing Win+Space to switch keyboards.
Skip all of that. Use Kactyl in your browser — it works on Windows 10 and Windows 11 with no changes required.
Mac Users: No Input Source Setup Needed
On macOS, adding a new input source means going to System Preferences → Keyboard → Input Sources, then using the menu bar flag icon to switch. With Kactyl, none of this is necessary — just keep the keyboard tab open in Safari or Chrome.
Chromebook Users
Chromebooks run Chrome OS and support language input through Settings. But since Kactyl is entirely browser-based, it works perfectly on any Chromebook — no system configuration needed at all.
Using a Physical Keyboard with Turkish
If you type in Turkish regularly on a PC, you may want to learn the keyboard mapping. This lets you use your physical keyboard to type Turkish characters at full speed. The mapping depends on whether you use phonetic or standard layout:
- Phonetic layout: Vowel harmony — vowels in suffixes match the vowels in the root word — letters map to similar sounds on your QWERTY keyboard
- Standard layout: Fixed positions matching the official Turkish keyboard standard
PC Typing Tips for Turkish
- Turkish has 6 extra letters: Ç Ğ İ Ö Ş Ü
- Note: dotted İ and undotted I are different letters
- Turkish Q and W don't exist in the standard alphabet
The Kactyl keyboard works as a click-based reference even if you're primarily using a physical keyboard. Use it to quickly look up a character you can't find, or to compose text when you're on an unfamiliar machine.
About the Turkish Language
Turkish is spoken by 88 million people in Turkey and Cyprus. The modern Turkish Latin alphabet was introduced in 1928 by Atatürk, replacing Arabic script. Turkish has 6 special letters (Ç, Ğ, İ, Ö, Ş, Ü) that are absent from standard QWERTY keyboards. WhatsApp and Instagram are the dominant platforms. Turkey has one of the world's highest Instagram engagement rates.
Turkey's Script Revolution — 1928 and the Latin Alphabet
On November 1, 1928, the Republic of Turkey switched from Arabic script to a modified Latin alphabet in one of history's most dramatic language reforms. The change was driven by Mustafa Kemal Atatürk's goal of modernizing Turkey and breaking with the Ottoman past. Citizens had 90 days to learn the new script. Books, signs, newspapers — everything changed simultaneously. The reform transformed Turkish from a language written right-to-left in Arabic script to a phonetically precise left-to-right Latin system. Modern Turkish has 29 letters including 6 unique to Turkish: Ç (ch), Ğ (soft g, often silent), İ (dotted i), Ö (umlauted o), Ş (sh), Ü (umlauted u). Note the crucial distinction: İ (dotted capital i) and I (undotted capital i) are different letters in Turkish — I lowercases to ı, İ lowercases to i. This confuses spellcheckers in other languages.