TL;DR

copypaster is an auto typer that types your clipboard into Microsoft Word as real keystrokes with human rhythm. Works in Word desktop and Word Online. Paste into copypaster, click into Word, hit play. Free trial - 5 pastes, no card. It shapes how text arrives, not the words.

Why type into Word instead of pasting?

Pasting into Word drops the whole block in at once. That is fine for many uses, but it stands out in two places: Track Changes marks a paste as one enormous insertion, and version history on OneDrive or SharePoint records it as a single large revision. Typing, by contrast, accumulates gradually across the session. An auto typer lets you enter text you already have while still producing that typed, gradual result. It also gets text cleanly into Word fields and templates that mangle or reformat a paste.

How to auto type into Word

  1. Download and open copypaster (free trial - 5 pastes, no card).
  2. Paste your text into copypaster's pill, not into Word.
  3. Set a speed. 60-90 WPM reads like an average typist.
  4. Leave realistic timing on for natural pauses and the occasional corrected typo.
  5. Click into your Word document (desktop or Word Online) to give it focus.
  6. Hit play. After a short countdown, copypaster types the text into Word as keystrokes.

Word desktop and Word Online both work

Because copypaster sends OS-level keystrokes to whatever window has focus, it does not care whether Word is the desktop app or Word Online in a browser tab - both receive the characters exactly as if typed. This is also why a browser extension can't do this job: an extension can only reach a web page, never the Word desktop app.

One honest note on "looks like human typing"

People search for apps that make text "look like human typing in Word." copypaster genuinely does that at the keystroke level: the timing, pauses, and typo corrections read as a person typing, and the document's edit history reflects gradual typing. What it does not do is change the words. If your concern is a content-based AI or similarity check, that reads the text itself and is unaffected by how it was entered. copypaster shapes delivery and history, not content.

Frequently asked.

Is there an app that types text into Word like a human?

Yes. copypaster types your text into Microsoft Word as real keystrokes with human timing: variable speed, pauses at sentence and paragraph boundaries, and optional typos it corrects. It works in Word desktop and Word Online because it sends OS-level keystrokes to the focused window.

How do I auto type into Microsoft Word?

Open copypaster, paste your text into it (not into Word), set a speed like 60-90 WPM, click into your Word document, and start. copypaster counts down and then types the text in one character at a time.

Does typing into Word affect Track Changes or version history?

Typing arrives gradually rather than as one paste block, so Track Changes and OneDrive/SharePoint version history record it as typing across the session, not one large insertion. It changes how text arrives, not the words, so content-based checks are unaffected.

What WPM looks natural when typing into Word?

Around 60-90 WPM reads like an average typist. copypaster ranges 20-250 WPM with realistic pauses and optional typo corrections for a more human cadence.

Auto type into Word

Free trial - 5 pastes, no credit card. Works in Word desktop and Word Online.

Download free