Southeast Asian Virtual Keyboards

Thai, Vietnamese, Khmer, Myanmar, Lao, Indonesian, Malay, Filipino, Cebuano, and more

21 keyboard layouts available

About Southeast Asian Languages

Southeast Asia encompasses a remarkably diverse linguistic region covering the mainland countries of Thailand, Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, and Laos, as well as the maritime nations of Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Brunei, Timor-Leste, and Singapore. The region's languages span multiple families: Tai-Kadai (Thai, Lao), Austroasiatic (Khmer, Vietnamese), Austronesian (Indonesian, Malay, Filipino, Javanese), and Tibeto-Burman (Myanmar/Burmese). Some languages use their own unique indigenous scripts with thousands of years of history, while others use adapted Latin alphabets introduced during colonial periods. Southeast Asia is home to roughly 700 million people across these diverse linguistic communities.

Which Southeast Asian Keyboard Should I Use?

Southeast Asian keyboards are highly varied — some use ancient indigenous scripts, others use modified Latin alphabets. Choose based on your specific language and script.

Thai (Kedmanee) KeyboardBest for typing Thai (ภาษาไทย), spoken by approximately 60 million people in Thailand. The Kedmanee layout is the most common Thai keyboard standard.Open keyboard →Vietnamese (Telex) KeyboardBest for typing Vietnamese using the popular Telex input method. Vietnamese (Tiếng Việt) uses a Latin-based script with extensive tone and vowel diacritics. Telex is the most widely used input method in Vietnam.Open keyboard →Vietnamese (VNI) KeyboardBest for typing Vietnamese using the VNI input method, which uses numbers to indicate tones. Alternative to Telex for Vietnamese typists who prefer number-based tone input.Open keyboard →Khmer (NiDA) KeyboardBest for typing Khmer (ភាសាខ្មែរ), the official language of Cambodia spoken by approximately 16 million people. The NiDA layout is the standard Khmer keyboard for Cambodia.Open keyboard →Myanmar (Myanmar3) KeyboardBest for typing Burmese/Myanmar (မြန်မာဘာသာ). The Myanmar3 font standard is the modern Unicode-compliant layout replacing the older Zawgyi system.Open keyboard →Lao (STEA) KeyboardBest for typing Lao (ພາສາລາວ), the official language of Laos spoken by approximately 7 million people. The STEA layout is the official government-endorsed standard.Open keyboard →Indonesian KeyboardBest for Bahasa Indonesia, the official language of Indonesia and one of the most spoken languages in the world with approximately 200 million speakers. Uses standard Latin alphabet.Open keyboard →Malay (Malaysia) KeyboardBest for Bahasa Melayu (Malaysian/Bruneian standard). Closely related to Indonesian but with distinct vocabulary and spelling conventions.Open keyboard →Filipino (Tagalog) KeyboardBest for Filipino/Tagalog, one of the official languages of the Philippines spoken by approximately 80 million people as a first or second language.Open keyboard →Turkish KeyboardBest for Turkish (Türkçe), spoken by approximately 80 million people. The Turkish Latin alphabet uses specific diacritics including ğ, ı, ş, ö, ü, and ç.Open keyboard →Javanese (Carakan) KeyboardBest for typing Javanese in the traditional Carakan (Hanacaraka) script — an ancient Indic-derived script used for the Javanese language of Indonesia.Open keyboard →Balinese KeyboardBest for the traditional Balinese script, used for the Balinese language of Bali, Indonesia, in ceremonial, literary, and cultural contexts.Open keyboard →

Frequently Asked Questions

What Southeast Asian keyboards are available?

AnyKeyboard offers 21 Southeast Asian keyboard layouts. Thai, Vietnamese, Khmer, Myanmar, Lao, Indonesian, Malay, Filipino, Cebuano, and more. Each keyboard is free to use and works directly in your browser.

How do I type in Southeast Asian languages?

Simply select a keyboard from the list below, then either click the on-screen keys or use your physical keyboard. The characters will appear in the text editor, which you can then copy or download.

Do I need to install any software?

No installation required. All keyboards work directly in your web browser. Just visit the keyboard page and start typing immediately.

Is my typing saved anywhere?

No. Everything you type stays on your device. We never send your text to any server. Your privacy is completely protected.

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