Tatar Keyboard for Linux

Use the Tatar Keyboard below to type instantly on Linux — no install, no signup, no font downloads. Below the keyboard you'll find the official setup steps for Linux if you'd rather have it system-wide.

Virtual Keyboard

Install the Tatar Keyboard on Linux

  1. On GNOME: Settings → Keyboard → Input Sources → +.
  2. On KDE: System Settings → Input Devices → Keyboard → Layouts.
  3. Add the layout you need and a switch shortcut (often Super + Space).
  4. On other distros, configure ibus or fcitx5 with the matching engine.

Online Tatar Keyboard vs. system keyboard

Linux input frameworks (ibus, fcitx5) are extremely flexible but can take a while to configure. The online Tatar Keyboard works in any browser and is a no-setup alternative when you just need to type a passage and copy it.

Tips for Linux

On X11 you can also use xkbcomp or setxkbmap to load custom layouts — Wayland users typically rely on the desktop environment's input panel.

Frequently asked questions

Is the Tatar Keyboard on Linux really free?

Yes — the in-browser Tatar Keyboard above is completely free on Linux. No signup, no ads, no usage limits.

Do I need to install anything to use the Tatar Keyboard on Linux?

No. The Tatar Keyboard runs entirely in your browser on Linux. Just type, copy and paste anywhere.

Will the Tatar Keyboard work in any app on Linux?

The on-screen Tatar Keyboard types into the page itself, then you copy the result and paste it into any Linux app — including chat, email, social media, and documents.

Can I use the Tatar Keyboard offline on Linux?

After the page loads once, modern browsers cache it, so the Tatar Keyboard keeps working even with a flaky connection on Linux.

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