For many users, the default keyboard that comes with their device is pretty boring. It is usually a stock Android keyboard or an OEM keyboard from Samsung, LG devices. However, they are not your only option. There are many third-party keyboard apps for Android with a wide range of features.
Some keyboards focus on effects and customization, while others offer a great typing experience. There are some keyboards that meet both requirements. In the article below, Quantrimang will introduce you to the best keyboards for Android devices today.
AI Type Keyboard Pro has been around for a long time, and it’s the best keyboard option. It has a lot of standard features, including predictive text, auto-fill, emoji, and other keyboard customizations. It also has over a thousand themes that you can change. The free trial lasts 18 days, and then you pay $3.99 for the paid version. You can still use it for free, but some features will be limited. It’s also one of the few Android keyboards that has a number row.
AnySoftKeyboard
AnySoftKeyboard is a simple keyboard with surprisingly many customization options. Its biggest feature is that it supports multiple languages, and the developers have added a lot of add-ons for different languages. In addition, the keyboard has many unique themes, and some additional features such as undo and back arrow. Best of all, this application is completely free.
AnySoftKeyboard
FancyKey
FancyKey is one of the fastest keyboards for Android. It focuses on customization options, themes, and everything in between. The app has over 50 themes, 70 fonts, and 3,200 emojis. The typing settings are basic but still feature-rich. You get autocorrect, autosuggest, and swipe gestures in case the keyboard crashes. However, the app was stable during testing.
Fleksy
Flesky is one of the famous keyboards for Android, it includes all the basic features such as swipe, hand gestures, web search, GIF meme support, themes, widgets are very diverse. This keyboard application is completely free, only a few themes need to be purchased but at a quite cheap price.
Flesky
Gboard
Gboard is Google’s official keyboard. It has all the basics like autocorrect, multilingual typing, and tons of customization options. Google Search is also built into the keyboard, so you can search for anything without having to switch apps. Gboard also supports GIFs, voice typing, and Google Translate. However, this is not a minimalist keyboard.
Gboard
Grammarly
Grammarly is one of the newer keyboards for Android. It started out as a Chrome extension that corrected grammar errors in your text. The Grammarly keyboard version does the same thing. It checks your grammar and spelling for you. This is a fairly new keyboard app, so it’s still in development, hopefully more features will be added in the near future. Now, you have a neat keyboard with grammar correction, which is great for those who write long articles and paragraphs on their devices.
Grammarly
Hacker's Keyboard
Hacker's Keyboard is a good keyboard. It doesn't have the AI autocorrect features of SwiftKey or Gboard. However, it has the same layout as a full PC keyboard, and supports multiple languages via separate downloads from the Google Play Store. Other than that, it's a pretty simple app. You get the classic Gingerbread-style keyboard with CTRL, escape, ALT, Fn, and arrow keys. Some keys only appear when the device is held horizontally.
Hacker's Keyboard
Microsoft SwiftKey
SwiftKey has always been one of the best Android keyboards. It has predictive and auto-correct features that mimic your typing, cloud syncing so all your devices have the same theme, the same custom style, a number row, etc. It also supports over 100 languages, all the keyboard features are free but most of the themes are paid. SwiftKey was acquired by Microsoft a few years ago but it still works perfectly as before.