Sindhi requires 52 code points spanning two Unicode blocks. Most people assume Arabic script keyboards all use the same characters — this article shows exactly where Sindhi diverges and why those distinctions matter.
They look similar at first glance. Both use Nastaliq, both read right to left, both sit in the same Unicode block. But Sindhi has 14 letters Urdu simply does not have — and mixing them up produces text that is quietly wrong in ways that matter.
Before the Perso-Arabic form became standard, Sindhi had at least four distinct writing systems in active use. How one script survived British standardisation, Partition, and the digital age is a story worth knowing.
Android gives you several routes to a working Sindhi keyboard — Gboard, SwiftKey, and dedicated Sindhi apps all take different approaches. This guide walks through each option and says plainly which one actually works best for daily use.
Windows does not ship with a Sindhi keyboard layout in most regional configurations. That does not mean you are stuck. Here are three working methods — including a zero-install option that takes under two minutes to set up.
Ready to start typing?
The Sindhi keyboard is free, instant, and needs nothing installed.