65% vs 75% Keyboard Layouts: Which Fits Your Workflow?

Jan 17, 2026

Both 65% and 75% layouts are compact, but they feel very different day to day. The biggest difference is the function row and navigation cluster.

Layout overview

  • 65%: arrow keys + a small nav column, no function row
  • 75%: adds a function row and a more complete nav cluster

If you use shortcuts or F-keys often, 75% feels closer to a full size board. If you want a tight footprint, 65% wins.

Keycap set compatibility

When buying or designing a set, check for:

  1. 1u keys in the nav column (65% often needs extras)
  2. Right shift size (varies by board)
  3. Bottom row spacing (especially for custom layouts)
  4. Function row legends (needed for 75%)

Browse layouts:

Use cases

  • 65%: small desk, travel builds, clean minimal look
  • 75%: productivity, coding, function row heavy workflows

Why 75% feels closer to full size

The extra function row and navigation keys reduce layers and shortcuts, which helps if you use F-keys, media controls, or IDE shortcuts often. If you rarely touch those keys, 65% keeps the footprint tight without major daily pain.

Pairing tips

  • 65% + XDA/DSA makes row coverage easy
  • 75% + Cherry/OEM feels familiar for daily work
  • Consider PBT if you want lower shine over time

More hubs:

Prompt starter

Theme: minimal graphite
Layout: 75%
Profile: Cherry
Legends: subtle, small caps
Lighting: soft diffused

FAQ

Is 65% too small for work? Not if you rarely use function keys. It is very popular for coding and daily typing.

Does 75% always need more keycaps? Yes, you will need a function row and often a larger nav cluster.

Keycaps AI

Keycaps AI

65% vs 75% Keyboard Layouts: Which Fits Your Workflow? | Keycaps Blog | Keycaps.dev