If you type accents often, shortcuts alone aren’t enough.
Here’s the fastest, easiest way to type any accent on Mac, Windows, and mobile.
⚡ Best Method by Platform
Not sure where to start? Here’s the fastest recommended method for each platform:
| Platform | Recommended Method |
|---|---|
| Mac | Option key shortcuts |
| Windows | US International keyboard layout |
| iPhone / Android | Hold the key |
🧠 All Methods Explained
Method 1: Option Key Shortcuts (Mac)
The Mac has a built-in accent system that’s fast once you know the patterns. There are two ways to use it:
Hold-key popup Hold down any letter key and a small popup appears showing accented versions of that letter. Click the one you want, or press its number. Works everywhere on a Mac — no setup required.
Option key combinations For faster typing, use Option key shortcuts directly:
- Option + e, then a vowel → acute accent (é, á, í, ó, ú)
- Option + `, then a vowel → grave accent (è, à)
- Option + u, then a vowel → umlaut (ü, ö, ï)
- Option + n, then n or a vowel → tilde (ñ, ã)
- Option + i, then a vowel → circumflex (ê, â, î)
These work in virtually every Mac app. A small learning curve, but quick once the combinations are in muscle memory.
For character-specific guides, see our posts on how to type é, how to type ñ, and how to type ü.
Method 2: Alt Codes (Windows)
Alt codes are a classic Windows method — hold the left Alt key, type a number on the numeric keypad, and release. The accented character appears.
Some common ones:
- Alt + 0233 → é
- Alt + 0241 → ñ
- Alt + 0252 → ü
- Alt + 0231 → ç
- Alt + 0232 → è
A few things to keep in mind:
- Num Lock must be on — this is the most common reason Alt codes stop working
- You need a dedicated numeric keypad — the number row across the top of your keyboard won’t work
- Most laptops don’t have a numeric keypad, which makes Alt codes impractical for a lot of users
If Alt codes aren’t working for you, see our dedicated troubleshooting post: Alt Codes Not Working (Fix).
For the complete list of codes, visit our Windows Alt Codes for Accents page.
Method 3: Keyboard Layouts (Recommended for Regular Use)
If you type accents frequently, switching to a keyboard layout designed for accents is the most sustainable long-term solution. The best option for English speakers is the US International keyboard layout.
It looks identical to your standard keyboard but reassigns a few keys as dead keys — keys that modify the next character you type:
- ‘ then e → é
- ~ then n → ñ
- “ then u → ü
- ^ then o → ô
- ` then e → è
It’s available on Windows, Mac (as ABC Extended), and Chromebook, and works in every app without plugins or additional software.
The one adjustment: typing a plain apostrophe or quotation mark requires pressing the key followed by spacebar. Minor inconvenience, major payoff.
Full setup instructions for all platforms: US International Keyboard Layout Guide.
Method 4: Copy and Paste (Fallback)
Not glamorous, but completely reliable. If you need an accent right now and don’t want to set anything up, copy it directly from a reference page.
This works on every platform and every app — browser, Word, Google Docs, messaging apps, all of it. It’s not efficient for regular use, but as a one-off solution it’s hard to beat.
🌍 Accents by Language
If you’re typing in a specific language, here’s a quick overview of the characters you’ll need most — and where to go for the full guide.
Spanish
Key characters: á, é, í, ó, ú, ñ, ü, ¿, ¡
Spanish accents mark stress and distinguish between words that would otherwise look identical — si (if) versus sí (yes), for example. The ñ is its own letter entirely, not a stylistic variation.
Full guide: How to Type Spanish Accents
French
Key characters: é, è, ê, ë, à, â, ç, î, ô, û, ù
French uses accents to indicate pronunciation, distinguish homophones, and mark certain grammatical forms. The cedilla (ç) is among the most frequently needed characters for English speakers writing French.
Full guide: How to Type French Accents
German
Key characters: ä, ö, ü, ß
German’s umlauts change vowel sounds significantly — ü and u are distinct sounds, not interchangeable. The ß (eszett) represents a double-s sound and has no direct English equivalent.
Full guide: How to Type German Accents
⚙️ Troubleshooting
Alt codes aren’t working
The most common causes: Num Lock is off, you’re using a laptop without a numeric keypad, or the app you’re using is intercepting the Alt key. See the full fix guide: Alt Codes Not Working (Fix).
Your keyboard isn’t typing accents at all
If nothing is producing accent marks — shortcuts, Alt codes, hold-key — the issue is likely a keyboard layout change, an app conflict, or a settings problem. Walk through the diagnosis here: Keyboard Not Typing Accents (Fix).
You don’t have a numeric keypad
Most modern laptops don’t. This rules out Alt codes entirely, but the US International keyboard layout works without one — and is arguably a better method anyway. Full setup guide here.
Which Method Is Right for You?
A quick way to decide:
- Occasional use → copy and paste, or the hold-key method on Mac and mobile
- Regular use on Windows → US International keyboard layout
- Regular use on Mac → Option key shortcuts or ABC Extended layout
- Mobile → hold the key — it’s already built in, nothing to set up
🌍 Accent shortcuts
👉 How to type ñ
👉 How to type ü
👉 How to type ç
👉 How to type é
👉 Full accent guide Full accent guide
Never look up accent shortcuts again.
👉 Get the Accent Mastery Pack ($7)
→ All shortcuts in one place. No memorizing