Kurdish Handwriting to Text — Free AI OCR for Latin Script
Reading Kurdish by machine is not trivial: kurmanji Kurdish uses the Latin alphabet with ç, ş, ê, î and û marking its vowels and consonants. Our AI takes care of it, so you can **convert Kurdish handwriting to text** and get straight back to your work.
Drag and drop or
PNG, JPEG, JPG, WEBP, HEIC, HEIF, PDF up to 20 MB
or drag and drop, or paste with Ctrl + V
Extracted kurdish text
Your extracted kurdish text will appear here. Upload an image on the left to get started.
What makes this Kurdish OCR different
Latin script, real penmanship, and everything you need to get editable Kurdish text.
Photos and PDFs both work
Snap a picture or drop in a multi-page PDF. We pull the Kurdish text out of letters, notes and official documents.
Edit before you export
The result lands in an editable box, so you can fix anything the AI misread and then copy or download it — no extra steps.
Export however you need
Save your text as TXT, Markdown, Word (.docx) or PDF, or copy it straight to the clipboard.
Your files stay private
Every Kurdish image is processed securely and deleted right after the text is pulled. Nothing is kept on our servers.
Free, and no account
No sign-up, no watermark, no daily cap — convert as much handwritten Kurdish as you need.
Copes with Turkey styles
Handwriting shifts from person to person across Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran. Our model is tuned to handle that range in Kurdish.
Converting Kurdish handwriting takes three steps
Three quick steps and your Kurdish handwriting is text you can edit.
- 1
Upload your image or PDF
Drag in a photo, scan or PDF of the Kurdish handwriting. JPG, PNG, HEIC and PDF all work.
- 2
Let the AI read it
Our OCR studies the Latin characters and turns them into digital text.
- 3
Edit, copy or download
Check the text, make any small fixes, then copy it or export to Word, PDF, TXT or Markdown.
Kurdish handwriting to text — questions people ask
No. Files are processed and then deleted immediately — we never hold on to them.
Yes. It runs in any modern mobile or desktop browser, so you can snap a photo and convert on the spot.
Anything handwritten — letters, notes and official documents, and more.
It is used across Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran, and the model is tuned for the handwriting styles found there.
Yes — it's free to use, with no sign-up and no daily limit.
It handles most everyday Kurdish handwriting well. A clearer photo gives a cleaner result; very faded or hurried writing might need a quick edit afterwards.