Mouse Click Speed Tool

Click Speed Test, Click Test & Click Per Second Test

Measure click speed with real 1s, 5s, 10s, and 30s timers. The result card shows total clicks, CPS, your local personal best, and recent attempts without uploading scores.

Click speed test 1s burst 5s quick burst 10s steady CPS 30s endurance Share result

Score explanation: CPS means clicks per second. The tool divides your total clicks by the selected timer, so 70 clicks in 10 seconds equals 7.0 CPS.

Click test vs CPS test

Direct answer: a click speed test measures how many times you can click or tap during a short timer, then reports CPS. Use 1s for reaction-style bursts, 5s for fast attempts, 10s for a stable average, and 30s for endurance.

A click test and a CPS test usually mean the same thing: click as many times as possible during a fixed timer, then divide total clicks by seconds. This page adds a shareable result card plus local personal best and recent attempts so repeat testing is easier.

1s, 5s, 10s, and 30s mode guide

A 1-second click speed test is useful for a tiny burst or reaction-style challenge, but it is noisy because one missed click changes the result sharply. The 5-second mode is best for quick CPS attempts, 10 seconds gives a smoother average, and 30 seconds shows rhythm, fatigue, and endurance.

How the click speed score is calculated

The tool counts every click inside the test area for the selected duration. When the timer ends, the total number of clicks is divided by the number of seconds to produce your clicks-per-second score. For example, 35 clicks in 5 seconds equals 7.0 CPS, and 90 clicks in 10 seconds equals 9.0 CPS.

CPS and CPM definitions

CPS means clicks per second: total clicks divided by seconds. CPM means clicks per minute: CPS multiplied by 60. For example, 8 CPS equals about 480 CPM. CPS is better for short tests, while CPM can help compare longer rhythm or endurance attempts.

CPS score explanation

CPS means clicks per second. A 4 to 6 CPS result is a normal casual range for many people, 6 to 8 CPS is a solid mouse clicking speed, and 9+ CPS is fast for a standard click test. Longer tests can feel lower because they measure rhythm and hand endurance, not only a short burst.

1s, 5s, 10s, and 30s CPS benchmark table
Test lengthBest useCasualSolidFast
1 secondTiny burst and reaction-style attempts.3-5 CPS6-8 CPS9+ CPS
5 secondsQuick burst and warm-up attempts.4-6 CPS6-8 CPS9+ CPS
10 secondsSteadier click speed test score.3.5-5.5 CPS5.5-7.5 CPS8+ CPS
30 secondsEndurance, rhythm, and fatigue checks.3-5 CPS5-7 CPS7.5+ CPS

1s, 5s, 10s, and 30s click test options

Choose 1s when you want a tiny burst, 5s when you want a normal fast attempt, 10s when you want a smoother average, and 30s when you want to see whether your clicking pace stays consistent. For fair comparisons, use the same duration, mouse, browser, and hand position each time.

Mobile click test and tap speed

The click zone also works as a mobile tap test on most phones and tablets. Mobile scores can differ from desktop mouse scores because touchscreens add tap latency, finger travel, browser gesture handling, and screen refresh differences. For the cleanest mobile CPS result, open the focused CPS Test, choose the same timer length each attempt, and tap with the same finger position.

What is a good click test score?

A casual score is often around 4 to 6 CPS, while 6 to 8 CPS is a solid result for many users. Scores above 9 CPS are fast for a normal mouse click test, but comfort and accuracy matter more than chasing a single high number.

How to improve click speed

Keep your hand relaxed, use a comfortable mouse, and compare attempts on the same device. For hardware issues like double-clicking or scroll wheel problems, use the full Mouse Test or the focused Double Click Test.

When to use a mouse click test

Use this page when you want a quick click speed result, a simple CPS comparison between devices, or a short warm-up before games that depend on repeated clicking. If you suspect hardware problems, run the mouse test afterward to check double-click behavior, buttons, wheel input, and pointer movement.

How to get a fair CPS result

Run several attempts and compare your average instead of only your best score. Keep the same timer length, hand position, input device, and browser window focus. Wireless latency, touch input, browser throttling, and mouse switch feel can all change a click speed score even when your hand speed is similar.

Click Test FAQ

What is a click speed test?

A click test measures how many mouse clicks or taps you can make during a fixed time window, then converts the result into clicks per second.

Is a click test the same as a CPS test?

Most click tests and CPS tests measure the same basic score: total clicks divided by the number of seconds in the test. Some sites add rankings or alternate buttons, but the core calculation is the same.

Which click test length should I choose?

Use 1 second for quick bursts, 5 seconds for normal fast attempts, 10 seconds for a steadier CPS score, and 30 seconds when you want to test endurance and consistency.

Does this click speed test save my best score?

Yes. Recent attempts and personal best scores are stored only in your browser localStorage. They are not uploaded or tied to an account.

What does my CPS score mean?

CPS means clicks per second. A 7.0 CPS result means you averaged seven clicks each second during the selected test length.

What is CPM in a click speed test?

CPM means clicks per minute. Multiply your CPS score by 60 to estimate CPM, so 7 CPS is about 420 clicks per minute.

Why is mobile CPS different from mouse CPS?

Touchscreens, browser gesture handling, screen refresh, and finger movement can make mobile tap scores different from desktop mouse scores. Compare mobile and desktop results separately.

Why did my click test score change?

Scores can change with mouse switch feel, touch input, hand position, fatigue, browser focus, and whether you are using the same device each time.