Fast Browser Measurements

Speed Tests

Measure reaction speed, typing speed, clicks per second, mouse click speed, and keyboard input timing with lightweight browser tools.

Each test gives an instant score so you can repeat runs, compare devices, or practice a specific skill.

Quick Test Hub speed test preview

How to compare speed test results

Run several attempts, ignore obvious mistakes, and compare your average score. Reaction time and click speed can change with sleep, device latency, browser focus, and hand position.

Which speed test should I start with?

Use reaction time for visual response speed, typing speed for keyboard skill, CPS or click test for clicking rhythm, spacebar clicker for keyboard tapping rhythm, double click test for mouse click-pair behavior, and keyboard polling rate when you want to compare keyboard input timing.

What affects browser speed test scores?

Scores can change with device latency, display refresh rate, mouse switch feel, keyboard layout, wireless connection, browser focus, background CPU load, and how rested you are. For fair comparisons, use the same device, same browser, and several repeated attempts.

Speed test score meanings

Reaction time is measured in milliseconds, typing speed is measured in words per minute, click speed is measured in clicks per second, and keyboard polling estimates input rate in hertz. These numbers are useful for practice and device comparison, but they are not medical, professional, or official performance measurements.

Speed Tests FAQ

Why should I run more than one attempt?

One attempt can be affected by a mistake, distraction, or lucky timing. A small set of repeated attempts gives a more useful average.

Can mobile and desktop results be compared?

Not cleanly. Touchscreens, mice, keyboards, and display refresh rates introduce different delays, so compare mobile with mobile and desktop with desktop.

Which test is best for gaming practice?

Use reaction time for visual response, CPS or click test for repeated clicking, and keyboard polling rate when you want to estimate input timing.