Gamepad Tester Click Speed Test
Welcome to Gamepad Tester — Click Speed Test CPS
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Click Speed Test - Free Online CPS Test & Clicks Per Second Counter

Free Online CPS Test: Measure Clicks Per Second, Track Click Speed, Test Gaming Mouse Performance, Compare Clicking Techniques & Beat the World Record, All Durations from 1 to 100 Seconds

The most complete free online click speed test. Measure your exact clicks per second (CPS) across six durations! 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, and 60 seconds. Track your live CPS with a real-time chart, compare your score to world records and average CPS benchmarks, save your personal best, and see your performance grade. Works on all gaming mice, wireless mice, and laptop trackpads. No download, no install, no sign-up required.

Live CPS Counter Real-Time Chart Personal Best 1s to 60s Tests Grade + Rating Session History All Mouse Types Gaming Benchmark
Live CPS Preview
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Click Speed Test — CPS Tester
Click Speed Test — Clicks Per Second, Live Chart & Session History
Choose duration and click to start
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Click here to start — click as fast as you can!
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Live CPS Chart — Updates Every 500ms During Test
CPS ratings: 1–3 = Slow  ·  4–6 = Casual  ·  7–9 = Good  ·  10–13 = Fast  ·  14+ = Very Fast  ·  World record: 17.4 CPS (5s). Average gamer: 6–8 CPS regular clicking. The 5-second test gives the most accurate sustainable CPS score.
Click Event Log
Click the test zone to begin logging...
Session History — All Tests This Session
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CPS Rankings — Where Does Your Score Rank?
Rank
CPS Range
Description
Level
🐌
Casual
1 – 3 CPS
Normal browsing and office work speed. Single finger, unhurried clicking. Typical of non-gamers and first-time testers. No technique used.
Beginner
🐢
Standard
4 – 6 CPS
Average clicking speed for most computer users and casual gamers. Sufficient for most game genres except fast-paced PvP. Achievable with regular index finger clicking.
Average
🐇
Good
7 – 9 CPS
Above-average clicking speed. Handles most gaming scenarios comfortably. Good for Minecraft PvP, FPS games, and competitive gaming. Achievable with practice using a relaxed arm and fingertip clicking.
Good
🦅
Fast
10 – 13 CPS
Fast clicking — typically requires jitter clicking technique. Strong advantage in Minecraft PvP, rhythm games, and fast-action games. Most gaming mice are designed to register reliably at this speed without switch ghosting.
Fast
Very Fast
14 – 16 CPS
Very fast — requires butterfly clicking or advanced jitter technique. Few people achieve this sustainably over 5+ seconds. Requires a gaming mouse with optical switches or high-end mechanical switches to register all clicks without missing.
Very Fast
🌍
World Class
17+ CPS
World record territory — 17.4 CPS over 5 seconds is the recognised web benchmark. Typically achieved with drag clicking technique on mice with specific surface textures. Impossible to sustain without specialised technique and the right mouse hardware.
World Record
Note: CPS above 14 typically requires advanced techniques (jitter clicking, butterfly clicking, drag clicking) that can cause repetitive strain injuries with prolonged use. For casual gaming and most competitive play, 7–10 CPS with regular clicking technique is sufficient and far safer. The world record of 17.4 CPS was achieved over a 5-second burst — not sustained clicking.
Clicking Techniques — Regular, Jitter, Butterfly & Drag Clicking Explained
Regular Clicking
5 – 8 CPS
Standard clicking with the index finger pressing the left mouse button. The most accurate and least physically demanding technique. CPS is limited by natural finger movement speed and the time required for a full press-and-release cycle per click.
How to improve: Relax your hand and arm completely. Use your fingertip — not the full finger pad — on the button. Keep your wrist slightly elevated. Click from the finger, not the whole arm. Practice short 5-second bursts with rest between attempts. Most people reach their natural ceiling at 7–8 CPS with this technique.
Jitter Clicking
10 – 14 CPS
Tensing the forearm and arm muscles to generate rapid, controlled vibrations that transfer to the index finger on the mouse button. The vibration causes repeated micro-presses faster than deliberate clicking allows. Popular in Minecraft PvP communities.
How to do it: Rest your fingertip lightly on the left mouse button. Tense your forearm muscles — not your wrist or fingers — to create a stiff vibration in your arm. Let the vibration transfer down through your finger to click. Do not press hard. Start with short 2-second attempts and build up. Warning: Can cause forearm pain and repetitive strain injury with prolonged practice.
Butterfly Clicking
15 – 25 CPS
Alternating between two fingers — typically index and middle — on the same mouse button. Each finger presses and releases in rapid succession, creating a doubled click rate compared to single-finger clicking. Very high ceiling but requires coordination.
How to do it: Place both your index and middle fingers on the left mouse button. Click in alternation — index down, middle down, index down — in a rapid flapping motion. Start slowly to build the muscle memory before increasing speed. Requires a mouse where two fingers can rest comfortably on the same button. Not suitable for mice with very narrow button surfaces.
Drag Clicking
25 – 40+ CPS
Dragging the finger from the back to the front of the mouse button in a single motion. Friction between the finger and button surface causes the switch to register multiple actuations during one drag. The highest CPS method but the most hardware-dependent.
How to do it: Position your finger at the rear of the left mouse button surface. Apply moderate downward pressure and quickly drag your finger toward the front edge of the button in one smooth motion. The trick is finding the right pressure — too light registers no extra clicks, too heavy stalls the drag. Requires a mouse with textured button surface or tape applied to the button. Optical switches do not support drag clicking.
Health Warning: Jitter clicking and butterfly clicking at high intensity can cause repetitive strain injury (RSI), carpal tunnel syndrome, and tendinitis. Take a break every 30–60 minutes. If you feel any pain, numbness, or tingling in your wrist or forearm, stop immediately and rest. These techniques should not be practised continuously. For casual gaming improvement, regular clicking with technique refinement is the safest path.
What the Click Speed Test Measures

Clicks Per Second (CPS)

Measures your exact click rate calculated as total clicks divided by elapsed time. The live counter updates every 100 milliseconds during the test, giving you real-time CPS feedback as you click. Your final CPS is the most accurate measure at your chosen duration — the 5-second and 10-second tests give the best balance of accuracy and sustainability.

Real-Time CPS Chart

A live bar chart plots your CPS every 500 milliseconds during the test, revealing how your clicking speed changes from start to finish. This shows whether you start fast and fatigue, maintain a steady pace, or accelerate through the test — valuable insight for improving your technique and endurance.

Performance Grade & Rating

Automatically grades your CPS score from Casual through to World Class based on recognised click speed benchmarks. The grade accounts for your chosen duration — a 1-second test naturally yields higher CPS than a 60-second sustained test. Compare your grade to average gamers and competitive players to understand where you stand.

Session History Tracking

Every test result is saved in your session history with CPS, total clicks, duration, and grade. Compare results across different durations and attempts to see progression during your session. The session average CPS shows your consistent performance level rather than your single best burst.

Six Test Durations

Choose 1, 5, 10, 15, 30, or 60 seconds. The 1-second test shows your peak burst CPS. The 5-second test is the gaming standard used for Minecraft PvP benchmarking. The 10-second test measures sustainable CPS. The 30 and 60-second tests reveal clicking endurance and whether your speed drops significantly over time from fatigue.

Click Event Log

Every mousedown event is logged with a millisecond timestamp during the test. The event log shows the exact timing between clicks — useful for identifying inconsistencies in clicking rhythm, detecting switch chattering (multiple events per physical press), and verifying that your mouse is registering every click without missing inputs.

How to Run the CPS Test

How to Use the Free Online Click Speed Test

Get your accurate CPS score in under 2 minutes — no download, no account, works in any modern browser.

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Choose Your Duration

Select how long you want your CPS test to run. Use 1 second for your absolute peak burst CPS. Use 5 seconds for the standard gaming benchmark — this is the duration used by most Minecraft PvP communities and the duration of the world record. Use 10 seconds for a more accurate picture of your sustained clicking speed. Use 30 or 60 seconds to test endurance and see whether your CPS drops significantly over time from fatigue.

1s = peak burst5s = gaming standard10s = sustained60s = endurance
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Click to Start

Click inside the large red test zone. The timer starts immediately on your first click and counts down from your chosen duration. The test zone lights up red and shows your live CPS as you click. Every click is registered using the mousedown event rather than the click event — this captures the press at the exact moment of actuation rather than after the full press-and-release cycle, giving maximum accuracy.

Timer starts on first clickmousedown for accuracyLive CPS shown
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Click as Fast as Possible

Click as rapidly as you can until the timer runs out. Watch the live CPS number update every 100 milliseconds. The timer bar depletes in real time showing time remaining. The ripple effect on each click gives you visual feedback confirming every click is registered. Do not lift or move your hand during the test — keep your clicking position stable and consistent for the best score.

Stay consistentWatch live CPSDon't pause
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Read Your Results

When the timer expires, your final CPS score, total clicks, clicks per minute, and performance grade appear in the result panel. The CPS chart shows how your speed varied throughout the test. If your CPS started high and dropped significantly, focus on endurance training. If your score was consistent throughout, you have good clicking rhythm — work on increasing speed without losing consistency.

Final CPS shownChart reveals patternGrade assigned
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Improve and Repeat

Click Try Again to immediately run another test with the same duration. Your session history records every attempt so you can track improvement across multiple runs. Rest your hand for 30–60 seconds between attempts — clicking muscles fatigue quickly and a fresh hand always clicks faster. The session average CPS shown in the stats bar is your most reliable performance indicator across multiple attempts.

Rest 30–60s between testsTrack session historySession avg = true level
Why Use This Click Speed Tester

Why Choose Gamepad Tester for Your CPS Test

Instant — Zero Install

Open in any modern browser and start testing in seconds. No download, no driver, no account, no email. Works on Windows, macOS, Linux, and Android Chrome. The entire click speed test runs locally in your browser using standard mouse event listeners.

Real-Time CPS Chart

Most click speed tests only show your final CPS. This tool charts your CPS every 500 milliseconds throughout the test — revealing whether you start fast and fatigue, maintain a steady pace, or build momentum. This chart is essential for improving technique rather than just seeing a final number.

Six Durations from 1s to 60s

Six test durations covering every use case — 1-second burst tests, the standard 5-second gaming benchmark, 10-second sustained tests, and 30 and 60-second endurance tests. Switch between durations instantly without losing your session history or best score.

Session History with Average CPS

Every test result is saved in session history with CPS, total clicks, duration, and grade. The session average CPS is your most accurate performance indicator — it smooths out lucky outlier scores and shows your true consistent clicking speed across multiple attempts.

100% Private — No Data Sent

Your click counts, timestamps, and CPS scores never leave your device. This click speed tester runs entirely in your browser — no analytics, no logging, no server. Your clicking data stays completely private to your session.

mousedown Accuracy — No Click Delay

This tester registers clicks on mousedown — the exact moment the button is pressed — rather than waiting for the full click event (mousedown + mouseup). This eliminates the release-delay that causes most click speed testers to under-count by up to 5–10% at high speeds, giving you a more accurate score.

Frequently Asked Questions

Click Speed Test & CPS FAQs

What is a CPS test and what does it measure?
A CPS test (Clicks Per Second test) measures how many times you can click your mouse button within a given time period. The result is expressed as clicks per second — calculated by dividing your total click count by the number of seconds in the test. For example, 35 clicks in 5 seconds equals 7.0 CPS. This metric is used by gamers to benchmark their clicking speed, test gaming mouse switch performance, and practice clicking technique. It is also used to verify that a gaming mouse registers every click at high speeds without missing inputs due to switch debounce settings.
What is a good CPS score?
A good CPS score depends on your use case and the test duration. For casual use and most PC gaming, 5–7 CPS is perfectly adequate. For competitive gaming and Minecraft PvP, 7–10 CPS is considered good and provides a meaningful advantage. Scores of 10–13 CPS are considered fast and typically require jitter clicking technique. Scores above 14 CPS require butterfly clicking, drag clicking, or advanced jitter and are considered very fast. The world record for the 5-second CPS test is 17.4 CPS. The average score across all users on established CPS test sites is around 6.5–7.0 CPS on the 5-second test.
Why is the 5-second test the most accurate?
The 5-second test is widely considered the most accurate CPS benchmark because it is long enough to average out your natural clicking rhythm and eliminate the spike from the first-click burst start, but short enough that hand fatigue does not become a significant factor. A 1-second test is too short — the opening burst from your first click inflates the score. A 60-second test introduces significant fatigue that deflates the score. The 5-second duration gives the best representation of your sustainable clicking speed, which is why it is the standard used by Minecraft PvP communities and recognised CPS record-tracking sites.
How does jitter clicking work and is it safe?
Jitter clicking involves tensing your forearm muscles to generate rapid vibrations that transfer through your arm to your finger, causing rapid repeated micro-presses on the mouse button faster than deliberate clicking allows. It can produce 10–14 CPS with practice. The safety concern is significant — prolonged jitter clicking puts repetitive stress on the forearm tendons and wrist, and can cause repetitive strain injury (RSI), carpal tunnel syndrome, or tendinitis. If you feel pain, numbness, or tingling in your wrist or forearm, stop immediately and rest. Jitter clicking should not be practised for extended sessions. For casual gaming improvement, refining regular clicking technique is safer and still provides most of the competitive benefit.
Does CPS matter in Minecraft PvP?
Yes, CPS has a direct impact in Minecraft PvP — particularly in versions before 1.9 (pre-combat update) where the attack speed system did not exist. In 1.8 PvP servers (still by far the most popular PvP format), clicking faster registers more hits, which increases knockback dealt and reduces the opponent's ability to hit back. At 6–8 CPS, hits register cleanly for most combos. At 10+ CPS, the extra hits can break enemy sprint and extend combos. However, Minecraft officially claims it registers around 4–8 CPS effectively — clicks above that threshold may not always result in additional registered hits depending on server-side tick rate and latency. Aim is equally or more important than raw CPS for most players.
Why is my CPS lower than expected on a gaming mouse?
Several factors can reduce your CPS reading: mouse debounce time — the hardware-level delay built into the switch to prevent accidental double-clicks (typically 5–20ms, which limits theoretical maximum CPS to 50–200); polling rate — a 125Hz polling rate mouse can only report 125 clicks per second maximum, though at normal CPS levels this is not a bottleneck; browser event handling — the browser introduces a small delay between the physical switch actuation and the JavaScript event firing; and fatigue — most people click slower than they think over a sustained 5-second test. For the most accurate test, use a gaming mouse with low debounce (under 10ms), a 1000Hz polling rate, and test in Chrome or Edge for the lowest browser event latency.
What is drag clicking and does it work on all mice?
Drag clicking is a technique where you drag your finger from the back to the front of the mouse button surface, using friction to cause the switch to register multiple actuations in one motion. It can produce 25–40+ CPS but is heavily hardware-dependent. It works best on mice with textured button surfaces, or when tape (typically masking tape) is applied to the button for friction. It does not work on mice with optical switches (Razer, some Logitech models) because optical switches have near-zero debounce and do not respond to the friction-based actuation that drag clicking relies on. Mechanical switches — particularly Omron-based switches in Logitech G series, Glorious Model O, and similar — are the best candidates for drag clicking. Many game servers ban drag clicking as it is considered exploitative.
Does this CPS test work on mobile phones and tablets?
Yes — on mobile devices, tap events are mapped to mouse events in most modern mobile browsers. You can tap the test zone to register clicks and measure your tapping speed instead of mouse clicking speed. The score on mobile will differ from desktop — tapping with a finger on a touchscreen involves different muscle groups and mechanics than mouse clicking. On mobile, 5–12 taps per second is typical, and some users achieve higher scores tapping than clicking due to the direct physical contact. Android Chrome and iOS Safari both support touch events that map correctly to the mousedown listener used by this tester.
How do I improve my CPS score?
To improve your CPS: first ensure your technique is correct — use your fingertip rather than the full finger pad, keep your wrist slightly elevated, and relax your hand and arm. Second, practice consistently — short 5-second bursts with 30-second rests between attempts, repeated 10–15 times per session. Third, check your mouse — a mouse with a heavy, stiff switch or high debounce time physically limits your CPS. Gaming mice with lighter switches (45–60g actuation) register clicks more easily at high speeds. Fourth, consider clicking grip — claw grip and fingertip grip generally allow faster clicking than palm grip because they position the finger correctly on the button. Fifth, track your session average rather than your best score — consistent improvement in average CPS is more meaningful than outlier peaks.
Is this click speed test free and does it store my data?
This click speed test is completely free — no download, no installation, no account, and no email required. It runs entirely in your browser using standard JavaScript event listeners. No click data, CPS scores, or session history is sent to any server. Everything runs locally on your device. Your session history exists only in your browser's memory for the current session and is cleared when you close or refresh the page. You can run as many tests as you want, across any duration, without any restrictions or data collection.

Gamepad Tester — free browser-based click speed test tool. Measure your CPS (clicks per second), track session history, view real-time CPS charts, and compare to world record benchmarks. Works with all gaming mice, wireless mice, and laptop trackpads. No download required. Compatible with Chrome, Firefox, Edge, and Safari. All data processed locally — fully private.  ·  ← Back to Gamepad Tester  ·  Mouse Test →  ·  Key Rollover Test →