Measure your mouse's actual DPI accurately in your browser using a physical ruler. Move your mouse a known distance, enter the measurement, and the tool calculates your true DPI from the raw pixel count. Works with any mouse — gaming, office, wireless, or wired — on any operating system without any software installation.
DPI stands for Dots Per Inch. It measures how many pixels your cursor moves on screen for every inch your mouse moves physically. A mouse set to 800 DPI moves the cursor 800 pixels per inch of physical movement. A mouse at 1600 DPI moves the cursor 1600 pixels for the same physical distance, making it twice as fast. DPI is the single most important sensitivity setting on any mouse.
Mouse manufacturers advertise DPI ratings that are often rounded or approximate. The actual DPI your sensor produces can differ by 5 to 15 percent from the advertised value due to sensor calibration tolerances, firmware rounding, and surface variation. Windows pointer speed and acceleration settings add further multipliers. Testing your true DPI reveals the actual sensitivity your hand experiences, not the theoretical spec.
The test captures raw pointer movement data from your browser as you move the mouse a known physical distance. Dividing the pixel count by the physical distance in inches gives your actual DPI. The formula is simple: DPI = pixels moved / inches moved. Using a real ruler on your desk for the physical measurement makes this method as accurate as professional sensor testing equipment.
| Run | Distance | Pixels | Measured DPI | Deviation | Axis |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No measurements yet. Run the test above. | |||||
There is no single best DPI. The optimal setting depends entirely on what you are using your mouse for and your personal movement style.
First-person shooter games like CS2, Valorant, and Apex Legends demand maximum precision for small target acquisition and flick shots. Most professional FPS players use very low DPI combined with high in-game sensitivity to maintain large, sweeping movements for full accuracy. Lower DPI reduces jitter from minor hand tremors and allows more precise micro-adjustments.
Multiplayer online battle arena games like League of Legends and Dota 2 require frequent fast cursor movements across a large map view. RTS games require clicking units at speed. A higher DPI reduces the physical distance needed to traverse the screen, reducing wrist fatigue in long sessions. Precision matters less than speed for most MOBA actions.
Graphic designers, illustrators, and photo editors need precise cursor control for pixel-level adjustments, smooth brush strokes, and fine selections. A DPI that is too high causes jittery, overshooting movements when working at high zoom levels. Lower DPI provides more physical control per pixel, making detailed editing work significantly more comfortable and accurate.
For general productivity work including web browsing, document editing, and multitasking across multiple monitors, a moderate DPI provides a comfortable balance between cursor speed and control. High-resolution displays and multi-monitor setups benefit from slightly higher DPI to reduce the physical effort of navigating across large screen areas. Most office users are satisfied with 1000 to 1600 DPI.
An accurate DPI measurement requires a physical ruler and takes about two minutes. Follow these steps for reliable results.
Place a ruler or measuring tape on your mousepad next to where you will move your mouse. Set your Windows pointer speed to 6/11 (the default center position) and disable Enhance Pointer Precision in Mouse settings under Control Panel. These settings ensure the browser receives raw pixel counts without OS-level multipliers distorting the result. On macOS, set Tracking Speed to a known value and note it for reference.
Enter the physical distance you will move your mouse in the Target Distance field above. A distance of 10cm or more gives better accuracy than short distances because small errors in the physical measurement have less impact on the final result. Enter your configured DPI from your mouse software or driver if you know it — this is used only to calculate the deviation percentage and does not affect the measurement itself.
Click Start Test and move your mouse in a straight line along the ruler for exactly the target distance, then click Stop. The tool counts every pixel your cursor moved during that physical distance. Move as steadily as possible — lifting the mouse or changing direction adds noise to the pixel count. The test zone highlights red during the active measurement to show it is capturing data.
Run the test three to five times and compare the results in the measurement history table. Small variations between runs are normal and caused by minor inconsistencies in your physical movement. The average of multiple runs gives a more reliable DPI figure than a single measurement. If results vary by more than 5 percent, check that pointer acceleration is fully disabled and that your ruler measurement is consistent.
Accurate, private, and instant — no software, no installation, and no data collection.
Open your browser on Windows, Mac, or Linux and measure your DPI in seconds. No app, no driver software, no extension, no account. Works on any device with a modern browser and a connected mouse.
All mouse movement data is processed entirely in your browser. No pixel counts, DPI readings, or movement data are ever transmitted to any server. Your mouse data never leaves your computer.
Every run is saved in the history table so you can compare multiple measurements across different distances and axes. Average your results to get a highly accurate final DPI figure with visible deviation from your configured setting.
The tool compares your measured DPI against your configured DPI and shows the exact percentage deviation. A deviation above 10 percent indicates your sensor is not performing to spec and your in-game sensitivity may need adjustment to compensate.
The built-in eDPI calculator combines your measured DPI with your in-game sensitivity to give you your effective DPI. Compare your eDPI against professional gamer benchmarks to optimise your setup for competitive gaming.
Gaming mice, office mice, wireless mice, trackballs, laptop trackpads — any pointing device your OS recognises is compatible. No brand-specific software or proprietary API is required. If the browser sees your mouse, the DPI tester reads it.
Gamepad Tester — free browser-based Mouse DPI Test and analyzer for any mouse on Windows, macOS, and Linux. Measure actual DPI with a physical ruler, calculate eDPI, and detect sensor deviation. Data processed locally. Compatible with Chrome 58+, Edge 79+, Firefox 55+, Safari 14+.