Free Online Click Speed Tool

Clicking Speed Test & CPS Test

A clicking speed test measures how many clicks you make during a fixed timer and converts them into clicks per second (CPS). Choose 1, 5, 10, or 30 seconds for an instant result.

The timer and score calculation run in your browser, so this click per second test works with a mouse, trackpad, or mobile touchscreen without installing anything.

Free online Click per second Clicker test Instant result Accurate CPS formula Mobile & desktop

Quick answer: CPS means clicks per second. This CPS test counts every click or tap during your chosen timer, divides the total by seconds, and shows your score instantly. Example: 40 clicks in 5 seconds equals 8.0 CPS. Use the same timer and device when comparing attempts.

Click1/5/10/30sCPSResult
8.2

Instant CPS score

Count every click or tap and convert the total into clicks per second.

Click Speed

Free, instant, and easy to compare.

Use the same 1, 5, 10, or 30 second timer when comparing attempts. Mouse quality, touch input, and browser focus can affect your score.

One click zone

Click or tap inside the large button so the test can count every input cleanly.

Instant CPS

Your total clicks are divided by the selected timer length to produce the CPS score.

Desktop and mobile

Run the same click speed test with a mouse, trackpad, or phone touchscreen.

What does CPS mean?

CPS means clicks per second. A score of 6 CPS means you clicked about six times each second during the test. Short CPS tests are common because they are easy to repeat and work on both desktop and mobile browsers.

Choose the Click Speed Test for a broader click test page, the Mouse Test to check buttons and pointer movement, the Double Click Test to investigate switch behavior, the Spacebar Clicker to compare key-press speed, or the Typing Speed Test to measure keyboard performance.

How this click speed test works

Pick a timer length, then start clicking or tapping inside the test area. The tool counts each browser click event until the timer reaches zero, divides total clicks by seconds, and shows your instant CPS result.

How to run the CPS test

  1. Select 1 second for a tiny burst, 5 seconds for a quick attempt, 10 seconds for a stable average, or 30 seconds for endurance.
  2. Click or tap the test zone until the timer finishes; keep the browser tab focused so inputs are counted consistently.
  3. Review total clicks and CPS, then repeat with the same device and timer to compare results fairly.

Example: 54 clicks in a 10-second CPS test equals 5.4 CPS because 54 ÷ 10 = 5.4.

Is this CPS test accurate?

The score uses the standard clicks-per-second formula, so the calculation is accurate for the clicks the browser receives. For the cleanest comparison, keep the same device, timer length, browser tab focus, and hand position across attempts.

Desktop mouse test and mobile tap test

On desktop, use the CPS test to compare mouse or trackpad click speed. On mobile, tap the same click zone to measure touch speed. Touch latency can differ from a mouse, so compare mobile scores separately from desktop scores.

What is a good CPS score?

A casual result is often around 4 to 6 CPS, 6 to 8 CPS is a solid clicking speed, and 9+ CPS is fast for a normal mouse click test. Longer runs can be lower because they measure rhythm and endurance.

How to get a better CPS score

Use a comfortable hand position, keep your wrist relaxed, and avoid pressing so hard that your rhythm slows down. Different mice can produce different results, so compare attempts with the same device when possible.

CPS Test FAQ

What does CPS mean?

CPS means clicks per second. A 6 CPS score means you averaged about six clicks each second during the test.

How does this CPS test calculate my score?

The tool counts clicks or taps inside the test area, divides the total by the selected timer length, and shows the result as clicks per second.

Is this click speed test free?

Yes. The CPS test is free online and runs in your browser without installing an app.

Can I use the CPS test on mobile and desktop?

Yes. You can use a mouse, trackpad, or mobile touchscreen. For fair comparisons, use the same device and timer length each time.

Is higher CPS always better?

Not always. Many games and tasks depend more on timing, accuracy, and comfort than raw clicking speed.