Target CPS
CPS
sec
Round 1
Target 10 CPS
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Set your target, then click!
Press Start Test — hit your CPS goal as precisely as you can
Ready — Click!
Your first click starts the timer
0.0
0 CPS
0
clicks per second
Time Left
0
Clicks
0.00
CPS
10
Target CPS
Best CPS

🏆 Personal Best

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No record yet

📊 Session Stats

Last CPS
Best CPS
Worst CPS
Avg CPS
Target Hit %
Tests Run0

🕐 Recent History

No tests completed yet.

📋 Result Breakdown

CPS Achieved
Target CPS
Difference
Accuracy %
Total Clicks
Clicks Needed
Tier
Clicks Per Second Breakdown — vs Target

CPS Speed Tiers — Where Does Your Score Rank?

0–3 CPS
🐢 Beginner
3–5 CPS
🕐 Casual Clicker
5–8 CPS
📘 Average User
8–12 CPS
🚀 Fast Clicker
12–16 CPS
⚡ Elite
16+ CPS
🌟 World Class
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What Is a Click Speed Timer?

A click speed timer is different from a normal CPS test. Instead of clicking as fast as you can, you pick a goal rate — say 5 clicks per second — and the tool checks whether you actually hold that speed. It updates live as you click, so you get instant feedback on whether you are too fast, too slow, or right on pace. Most CPS tools only tell you your peak. This one tells you how consistent you are.

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How the Green and Orange Feedback Works

The click zone changes colour as you test. Green means your current clicks-per-second is at or above your chosen target — you are on pace. Orange means you have dropped below it and need to speed up. The colour changes on every single click, so you always know your status without looking at any numbers. After the test, the bar chart uses the same colours to show you exactly which seconds were on target and which ones were not.

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Why Click Pacing Matters More Than Raw Speed

In most games, clicking as fast as possible does not help as much as clicking at the right speed consistently. In Minecraft PvP, servers only register up to about 14 to 20 hits per second — any clicks above that are wasted. In real-time strategy games, you need a steady hand speed over long periods, not a short burst. Pacing practice teaches your fingers to stay in the useful range automatically so you stop wasting effort on clicks that do not count.

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What Your Accuracy Score Tells You

After each test you get an accuracy percentage. This number shows how close your final CPS was to the target you set. If you score 95% or higher, your pace was very tight and consistent. A score between 75% and 90% means you were close but drifted a little. Below 70% means there was a big gap — usually because of a fast start that faded quickly. Use the per-second chart to find exactly where the drift started and focus your next session there.

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How to Use This Tool for Click Rate Training

Start at a target that feels a little slow — about 1 CPS below your natural speed. Run ten short tests and try to finish with a green zone and a flat chart. Once you can do that eight times in a row, raise the target by 1 and repeat. For stamina work, keep the target the same but switch to a 30 or 60 second duration. The goal is a chart full of green bars with no sudden drops. Progress is slow but it sticks when you train this way.

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Getting Accurate Results Every Time

This timer uses your browser's built-in high-precision clock, which is accurate to about one millisecond. That means your score is not rounded or estimated — it reflects exactly how many clicks happened in the time window. For the best results, use Chrome or Edge, keep the browser tab active during the test, and close other heavy apps in the background. A wired mouse also helps, since it removes the tiny delay that some wireless mice add between click and registration.

Click Speed Timer — Questions and Answers

A regular CPS test just counts how fast you click and shows a number. This click speed timer adds a goal. You decide in advance how many clicks per second you want to hit, and the tool tracks whether you actually stay at that rate during the test. It is more about control and consistency than maximum speed.
Start with a target that feels easy, not fast. Run a normal click test first to find your natural speed, then set the target about 1 to 2 clicks per second below that. This lets you focus on rhythm and holding the rate steady, rather than just trying to keep up. You can raise the target once you score 85% accuracy or better a few times in a row.
Your finger muscles get tired when you click fast for a long time. Fast-twitch muscle fibres are powerful but they wear out quickly. Most people see their click rate drop after 10 to 15 seconds at full speed. The per-second chart shows this clearly — bars that start tall and get shorter as the test goes on. To fix it, do more 30-second tests at a moderate pace instead of only short, fast bursts.
Yes. Each tap on a touchscreen counts as one click. The tool works on phones and tablets in any modern browser. Tap with the tip of one finger, not the flat pad, and make sure the whole click zone is visible on screen before you start. Tapping accuracy can vary a little between devices, but the results are close enough for training purposes.
It depends on the game. For Minecraft PvP on legacy servers, 10 to 14 clicks per second is a solid, useful range. For real-time strategy games like StarCraft, a steady 8 to 10 CPS is usually enough. FPS games rarely need more than 6 to 7 clicks per second since shot timing matters more than raw click speed. Use this timer to find and hold the rate that actually matters for the game you play.
Yes. Your personal best CPS and the last 20 test results are saved in your browser's local storage. They stay there between visits as long as you use the same browser and do not clear your browser data. You can also export your history as a CSV file from the Settings panel if you want to keep a backup or track your progress in a spreadsheet.
Yes. The target CPS and the duration are set separately and work together in any combination. Type your preferred CPS in the custom target box, press Set, then type your preferred duration in the custom time box and press Set again. You can pair any target with any duration — for example, 7 CPS for 45 seconds to match a specific game scenario you want to practice.
Clicks Needed is the total number of clicks that would have been a perfect score — your target CPS multiplied by the duration in seconds. For example, a 10 CPS target over 5 seconds needs 50 total clicks. Comparing this to your actual click count shows you at a glance whether you were over or under your goal for the whole test.