Mouse Double Click Fix — Test Your Double Click & Find the Problem
Mouse double clicking on its own? Clicks not registering? Start the test, double-click the zone, and see your exact score in real time. Your DCPS, total count, consistency rating, and tier all appear the moment time runs out. No signup, no download, nothing to install.
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Double Click Speed Guide — What Does Your DCPS Score Mean?
What Is the Mouse Double Click Fix Tool?
This tool helps you test and diagnose your mouse double click in one place. Every double-click you make inside the zone is counted and timed. After the test you get your DCPS score, a consistency rating, average interval between clicks, and a per-second chart. Together these four results tell you whether your mouse double click problem is caused by your speed, your timing, your OS setting, or your mouse switch hardware. No app to install — it runs entirely in your browser.
Mouse Double Clicking on Its Own — What Causes It
When your mouse registers a double click from a single press, the most common cause is a worn switch. The metal contact inside the switch bounces after you press it, sending two signals before the circuit settles. This is called switch bounce or debounce failure. It happens most often on mice that are one to three years old and have been clicked heavily. You can check for it here — if the counter rises faster than the number of double-clicks you actually made, your switch is likely bouncing. A short-term fix is to make your OS double-click interval stricter so only very fast pairs register. A permanent fix is replacing the switch or the mouse.
Mouse Double Click Not Working — How to Fix It
If your double clicks are being missed entirely, check these three things in order. First, open Mouse Settings on your OS and move the double-click speed slider toward Slow — your current setting may be too strict for your natural rhythm. Second, try a different USB port or cable if you use a wired mouse, as a loose connection causes missed inputs. Third, run this test and check your consistency score. A low consistency score with normal DCPS points to timing variation in your clicks — practice will fix that. A very low DCPS despite normal effort points to a hardware issue with the switch itself.
What Is a Normal Double Click Speed?
Most people land between 2 and 5 double clicks per second without training. Regular computer users typically reach 4 to 7 DCPS. Gamers and people who do a lot of file work on a daily basis often reach 6 to 9 DCPS with no special effort. A score well below 2 DCPS suggests either an OS interval that is set too tight or a mouse switch that is not responding cleanly. A score much higher than expected for your effort can mean the switch is bouncing and registering phantom clicks.
How to Adjust Your OS Double Click Interval
Your operating system uses a time window to decide whether two clicks count as a double-click. If that window is too short, your double clicks get missed. If it is too long, accidental doubles sneak in. On Windows, go to Control Panel, click Mouse, open the Buttons tab, and move the Double-Click Speed slider. Move it toward Slow if your clicks are being missed, or toward Fast if you are getting unexpected doubles. On macOS, go to System Settings, click Mouse, and adjust the Double-Click Speed. Test here after each change until your score matches what you expect.
How to Read Your Consistency Score
The consistency score shown after each test measures how evenly your double-clicks were spread across each second of the test. A score of 90% or above means your rhythm was steady from start to finish — that is the sign of good technique and a healthy switch. A score below 60% means your output varied a lot between seconds, which points to either fatigue, inconsistent timing, or a switch that registers unreliably. If you get a low consistency score on a short test, hardware is the more likely cause. On a long test, fatigue is the more likely explanation.
Mouse Double Click Fix — Common Questions Answered
performance.now() which gives about 1ms precision, so timing error is too small to affect your score. The tool counts native browser double-click events, which are the same signals your OS and applications respond to. The most accurate results come from using Chrome or Edge on a desktop with a wired mouse and no heavy programs running in the background. Safari on older iOS devices may add a small tap delay, but the tool is viewport-optimised to suppress it.