Mouse Click Counter

Mouse Click Counter

Click inside the click zone below to start counting.

0 Total Clicks
0.0 Current CPS
0.0 Average CPS
0.0 Peak CPS
0.0s Elapsed / Remaining
0 Best Score (this mode)

Click as fast as you can — each click bumps the counter

Live CPS Graph

Session History

No completed runs yet

Mouse Click Counter — Test Your Clicks Per Second (CPS)

This mouse click counter measures how many times you can click in a set period of time, reporting your total clicks, current CPS, average CPS, and peak CPS as you go.

Choose Free Mode to click for as long as you want, or pick a 5, 10, 30, or 60-second timed run to get a comparable, repeatable CPS score you can track over multiple sessions.

How CPS Is Measured

CPS, or clicks per second, is simply your total click count divided by the time elapsed. The live graph on this page tracks your CPS in real time so you can see whether you start fast and fade, or build up speed as you go — a pattern most people don’t notice without actually watching the data.

Timed Modes Explained

Shorter windows like 5 or 10 seconds tend to produce your highest peak CPS, since fatigue hasn’t set in yet, while 30 and 60-second runs are a better test of sustained clicking speed. If you’re comparing your score to online CPS leaderboards, check which time window they’re using — a 5-second CPS score and a 60-second CPS score aren’t directly comparable.

What’s a Good CPS Score

Most people click somewhere between 4 and 6 times per second with a normal clicking technique. Scores above 8–10 CPS usually involve a specific technique rather than a single finger clicking normally. Whatever your number, it’s most useful compared against your own click counter history rather than against an unverified world record posted somewhere online.

Clicking Techniques (Jitter, Butterfly, Regular)

Regular clicking uses a single finger and a normal click motion. Jitter clicking tenses the forearm and vibrates the whole hand to generate extra clicks with less finger movement. Butterfly clicking alternates two fingers rapidly on the same button. Techniques like jitter and butterfly clicking can boost raw CPS numbers, but they also increase strain, and worn switches can bounce in ways described in Wikipedia’s entry on switch bounce, which can inflate a count without any extra effort at all.

Mouse Hardware and Click Speed

Your CPS ceiling isn’t just about technique — the mouse’s switches matter too. Older or worn-out switches can bounce or double-click unintentionally, which will actually inflate your CPS count without you clicking any faster. If your numbers look unusually high or inconsistent, run our Mouse Tester to check for double-click issues before trusting the score.