How fast can you double-tap? Precision timing under pressure.
The double click test measures how quickly and consistently you can double-click your mouse button. It has two completely different audiences, and it's useful to both of them.
Audience 1: Competitive gamers
In certain games and mechanics, double-clicking speed matters for direct performance. Speed-clicking, inventory management, and specific PvP interactions all benefit from fast, clean double-click registration. Knowing your double-click speed โ and training it โ is a measurable, improvable skill.
Audience 2: People whose mouse is doing weird things
If your mouse is registering double-clicks when you only intend to click once, you have a hardware problem. A faulty click detection mechanism causes the mouse to register two clicks from a single button press โ which means misclicking UI elements, accidentally opening files, dropping items in games, and generally behaving like your mouse has a personal grudge against you. The double click test is one of the cleanest ways to diagnose this.
If you click once and see two inputs registering, your mouse button mechanism is worn out. That's not a software problem. It's a hardware problem with a known cause and a finite lifespan. See the diagnosis section below.
This test covers both use cases. What you're looking for depends on why you're here.
Double click speed is measured in double-clicks per second โ each valid double-click (two clicks within 250ms of each other) counts as one.
| Level | Double-clicks per second | Context |
|---|---|---|
| Slow | Under 2 | Standard mouse usage territory. |
| Average | 2โ4 | Normal human double-click speed. |
| Good | 4โ6 | Fast. You've either trained this or it comes naturally. |
| Fast | 6โ8 | Significantly above average. |
| Exceptional | 8+ | Very fast hands. Rare without specific technique practice. |
For gaming purposes, consistent speed matters more than peaks. A consistent 5 double-clicks per second that doesn't break down under sustained effort is more useful in gameplay than a 7 DPS peak that degrades after a few seconds.
The 250ms threshold this test uses is roughly the standard Windows double-click detection window (adjustable in mouse settings). If you're consistently clicking faster than this threshold, your double-clicks register cleanly. If your two clicks fall outside it, they'll register as two single clicks instead.
The same principles that apply to CPS testing apply here: relax your hand, use the fingertip rather than pressing from the wrist, and keep your arm and shoulder loose. The faster double-click practitioners use a subtle flick โ a single sharp downward motion that lets the button spring cause the finger to bounce for the second click, rather than two distinct conscious presses. It takes practice but produces noticeably faster results once it clicks (sorry).
This is a common hardware failure and it affects most mice eventually โ usually after 1โ3 years of regular use, though it can happen sooner.
Take the test. Click once, slowly and deliberately. If the test registers two clicks from a single intentional press, your mouse has a double-click fault. This will also show up in everyday use: accidentally opening files when you single-click them, dropping items in inventory when you pick them up, misclicking UI buttons, and generally feeling like your mouse is making decisions independently.
The culprit is almost always the mouse button switch โ the small tactile component underneath the button. The most common switch used in budget-to-mid-range mice is the Omron D2FC-F-7N, which is rated for around 5โ10 million clicks. Once the spring mechanism inside the switch wears out, it bounces slightly after actuation โ registering as a second click.
The double click test measures how fast and consistently you can double-click a mouse button. It's useful for two purposes: training competitive gaming double-click speed, and diagnosing a faulty mouse that registers double-clicks when you only intend to click once.
2โ4 double-clicks per second is average. Above 5 is fast. Competitive gamers who have trained double-clicking specifically can reach 6โ8 DPS. The test counts clicks within a 250ms window as a valid double-click โ the same threshold most operating systems use.
Your mouse button switch is wearing out. The spring mechanism inside the switch is bouncing after actuation, registering as a second click. This is a hardware fault โ the switch needs to be replaced or the mouse replaced entirely. As a short-term workaround, you can reduce the double-click speed in your OS mouse settings.
You can reduce the OS double-click detection speed as a workaround (Windows: Control Panel โ Mouse โ Buttons). A permanent fix requires replacing the mouse switch, which involves soldering โ straightforward if you have the tools. Or replace the mouse. Budget gaming mice typically start showing this issue after 12โ24 months of heavy use.
For specific mechanics yes โ inventory management in games like Minecraft, item pickup, and certain interactions benefit from fast, clean double-click registration. For most gameplay the direct impact is limited compared to CPS or reaction time. Its bigger gaming relevance is often diagnostic: an unintended double-clicking mouse causes significant problems in many games.
The CPS test counts every individual click. The double click test only counts valid double-clicks โ pairs of clicks that land within 250ms of each other. A high CPS score doesn't automatically mean a high double-click score; the timing and pairing of clicks is what matters here.